A gust of wind kicks up fresh snow as a vehicle travels on Point Woronzof Drive in Anchorage on Sunday, Dec. 28, 2025. (Bill Roth / ADN)
PALMER — The latest in a series of significant windstorms hammered Mat-Su on Monday, leaving hundreds without power and reports of scattered damage.
The storm marks the fourth weekend storm to bring powerful sustained winds and hurricane-force gusts to the region since early December. Damage from the first storm, which began on Dec. 6, prompted Gov. Mike Dunleavy to issue a disaster declaration that the governor’s office extended in mid-December.
The wind was gusting to nearly 80 mph at Palmer’s airport just before 7 a.m. Monday. Parts of Anchorage also saw gusty winds, with a 32 mph gust reported Monday morning at Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport.
A series of wind-triggered power outages started Sunday morning around Palmer and Wasilla and continued Monday. As of just before 7 a.m., a Matanuska Electric Association outage map was reporting just over 1,500 members out, mostly in Talkeetna.
There were scattered reports of damage and structure fires over the weekend, including at least one flipped semi-truck trailer.
A National Weather Service high wind warning for the lower Matanuska Valley remains in effect until 9 p.m. Monday.
“Winds continue to gust in excess of 60 mph across much of the Matanuska Valley this morning,” the agency said in an update early Monday. High winds are expected to continue through midmorning and gradually diminish through the day but not die down altogether until early Tuesday morning, the warning said.
The so-called Bora winds originate when super-chilled air over Interior Alaska gets funneled down the Matanuska River Valley. Parts of eastern Alaska and the Yukon are experiencing a deep and prolonged cold snap.