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863 FXUS65 KBOU 202019 AFDBOU Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Denver/Boulder CO 219 PM MDT Fri Mar 20 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - All-time March record high temperatures broken on Thursday will almost certainly be broken one or two more times through Saturday. - Heat peaks on Saturday with all time March records being broken by several degrees! A few locations may see 90F Saturday afternoon. - Prolonged elevated to critical fire weather conditions due to record heat and extremely low humidity levels. Saturday is still shaping up to be the most widespread critical day as winds increase. - Brief drop to near normal temperatures Sunday. - Return of unseasonable warmth, potential record heat (>70% chance), and more fire weather concerns again by Tuesday and Wednesday. && .DISCUSSION /Through Friday/... Issued at 145 PM MDT Fri Mar 20 2026 There`s only so much we can write about with the ongoing pattern. A relentless upper level ridge continues to sit over the desert southwest, but will start to flatten later today into Saturday. High temperatures will end up near all-time record highs for March (and, in some cases would be record highs for April!) through Saturday. The flattening upper level ridge will lead to increasing zonal flow aloft... leading to an added downslope component to the low/mid-level flow as those winds mix down late Saturday morning into Saturday afternoon. Mid-level temperatures are expected to warm another ~2C (near +14-15C), which would translate to high temperatures about 5F warmer than yesterday/today. Exactly how much wind mixes down Saturday will determine if we do see a couple >90F temperatures across the plains, and will also have implications for fire weather concerns across the lower elevations. Unfortunately, there isn`t a well-defined signal for this across today`s guidance. The HRRR/RRFS solutions are generally favored in this period... where winds may be slow to develop across the plains but do pick up enough by the mid- afternoon for at least a few 90s across the Denver metro. We`ll see some relief from the heat Saturday night as a cold front pushes across the plains, leading to a more mild (but still above normal) temperature forecast for Sunday. Highs are expected to remain in the upper 60s to low 70s. Guidance has generally backed off on the amount of moisture to work with, with little (if any) precipitation expected across the higher elevations. Ridging will start to build back across the southwestern CONUS by early next week, with Colorado remaining on the north/northeastern periphery of the thermal ridge. Modest west- northwest flow aloft should allow for at least a little added warming from downslope winds... with highs in the 70s on Monday, near 80F Tuesday, and potentially as warm as the mid/upper 80s on Wednesday. NBM probabilistic/percentile data appears to be, somewhat inexplicably, far warmer than the deterministic NBM and most of the available 12z ensemble members. Our forecast lies on the cool side of the NBM forecast, but is probably a little warmer than it should be. There are mixed signals by later in the week. Another shortwave does attempt to impinge on the ridge by Thursday or Friday, with most guidance attempting to push another cold front in Thursday. However, there appears to be a gradual trend to hold onto the above normal temperatures through Thursday. That shortwave may have enough moisture associated with it for a few scattered rain/snow showers across the higher elevations, but ensemble guidance continues to look rather dry through the end of the month. && .AVIATION /18Z TAFS through 18Z Saturday/... Issued at 1155 AM MDT Fri Mar 20 2026 VFR conditions expected for the TAF period. Light winds will turn to the north or northeast this afternoon at DEN and APA. Light winds will continue tonight with drainage flow overnight. Winds will be weak and out of the wst for the majority of the day on Saturday. By the mid to late afternoon, gusty westerly winds will develop at all terminals. Gusts could reach 25 knots at APA and DEN and 30 knots at BJC. && .FIRE WEATHER... Issued at 145 PM MDT Fri Mar 20 2026 Elevated to critical fire weather conditions will continue through this evening, and become more widespread on Saturday. Red Flag Conditions have been observed at the Buckeye RAWS and at the AWOS sites located around the Pawnee Grasslands, and this should continue through the rest of the afternoon hours. As zonal flow increases on Saturday, widespread critical fire weather conditions are expected to develop. Winds will first start to mix down to the surface across the high mountain valleys and Front Range foothills by mid/late morning, before spreading eastward into the I-25 corridor and plains by early/mid afternoon. There is some question as to how far east winds manage to spread, with the I-76 corridor serving as the general cutoff point for Red Flag conditions. A cold front should bring a brief period of improved conditions Saturday night and Sunday, but well above normal (potentially record high) temperatures are expected to redevelop next week. Elevated to critical fire weather conditions will be possible each afternoon, depending on how much wind spreads across the forecast area. && .BOU WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... Red Flag Warning from 11 AM to 10 PM MDT Saturday for COZ211- 213>216. Red Flag Warning until 7 PM MDT this evening for COZ238-242. Red Flag Warning from 2 PM to 10 PM MDT Saturday for COZ238>245- 248-250. && $$ DISCUSSION...Hiris AVIATION...Danielson FIRE WEATHER...Hiris