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782 FXUS65 KBOU 172337 AFDBOU Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Denver/Boulder CO 537 PM MDT Fri Jul 17 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - Hot weather continues through Monday. The highest temperatures will occur Sunday and Monday, and a Heat Advisory has been issued for the Denver Metro/I-25 corridor from 10 AM Sunday through 9 PM Monday. - Scattered afternoon/early evening storms in the mountains expected through Sunday with the plains remaining dry. - Significant monsoonal moisture and cooler temperatures will arrive on Tuesday of next week. The thunderstorms that develop will be capable of producing locally heavy rainfall. && .DISCUSSION /Through Friday/... Issued at 141 PM MDT Fri Jul 17 2026 Visible satellite shows cumulus clouds growing upscale over the mountains this afternoon. Meanwhile, there are fewer clouds over the foothills and western I-25 corridor. Based on this satellite signature and given a similar environment to yesterday, scattered showers and storms are expected once again over the mountains but the chance for showers and storms over the western I-25 corridor is lower today. Storms over Clear Creek and Park Counties will be capable of producing locally heavy rainfall. Given that some areas in those counties received around 1.5" of rain yesterday, there could be some localized minor flooding from some of these storms today. A few storms will make their way into Jefferson and Douglas Counties this evening but are not expected to produce much rainfall there. On Saturday, there will be slightly warmer temperatures aloft with slightly less moisture in the low levels. As a result, there will be less coverage of showers and storms over the higher terrain with isolated coverage expected. Temperatures will be warm again but not noteworthy for this time of year. An upper level ridge will strengthen on Sunday and the easterly flow within the low levels will decrease. With stable conditions aloft, there will be plenty of sunshine across the plains. With 700 mb temperatures around 20 C, highs across the urban corridor will be in the upper 90s to around 100. Downtown Denver, Fort Collins, and Greeley will all have very hot temperatures on the pavement and there will be no relief from the sunshine since afternoon clouds will be limited. Considering that, along with the HeatRisk being at level 3 for the majority of the urban corridor, a Heat Advisory was issued. On Sunday night, the axis of the low level thermal ridge will be over northern Colorado. Low temperatures will be near record warm with lows potentially staying above 70 across much of the Denver metro. Given this, the decision was made to continue the Heat Advisory through Sunday night. The ridge aloft will be strongest on Monday and 700 mb temperatures will warm to around 22 C. A warm start to the day from the warm low temperatures, plenty of sunshine, and subsident flow will lead to a very hot day across the I-25 corridor and eastern plains. The GFS ensembles have a 50th percentile of 101 at KDEN and the ECMWF ensembles have a 50th percentile of 100. It seems reasonable that the KDEN ASOS reaches 100 and downtown Denver could hit 102 or 103. Many other downtown areas will be 101-102. Therefore, the Heat Advisory continues through Monday and will end Monday evening. By late Monday, there will be a cold front that pushes into northern Colorado. This will pool moisture along it and provide forcing for storms over the higher terrain. Some of these storms could produce heavy rainfall and it`s possible some move off the higher terrain onto the adjacent plains during the evening. The front will move to southeastern Colorado on Tuesday with east or southeast winds over northeast Colorado. This will push ample moisture into our forecast area and precipitable water values in Denver will reach 1.25". Strong storms with heavy rainfall are expected across the majority of our forecast area including the I-25 corridor. Precipitable water will increase further Wednesday and Thursday and could be near the 99th percentile for any day in Denver`s history. Scattered strong storms will again produce heavy rainfall. This may end up being a period where flash flooding is a concern and it`s possible there would be a need for Flood Watches. Otherwise, temperatures will lower to near normal Wednesday and Thursday. && .AVIATION /00Z TAFS through 00Z Sunday/... Issued at 537 PM MDT Fri Jul 17 2026 VFR will persist through the TAF period. Remnants of weak convection to the southwest has pushed a boundary through KAPA, and appears this could reach KDEN 01-02Z, but it is slowing so only about a 50-60% confidence of a wind shift to more southerly by then. Otherwise, winds will be more E-SE this evening before winds comply to fairly normal patterns. That means SE-SSW at KDEN and KAPA 03Z-13Z, then SW 13Z-15Z, VRB 15Z-17Z, and then increasing E with gusts increasing to 15-20kts 18Z-24Z Saturday. KBJC will see a more NW wind component during the 03Z-15Z period. No storms or outflow potential will exist Saturday. && .BOU WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... Heat Advisory from 10 AM Sunday to 9 PM MDT Monday for COZ038>040-043. && $$ DISCUSSION...Danielson AVIATION...20