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133 FXUS65 KBOU 291742 AFDBOU Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Denver/Boulder CO 1142 AM MDT Sun Mar 29 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - Well above normal temperatures continue today and Monday. - Critical fire weather conditions becoming widespread Monday. - Cooler by Tuesday with snow in the mountains and a chance of precipitation over the plains. - Potential for a stronger system to impact the region by the end of the week. && .UPDATE... Issued at 300 AM MDT Sun Mar 29 2026 On Monday, we see the strongest winds generally along and west of I- 25 with low (less than 15%) relative humidities in the foothills and plains. Where the stronger winds and lower relative humidities overlap, decided to issue a Fire Weather Watch for the foothills and nearby plains. The approaching shortwave trough increases mid level moisture with scattered high-based showers during the afternoon and early evening. No rain is expected to reach the ground under the showers, but wind gusts to 40 mph will be possible under the microbursts. Relative humidities begin to increase over the mountains and mountain valleys by mid afternoon, so opted to leave them out of the Fire Weather Watch at this time though wind gusts to 35 mph will be possible. && .DISCUSSION /Through Saturday/... Issued at 1135 PM MDT Sat Mar 28 2026 Significant changes are expected as we approach the end of the month. This weekend`s anomalously high/record-breaking temperatures will continue into Monday afternoon before the next shortwave traverses the northern Rockies, and an associated cold front slides south across Colorado Monday night into Tuesday morning. This looks to be the initiation of a more active pattern through the long term forecast period. Starting Sunday, a persistent, flattened ridge pattern will remain in place across the region. Lee troughing will continue to support downsloping winds, bringing another day of record-breaking temperatures, dry conditions, and elevated fire weather conditions to the forecast area. RH is expected to drop below critical thresholds across the plains and southern mountain valleys by the early afternoon, however, our strongest winds are forecast for North Park where RH is expected to remain in the upper teens. Should see some patchy elevated to near critical fire weather conditions for a few hours in the afternoon, but coverage and duration are not sufficient to warrant any highlights. High-based virga showers may develop once again, although slightly less moisture and instability are expected compared to Saturday. Nonetheless, gusty outflows with speeds up to 25-30 mph are possible as virga passes by. Winds are expected to increase on Monday as our next shortwave moves east out of the Pacific Northwest. This will track along the northern tier and cross the northern Rockies in the afternoon and evening. The aforementioned lee trough will continue to deepen as the shortwave approaches, and an associated cold front is expected to drop south across Colorado late Monday night into early Tuesday morning. Ahead of the cold front, one last day of well-above-normal temperatures is expected. With the strengthening winds, critical fire weather conditions will likely become more widespread across the plains, as RH values drop to around 10% for the afternoon. The current forecast has Middle Park reaching critical thresholds, while RH looks to be in the upper teens for North and South Park, so things are more marginal in these areas. Given the warm and dry conditions in the days leading up to this, fuels will be dry and receptive. As a result, might need highlights in these areas despite RHs being marginal. Tuesday will be much cooler with ample moisture to support widespread precipitation across the forecast area. Cross sections show a deep moisture profile by Tuesday morning, with upslope flow up to about 700 mb in place across the plains. Both the GEFS and EPS ensembles show between .15" to .2" of QPF for the plains and up to .5 to .6" for the mountains through Wednesday morning, with southwesterly flow aloft expected to continue bringing moisture into Colorado through Wednesday (PWAT anomalies show values reaching up to 250% of normal on Wednesday). Cold air behind the front will drop snow levels down to which would support mixed precipitation for the plains, but snow is only expected to accumulate in the mountains above roughly 10,000 feet, and as low as 8,500 feet just in Larimer County, but we may see a dusting to a few tenths for some of the lower elevations (NBM probabilities has a 50% chance of .2" or greater for areas along the Wyoming border). Another shortwave is expected to keep precipitation chances through Wednesday, before a stronger upper-level trough drops out of the Pacific Northwest on Friday that will impact the region for the weekend. While there is still time for things to change, current trends indicate that the northern mountains could see up to a foot of new snow between Tuesday and Wednesday, with more possible later in the week depending on the track of the next system. This certainly won`t make up for the large snowpack deficit, but it would allow for at least one more decent ski day before the end of the season! && .AVIATION /18Z TAFS through 18Z Monday/... Issued at 1139 AM MDT Sun Mar 29 2026 Winds should stay west-northwesterly early this afternoon at DIA, then become more northwesterly by late afternoon. Models have southeasterlies in by around 00Z-01Z for a few hours this evening before light drainage winds kick in by 06Z-07Z. I left the VCSH in with some of the models continuing to show weak convection later this afternoon. Precipitation is not expected. There will be no ceiling issues. && .BOU WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... Fire Weather Watch from Monday morning through Monday evening for COZ215-216-238>240-242-243. && $$ UPDATE...12 DISCUSSION...9 AVIATION...66