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555 FXUS65 KBOU 111856 AFDBOU Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Denver/Boulder CO 1256 PM MDT Mon May 11 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - Summerlike warmth and drier weather this week, with highs in the 80s for the lower elevations. - Warmest temperatures of the week (mid to upper 80s for the plains) on Wednesday and Thursday. - A few afternoon showers and an isolated thunderstorm possible from Tuesday through Friday, mainly across the Front Range mountains and foothills. && .DISCUSSION /Through Monday/... Issued at 1213 PM MDT Mon May 11 2026 The well-advertised ridge across the southwestern CONUS is gradually strengthening, leaving most of Colorado in a warm but relatively quiet pattern over the next several days. We`re well on track to seeing highs in the mid/upper 80s across the plains today, with 12 PM temperatures already in the low 80s at most locations. With dry air overhead (shown well by water vapor satellite), only a few clouds are expected through afternoon and evening hours. A weak cold front is still expected to arrive sometime late tonight or early on Tuesday. The front is expected to bring some short-lived cooling (highs ~5-10F cooler than today), along with a modest increase in moisture. Most guidance develops a narrow corridor of instability across the Front Range during the afternoon hours, and the weak upslope flow behind the front should allow for a couple of weak showers and perhaps a brief thunderstorm despite some capping. Temperatures should quickly warm back up into mid/upper 80s by Wednesday, with those well above normal temperatures continuing into the weekend. Guidance has been slowing warming temperatures on Wednesday, with ~30% of ECMWF ensemble members now getting DEN to its first 90F high of the year. However, statistical guidance remains a few degrees cooler and our current forecast is still just under 90F for most locations. There is also a weak wave working through the region Wednesday afternoon, with deeper moisture aloft and better instability across most of the forecast area. If we`re going to see any convection/measurable precipitation this week, Wednesday afternoon would be the time to do it. Drier zonal flow by Thursday slowly transitions to southwesterly flow aloft by the upcoming weekend. Guidance is generally in better agreement handling the few 500mb shortwaves across western North America in this time period, and generally keeps things quite dry through the rest of the forecast period. The pattern does look like it would turn a little more active by early next week with a couple stronger shortwaves noted in today`s guidance. && .AVIATION /18Z TAFS through 18Z Tuesday/... Issued at 1140 AM MDT Mon May 11 2026 VFR conditions will last through the forecast period. Latest observations near KAPA and KDEN show light and vrb winds. We expect this to continue through at least early this afternoon before eventually becoming NE to E around 21 to 22z. Winds at KBJC are also light currently (under 8 knots), but generally in an easterly direction. KBJC will likely have at least a few hour period of NW winds of 10-15 kts this afternoon/early evening after 22z. These NW winds are not expected to reach KDEN or KAPA at this time. Drainage winds are forecast ahead of the incoming cold front. Winds should stay under 12 knots through at least 10z. The cold front will move through all three sites between 10z and 11z early tomorrow morning turning winds to be nearly due north, first moving through KBJC and KDEN before KAPA. A few lower clouds around 9000 to 10000 ft AGL are possible early tomorrow after the cold frontal passage, but VFR conditions should continue. Winds will be at most between 15 and 20 kts immediately following the cold front, but will then be under 10kts after 15z. By tomorrow afternoon, winds will turn to NE/E once again with only a some sct mid- to high- level clouds. && .BOU WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ DISCUSSION...Hiris AVIATION...MV