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780 FXUS65 KBOU 072342 AFDBOU Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Denver/Boulder CO 542 PM MDT Tue Apr 7 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - Isolated to scattered showers this afternoon. Precip amounts will be low. Potential for gusty winds due to virga near showers. - Elevated to fire weather conditions over the plains, foothills and mountains parks Wednesday afternoon. - Higher chances for afternoon precip (25-60%) across much of the forecast area both Thursday and Friday. - Unsettled weather pattern Saturday through Tuesday with decent chances of precipitation across the CWA. && .DISCUSSION /Through Tuesday/... Issued at 113 PM MDT Tue Apr 7 2026 Cumulus clouds are forming over the mountains and Foothills as of early this afternoon and are pushing off into the plains. Unfortunately, conditions are very dry across the plains with dewpoint depressions around 30 to 45 degrees across much of the area. This will limit precip amounts and increase the potential for gusty winds from virga and possibly dry microbursts. Based on current and forecast DCAPEs this afternoon, wind gusts could be around 30 to 40mph near any dry microbursts that form. There is a low chance for lightning as well with the activity this afternoon, with the best chance for thunderstorms in our southern counties near the Palmer Divide and South Park. Precip chances will lower around sunset. Conditions are expected to remain mostly dry tomorrow, with a low potential for isolated showers and thunderstorms. Once again, there is going to be a wide spread between the dewpoint and temperature at the surface, leading to the potential for gusty winds around 30 to 40mph with any activity that develops. Winds on Wednesday are a bit tricky. A 50kt 700mb jet is forecast to sit near the CO/WY border Wednesday morning. Winds at mountain top will gust around that 50kt value for a few hours, but winds on the plains are more uncertain. Mountain wave enhancement is not expected with this event, the atmosphere just looks a little too unstable. However, mixing could still bring some breezier winds down to the surface across the plains. Some models are mixing gusts of around 30 mph towards the surface in the Foothills and adjacent plains. This typically wouldn`t be of much concern, but with the dry conditions we`re expecting, these stronger winds would lead to critical fire weather concerns. Another potential wrench in the winds is the cold front Wednesday morning and afternoon. If the cold front is a bit faster, it will cut off those stronger winds aloft, leading to weaker NE winds rather than gusty W/NW winds during the time of minimum RHs. We`ll hold off on any fire weather products for now due to the uncertainty, but we`ll have to keep a close eye on the mixing potential and front for tomorrow. Precip chances start to increase on Thursday, with an active pattern expected this weekend and early next week. Moisture will continue to increase Thursday into Saturday, with PWATs reaching ~200% of normal Friday night into Saturday morning. A cold front will to move into the area later on Thursday afternoon. The added moisture and weak surface convergence along the front could be enough to trigger some scattered showers and maybe a few thunderstorms late Thursday afternoon into Thursday evening. Once again, we`re not expecting any widespread rainfall, but some areas could see up to a tenth of an inch of rain, with most areas seeing nothing to a few hundredths. An upper level low will sit off the west coast of the United States through Saturday, putting us in southwest flow aloft. Little upper level disturbances and additional moisture will move through this flow aloft, bringing additional rain chances for Friday and Saturday. Precip amounts look a little more promising during this time, due to those higher PWATs and potentially convective nature of some of the activity, but much of the area is still sitting around a few hundredths for each round, with higher amounts in more localized areas under storms. For the mountains, expect on and off snow showers each afternoon through the end of the week for locations above 8500ft to 9000ft. Snow amounts will remain low, with much of the mountains staying below an inch or two of snow through Friday. Sunday into early next week holds a lot of uncertainty. Small changes in the potential upper level pattern will have big impacts in our area. And with the models changing between each run, we have little confidence in any one model solution. There is potential for a more potent shortwave to move through sometime late Saturday or Sunday. If this shortwave moves over our area, it will provide decent lift and better precip chances. However, some runs have a much less potent shortwave that moves to our west and north, which would not be as beneficial for precipitation in our area. The next system looks a bit more interesting with the potential for an upper low to approach and move through Colorado early next week. However, this far out, models can change significantly in both track and intensity of systems like this. Looking at model ensembles and NBM probabilities, right now we`re looking at a low chance (~30%) of much cooler temperatures, more significant precipitation amounts, and potentially even snow across the plains early next week. && .AVIATION /00Z TAFS through 00Z Thursday/... Issued at 533 PM MDT Tue Apr 7 2026 VFR conditions will prevail for all terminals through the TAF period. Mid-level cumulus development with SCT-BKN bases 100-120 continues to produce isolated virga and weak to moderate surface outflows, with gusts 20-27 kts. In the immediate term (approximately through the next 1 hr) westerly outflows are expected to prevail for KDEN and KBJC, with predominantly SSW to SE winds in place for KAPA from southerly outflows. Either way, wind directions will be rather variable with inconsistent speeds for most of the terminals through the next 1-3 hours. This mid-level development is expected to diminish 01-03Z, allowing for a graduation transition to prevailing S to SSW drainage flow for KAPA/KDEN, and lighter W/SE flow for KBJC. On Wednesday, daytime mixing should favor development of enhanced WNW winds beginning near 17Z, +/- 1 hour. Pre-frontal winds will see a steady clockwise rotation into early/mid-afternoon, with NW winds gusting as high as 25 kts at times ahead of an approaching cold front. There is still some timing uncertainty as far as the arrival of this front, although the bulk of the guidance favors the late afternoon period, generally 21-00Z. Regardless, the shift to north winds with the FROPA should also be accompanied with a notable weakening in wind speeds, coinciding with diurnal decoupling, with winds continuing to veer to the NE and eventually E through the evening/overnight hours. && .BOU WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ DISCUSSION...AP AVIATION...BRQ