National Weather Service Forecast Discussion |
Thornton Weather Forecast Today's Forecast Story |
496 FXUS65 KBOU 281144 AFDBOU Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Denver/Boulder CO 544 AM MDT Tue Apr 28 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - Scattered showers/weak thunderstorms across the plains and light mountain snow today. - More active pattern continues through the week with multiple precipitation chances. - Warmer and drier conditions expected by the weekend. && .DISCUSSION /Through Monday/... Issued at 1113 PM MDT Mon Apr 27 2026 Current radar imagery shows ongoing mountain snow and rain showers/thunderstorms for the lower elevations. Expect scattered showers to continue overnight tonight and into Tuesday morning ahead of an approaching shortwave trough. Tuesday morning will see low temperatures in the 30s across the plains, with areas of patchy fog possible, particularly for the northeastern plains where dewpoint depressions more likely to be smallest. The upper level shortwave trough will trek eastward on Tuesday morning, providing weak QG ascent and associated positive vorticity advection. This and an increase in mid-level moisture will help support another round of scattered mountain snow and rain showers for the lower elevations. Hi-res guidance indicates precipitation throughout the day before decreasing in the early evening as the shortwave exits the region. With some instability over the plains (guidance favors 100-300 J/kg CAPE in the afternoon) can`t rule out a couple of rumbles of thunder and small hail. We will likely get a break in precipitation overnight Tuesday and into Wednesday morning for most of the forecast area with subsidence aloft and surface high pressure sinking into the plains. Temperatures will have the chance to warm up to seasonal values, with the plains possibly reaching the low 60s. Another shortwave trough is progged to be over Colorado by Wednesday afternoon. This will bring yet another round of scattered showers (and mountain snow) with the presence of afternoon instability promoting some isolated thunderstorm activity. A cold front associated with the system will trek across the plains in the evening, bringing cooler air and below seasonal temperatures once again. Some uncertainty remains in the forecast for Thursday and Friday as models continue to resolve an upper level closed low as it travels from Baja California east late this week. Recent deterministic runs now favor a more southerly track of the closed low, with it trekking into New Mexico and Texas by Friday evening. This will result in less precipitation for our forecast area than our southern neighbors. However, ensemble guidance still holds on to measurable precipitation for us, with the GEFS/ECMWF ensembles indicating 60- 70% chance of 24-hr QPF amounts greater than 0.50" by Friday morning, and a 10-20% chance of 24-hr QPF amounts greater than 1.00". Thursday will be our best chance for this precipitation, with upslope flow throughout the day behind the cold front. The southern mountains/foothills and Palmer Divide area is favored for highest PoPs (and highest precipitation amounts) due to better QG ascent associated with the low. If this trend continues, our southern Front Range mountains and possibly foothills may see some travel impacts on Thursday, as snowfall in the high terrain could impact travel across the I-70 mountain corridor. The question remains if we will get additional showers on Friday. Not sure yet, as ensemble members diverge in solutions by then. Although, recent NBM has slightly decreased PoPs on Friday morning for our forecast area. For the weekend, guidance favors an upper level ridge building behind the exiting upper level low. This will promote a more warming and drying trend. As of right now, GEFS shows warmer temperatures than the ECMWF Ens due to the axis of the ridge being over the Rockies, rather than western U.S. like the ECMWF shows. Temperatures could get up to the mid-60s to low 70s by Sunday depending on the placement of the ridge. && .AVIATION /12Z TAFS through 12Z Wednesday/... Issued at 544 AM MDT Tue Apr 28 2026 A moist airmass will remain over the area today. An area of showers will track eastward across the Denver area 12-15Z this morning. A northerly wind shift and ceilingsof 500 to 2000 feet are also expected. After the showers move through, ceilings are expected to climb to 3000-6000 feet. Scattered showers are expected this afternoon, briefly lowering ceilings. There is also a slight chance (~10%) for a brief thunderstorm. Drier air moves in after 00Z Wednesday with ceilings climbing above 6000 feet, and then clouds scatter out by 06Z. The next round of showers and lower ceilings moves in 12-18Z Wednesday. && .BOU WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ DISCUSSION...MAI AVIATION...12