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829 FXUS65 KBOU 252349 AFDBOU Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Denver/Boulder CO 549 PM MDT Wed Mar 25 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - Another unseasonably warm day Thursday with locally critical fire weather conditions, but cooling and gusty northeast winds behind an afternoon cold front Thursday afternoon. - Some light precipitation Thursday night into Friday morning. Much cooler. - Temperatures warm well above normal again for the weekend into early next week. - Signs of a pattern change by the mid to latter portions of next week, but highest chances of meaningful precipitation confined to the mountains. && .DISCUSSION /Through Wednesday/... Issued at 211 PM MDT Wed Mar 25 2026 Summer warmth in full force across the forecast area this afternoon, with record highs falling left and right and approaching all time March record highs once again. For tonight, we`ll see another unseasonably warm night with some locations at the base of the foothills potentially staying in the 60s once again. That just shows how anomalously warm this airmass is, when nighttime lows still exceed our normal max temperatures (today`s normal is 59F in Denver). Most other plains locations will see mid 40s through the 50s however, with a little more pronounced inversion. Even those inversions will be quite shallow though and thus expect another quick warmup Thursday ahead of a cold front. We`re still uncertain about the timing of the front, although it appears we could see a weak pre-frontal shift to the north or northeast in the morning across the plains, followed by the real cold front during the afternoon. Given the shallow inversions to start the day, we`ve bumped up the high temperatures from previous forecasts which now pushes us to record or near record highs across the mountains and along the I-25 Corridor. Denver will be pushing up against the daily record (and old monthly March record of 84F) set in 1971, so the chances there are rather low (45 mph possible with the front. Winds settle down overnight, but with mid level instability, upslope, and enough moisture advection we`ll actually have a chance of light showers especially in/near the Front Range and I-25 Corridor. These don`t look significant, but at least a small 20-40% chance of a tenth of an inch liquid equivalent in/near the foothills. Temperatures would turn cold enough for a dusting of snow potential in the foothills and even a few flakes possible on the adjacent plains by late Thursday night and Friday morning. Friday will be a much cooler day, with high temperatures likely staying a few degrees below normal for a change. That cooling will be very short lived as lee troughing develops by the weekend and warm westerly flow dominates our weather under a flat ridge. Highs are expected to rise back into the lower 80s across the I-25 Corridor and plains by Sunday. Mountain areas will also warm again, continuing the melt of our already depleted snowpack. For those looking for a pattern change, the various ensembles continue to point toward more troughiness, cooler temperatures, and a better chance of more meaningful precipitation for the middle and end of next week. It starts benignly with just a hint of subtropical moisture and a few light showers starting by Monday and Tuesday, mainly in the mountains. There is agreement that more beneficial precipitation arrives for the mountains by Wednesday and Thursday, as ensembles for a change show above normal precipitation anomalies during the latter half of next week. For the plains, it`s more uncertain as we`ll be on the edge of the storm track. We are more likely to be sheltered by the mountains (~70% chance) due to southwest flow aloft, but if the storm track is slightly farther south we may be able to tag some upslope with beneficial precipitation (30% chance). Fingers crossed for those that want a change back to spring. && .AVIATION /00Z TAFS through 00Z Friday/... Issued at 539 PM MDT Wed Mar 25 2026 VFR conditions through the TAF period. A boundary is currently moving through APA and DEN, transitioning winds from light and VRB to SE quicker than guidance anticipated. Expect light SE to E winds for the next hour or so, before a more prominent boundary will push slightly stronger SE winds to both terminals (generally below 15 kts). Drainage winds return around 05/06Z tonight. Some uncertainty with winds tomorrow as guidance still tries to hone in on a specific time for the cold front. As of right now, it looks like the front could arrive at DEN anytime between 21Z and 02Z (BJC and APA will be an hour later). The timing of the front will determine how winds behave beforehand. With an earlier timing of the front, expect a light (