National Weather Service Forecast Discussion

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975
FXUS65 KBOU 120826
AFDBOU

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Denver/Boulder CO
226 AM MDT Tue May 12 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.

- Elevated fire weather conditions possible for portions of the
  mountain valleys and areas off the Cheyenne Ridge on Thursday.

&&

.DISCUSSION /Through Monday/...
Issued at 223 AM MDT Tue May 12 2026

Current surface observations shows the cold front entering
northern Colorado, and will continue passing through the forecast
area before sunrise. This will lead to slightly `cooler`
temperatures across the region for Tuesday. Forecasted highs will
be in the high 70s. Behind the front, mid-level moisture will be
advected into the region, and with upslope flow a few isolated
showers are possible for the foothills in the afternoon (20-30%
chance). Hi- res guidance shows DCAPE values reaching up to
1500-1600 J/kg, so strong outflow winds associated with any high-
based thunderstorm are possible.

Temperatures will warm back up to the high 80s on Wednesday as the
axis of the mid-level thermal ridge shifts east over Colorado.
Recent ensemble guidance continues to trend warmer with high
temperatures, with GEFS and ECMWF ensembles showing 89F/90F as the
max temperature at KDEN. This is further supported with NBM and
other hi-res guidance indicating the airport reaching 90F. If we
do get our first 90F degree day of the year, it will tie the
current daily temperature record set in 1915. With the passage of
a weak shortwave in the afternoon and lingering moisture with
increasing instability, looks like there are better chances for
scattered convection for the Front Range and adjacent plains into
the early evening.

Above normal temperatures are forecasted to last through the
weekend, although temperatures will be slightly cooler than
Wednesday (but still in the low-to-mid 80s) as the thermal ridge
continues shifting east. Guidance is now in better agreement keeping
the forecast area mostly dry (aside from a few isolated showers for
the Front Range and adjacent plains) as upper level disturbances
trek just north of Colorado. With zonal flow aloft towards the end
of the week, cross-barrier winds could gust up to 40-50 mph at times
in the higher elevations, and 30-40 mph off the Cheyenne Ridge. With
low relative humidity values between 10-15%, elevated to critical
fire weather conditions are possible on Thursday.

A pattern shift is looking likely by the beginning of next week as
models try to resolve an upper level disturbance passing through the
region, bringing measurable precipitation for the forecast area.
There is some uncertainty with the evolution of the shortwave,
however NBM has 20-40% PoPs for Monday, which seems reasonable at
this time.

&&

.AVIATION /06Z TAFS through 06Z Wednesday/...
Issued at 1133 PM MDT Mon May 11 2026

VFR conditions through the TAF period. Expect drainage winds to
continue at all terminals overnight, with APA becoming light and
VRB at times. Guidance indicates a slightly later time of arrival
with the cold front, closer to 11Z rather than 10Z. With the
passage of the front, expect winds to transition to the NE,
however stay below 15 kts.

For tomorrow easterly winds will take place, with winds
strengthening to 10-15 kts by 21Z. There is a low chance (

NWS BOU Office Area Forecast Discussion