National Weather Service Forecast Discussion |
Thornton Weather Forecast Today's Forecast Story |
051 FXUS65 KBOU 231126 AFDBOU Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Denver/Boulder CO 526 AM MDT Thu Apr 23 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - Critical fire weather conditions tOday, possible again on Friday with dry and breezy conditions. - Brief period of strong winds possible this morning across the Front Range Foothills. - Unsettled pattern by this weekend with chances for precipitation increasing. && .DISCUSSION /Through Wednesday/... Issued at 1201 AM MDT Thu Apr 23 2026 The pattern over the next several days will be dominated by a strong upper low over Saskatchewan, that remains nearly stationary through Monday or Tuesday of next week. A series of shortwaves will pivot around this closed 500mb low... though a majority of these will remain north of our forecast area until late this weekend or early next week, when we finally see a more favorable setup for precipitation. SPC Mesoanalysis shows that a mid-level cold front is progressing across the higher elevations at the time of this writing, and we should start to see a transition to a brief bora-like wind event through Thursday morning. Cross-sections show a marginally favorable mountain wave setup for a few hours Thursday AM, with cross barrier flow briefly around 40-50kt. That should translate to a few peak gusts of 60-70 mph across the Boulder County foothills, before quickly diminishing closer to noon as any wave amplification breaks down. Though there may be a few rain/snow showers across the high country, the main story of the day will be fire weather. See the fire weather discussion for more details. Friday also looks to be another day of elevated or critical fire weather conditions. While the flow aloft remains fairly modest, a passing mid-level trough and deepening lee cyclone may be just enough for some gustier winds to spread across the lower elevations Friday afternoon and evening. Temperatures will again be mild with highs in the mid to upper 60s across most of the plains. A cold front will attempt to push back into the area late Friday or early Saturday bringing some moisture and slightly cooler temperatures, which should limit the overall fire danger by the weekend. The pattern remains relatively uncertain this weekend into early next week. Another shortwave is expected to drift in from southern California on Saturday, and eventually get picked up by the broader upper low over Saskatchewan by Sunday or Monday. That should lead to one or two chances of widespread precipitation across the region as a deep lee cyclone develops over southeastern Colorado Sunday, before ejecting into the Great Plains by Monday. A secondary, weaker shortwave may bring some additional moisture on Monday. While the shortwave does take a favorable track for northern/northeastern Colorado, guidance has continuously delayed our chances of precipitation. Until we get a good ensemble signal inside ~84 hours, confidence in seeing rain across the plains will be lower than normal, despite what NBM and other raw model means/blends would suggest. There`s higher confidence in getting meaningful precipitation across the higher elevations, though QPF amounts are still up in the air. At the very least, the cooler pattern will continue to limit fire danger through early next week. && .AVIATION /12Z TAFS through 12Z Friday/... Issued at 518 AM MDT Thu Apr 23 2026 Winds have become SSE early this morning but should shift to more SW/WSW by 14z and then more westerly by 16z. Should see gusts from 25 to 30 mph by 16z. There is still some doubt to wind directon by early aftn at APA and DIA. Will probably see some type of Longmont Anti-Cyclone by early aftn which may allow winds to become north at DIA and more NNW at APA. At BJC, winds should stay from the W/WNW with gusts up to 35 mph thru the aftn. Also there could be some virga this aftn with a few weak microbursts as well. For this evening, winds may go back to a more NW/WNW direction with decreasing speeds by 01z. Overnight winds will become drainage by 06z. && .FIRE WEATHER... Issued at 1201 AM MDT Thu Apr 23 2026 Though temperatures will be cooler today, the dry airmass is expected to remain over the area during the day, with minimum relative humidity values falling to around 10-15% in the afternoon hours. Some brief mountain wave amplification may lead to a period of stronger winds in the foothills and immediately adjacent plains late in the morning, but should quickly diminish as we transition to more of a mechanical mixing regime by the afternoon hours. Boundary layer flow isn`t particularly strong, but frequent gusts of 20-25kt appear likely, especially over south Park and along the Cheyenne Ridge. While recent trends suggest winds may end up a bit weaker across portions of the Denver metro/Palmer Divide, there should still be at least a couple of hours of critical fire weather conditions across the existing Red Flag Warning area. Guidance over the past couple of days has trended a little warmer/drier on Friday, resulting in minimum RH values falling to near or below 10% across a large chunk of the plains, southern Foothills, and South Park. However, there still may be periods of gusty winds from the foothills across portions of the plains so have added more zones to the previous Fire Watch. && .BOU WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... Fire Weather Watch from Friday morning through Friday evening for COZ214>216-238>247-249. Red Flag Warning from 11 AM this morning to 7 PM MDT this evening for COZ214-216-238>251. && $$ DISCUSSION...Hiris AVIATION...RPK FIRE WEATHER...Hiris/RPK