Just before high winds blew in Wednesday, Boise broke a temperature record
Strong winds swept across Southern Idaho on Wednesday, prompting advisories across several counties. But just before the rain and wind came, Boise had a record-breaking warm morning.
The National Weather Service recorded that Boise hit 58 degrees at 7:12 a.m. That shattered the previous high temperature for Dec. 17, which was 55 degrees, set in 1917.
Unseasonably warm temperatures are not new for the region recently. Boise had the second-warmest November on record, according to previous Idaho Statesman reporting. And this month Boise nearly set a record on Dec. 11, when it was 63 degrees, which tied the 1933 high-temp mark.
According to Boise NWS meteorologist Sophie Adams, December 2025 is currently sitting at the third-warmest on record, with an average temperature of 41.5 degrees. Adams said that if abnormally warm weather continues, which is expected, it could surpass the hottest Decembers on record, which are 1917 and 1933.
The temperatures in the high 50s didn’t last very long on Wednesday, though.
Later in the morning, a cold front coming off the coast of Canada brought in rain and wind, and it quickly cooled off, meteorologist John Smith told the Statesman. Temperatures were in the mid-40s by midafternoon.
In Boise, the peak wind speed was 47 miles per hour at about 10 a.m., according to Smith. Much higher wind speeds were recorded across the Magic Valley and through the state’s central mountains.
There was a high-wind advisory in effect across most of Southwest Idaho, including the Treasure Valley, but it was expiring at about 5 p.m. After the wind dies down Wednesday evening, then Thursday could bring rain mixed with light snow, according to Smith.