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468 FXUS65 KBOU 102030 AFDBOU Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Denver/Boulder CO 130 PM MST Sat Jan 10 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - Dry with a warming trend Sunday through Tuesday. - Slight (< 20%) chance of rain or snow across northeast Colorado early Wednesday. - Elevated fire weather conditions possible (50%) across the plains on Thursday and a hints of a cool down by next weekend with 10-20% chance of snow for the mountains. && .DISCUSSION /Through Saturday/... Issued at 130 PM MST Sat Jan 10 2026 Tonight, northwest flow aloft continues with a deep trough over the Great Lakes. It will remain dry with just a few high clouds. Low temps will be seasonably cold but there may be enough wind across the plains to keep temperatures from dropping much below 20. The exception will be across the snowpack from the Palmer Divide east across Lincoln County, where we dropped low temps several degrees below guidance. Sunday will be dry with a building ridge to the west. 700 mb temps should warm to around -1 degC, supporting highs across the plains in the 50s, but cooler across the areas with snowpack across the Palmer Divide and Lincoln County. Highs in the mountain valleys should be in the upper 30s to around 40. Monday and Tuesday will be heavily influenced by the ridge across the Great Basin. It will remain dry at least through Tuesday evening. A slight warming trend is expected with 700 mb temps warming to around +3 degC Monday and Tuesday. Highs across the plains and I-25 corridor should be in the mid 50s to around 60, and the 40s for the mountain valleys. Breezy conditions are likely Tuesday afternoon along the WY border out to the northeast corner, but nothing more than gusts to 25 mph at this time. Late Tuesday into Wednesday all models/ensembles agree an impressive jet streak will dig straight south across the Central U.S. Plains on the backside of yet another deep/strong Great Lakes trough. It will also advect some mid-level moisture into far northeast Colorado. The right exit region of the jet gets really close to the northeast corner of Colorado, and this is the subsident side of the jet streak. Given the strength of the cross jet gradient, we expect pretty strong subsidence. Nevertheless, global ensembles continue to want to hold onto PoPs up to 20%. If any precipitation makes it to the ground early Wednesday across the northeast corner, that would be impressive. Elsewhere, with strong NNW flow at ridgetop, and very little moisture embedded in the flow, it`s not likely to snow in the mountains (though very light snow is possible) or the I-25 corridor. There should be a dry cold front moving across the area on Wednesday which will knock temps back to near normal, with highs in the 40s across the plains (mid 30s under cloud cover and colder air aloft across the northeast corner), and 20s to low 30s in the mountain valleys. Thursday temperatures will moderate with dry northwest flow aloft as the exceptionally strong trough across the Ohio valley continues to move east. Expect temperatures back into the mid/upper 50s across the plains and 40s in the mountain valleys. It will be breezy across the plains though given the strong pressure gradient across the Midwest US, with northwest wind gusts exceeding 30 mph. Elevated fire weather conditions are certainly possible Thursday afternoon across much of the plains. Friday and beyond, model agreement is quite low despite a continuation of northwest flow. So much depends on the evolution of a third, deep, cold trough moving across the northern U.S. later next week. Euro ensemble and GEFS are bleak for any precipitation but several members of the GEFS and Euro ensembles have some mountain snow for Friday along and behind a cold front. The really cold air is more than likely to be east of our area with a glancing blow across the northeast corner. However, even across the I-25 corridor the Euro ensemble mean high for Friday is 40 with a spread of 50-22 deg. GEFS is pretty much identical to the Euro for temps across the I-25 corridor on Friday. Unfortunately for those of us looking for snow across the I-25 corridor or eastern plains, about 1/3 of GEFS have light snow, and 1/5 of the Euro members have light snow sometime on Friday. Pretty bleak. Across the mountains late Friday into Saturday the ensemble output of only marginally higher than for the I-25 corridor, with about half of the members generating light snow from GEFS and the Euro. && .AVIATION /18Z TAFS through 18Z Sunday/... Issued at 1033 AM MST Sat Jan 10 2026 VFR through Sunday with scattered high clouds. The winds are a bit tricky today. ACARS soundings continue to show a very shallow inversion near DEN. If KDEN warmed to 33 or 34 degrees, then we expect NW winds to mix down to the surface. As it stands now, they are several hundred feet off the deck. Thus, going with a transition to NW winds by 1830Z and with continued mixing as temperatures reach 40+ degrees, NNW winds should increase possibly gusting to 20 kt after 21Z. The NNW winds should not last long, as decoupling will reduce them after 01Z. Expect SSW drainage winds 10-14 kts all night long. On Sunday, winds should remain mostly out of the south and under 10 kts after 19Z. Winds will be lighter this afternoon at BJC and APA, and the direction is uncertain. We are leaning towards north under 10 kts at APA after 20Z until going back to drainage after 04Z. At BJC, more than likely light and variable all afternoon but HRRR/RRFS want to go with ENE, and regardless the speeds will be light. There looks to be a push of WNW wind coming off the foothills to BJC after 00/01Z, for now just thinking 28012G20KT for several hours before going to drainage after 06/07Z. && .BOU WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ DISCUSSION...Schlatter AVIATION...Schlatter