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265 FXUS65 KBOU 011138 AFDBOU Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Denver/Boulder CO 438 AM MST Mon Dec 1 2025 .KEY MESSAGES... - Sunshine returns today, but tempered warming and still well below normal temperatures. - Light snow showers return to mountains Tuesday, with high temperatures warming to near normal levels. - Increasing confidence in more widespread snow late Tuesday night and Wednesday, including highest potential for lower elevation travel impacts so far this season. && .UPDATE... Issued at 225 AM MST Mon Dec 1 2025 Snow has exited all but the far southeast portions of the forecast area in east central Colorado in these wee morning hours. Skies were clearing rather quickly from the northwest, outside of patchy low level stratus. Therefore, other than a couple patches of morning fog/trapped clouds in high mountain valleys and in the lower elevations of the South Platte and Cache La Poudre river valleys, we`ll see plenty of sunshine today. Despite the return of sun, high temperatures will still be nearly 10 degrees below normal. The remainder of the forecast remains largely unchanged since yesterday, with a return of light snow showers in the northern mountains Tuesday, and then more widespread measurable snow (finally!) Tuesday night and Wednesday. There was a trend of slightly faster arrival, with snow developing across the I-25 Corridor and adjacent plains late Tuesday night. Thus, the Wednesday morning commute is shaping up to be slow and hazardous, with lingering impacts potentially lasting into the pm commute. Models were fairly consistent with the vast majority of ensembles showing 1-4" snow amounts for the I-25 Corridor and nearby adjacent plains, with the EC ensembles on the higher end and GEFS generally on the lower end. Mountains would get a few inches more while the far eastern plains could still be skunked. && .DISCUSSION /Through Sunday/... Issued at 1234 PM MST Sun Nov 30 2025 Snowfall has developed on schedule in our high country and will continue to increase in the afternoon under a deepening moisture column. Upstream observations so widespread precipitation across the Western Slope, and we can expect travel conditions in our mountains to deteriorate steadily in the coming hours as this migrates eastward. The overall picture through tonight remains relatively unchanged, with some banded snow showers expected to spill into the urban corridor as early as 4-5pm, but mostly into the evening hours. The better potential for these bands will be roughly south of I-70 as described in previous discussions, owing to the more favorable jet streak position aloft and deepest moisture. Most of the lower elevations will receive less than 1", but localized narrow corridors may accumulate 2 or even 3" under the heaviest/most persistent bands, enough for some enhanced travel impacts, and may extend into portions of our southern and eastern plains. Snowfall aside, temperatures have been notably slow to climb, with most of the lower elevations barely reaching into the lower 20`s as of this writing. This trend will carry over into the overnight period, with another cold night ahead bringing lows into the single digits to low teens for most areas. Tuesday`s warming will be modest as the trough axis pushes east, and have trended highs downward slightly keeping temperatures firmly in the 30`s across the plains/I-25 corridor, and 20`s for most mountain communities. It will be an otherwise dry day past sunrise, with a distinct lull in mountain snow and clearing skies across the region. Strengthening westerly flow ahead of a developing trough to our west will reignite the potential for mountain snow showers on Tuesday, with recent runs a little more bullish on accumulating snow potential, particularly for the Park and Medicine Bow Ranges. Amounts should nonetheless be rather minor given still limited moisture. Confidence in the arrival of another storm system on Wednesday has continued to increase with the latest guidance, which favors a shearing shortwave descending into AZ/NM before lifting NE into the plains come Thursday. This path easily generates the highest potential for winter weather travel impacts to the lower elevations yet this season, even if questions remain regarding accumulation amounts. There`s moderate consensus in a period of modest northeasterly upslope flow during the day Wednesday, which would promote quite high (~75-80%) precipitation probabilities for our foothills, Denver metro and Palmer Divide in particular. However, the system won`t lack speed, with its rapid eastward motion being a limiting factor in snowfall potential. Ensemble QPF spread appears quite unimodal and symmetric, generally favoring 0.1-0.3" of QPF for the mountains and I-25 corridor with a small handful of both drier and wetter scenarios. Still time to trend in either direction, of course. As the low merges with the broader synoptic flow Thursday, we look to return to a more progressive pattern with troughing to our north and ridging in the vicinity of the West Coast. The nuances in the pattern can`t yet be discerned, but the door will remain open for the passage of a few shortwaves under northwest flow that would sustain a few windows for predominantly mountain snowfall. With the bulk of the troughing expect to remain to the north, our northern mountains will be most favorably positioned for some additional healthy snowfall during the latter half of the week. This pattern also lends itself to more robust pressure gradient- driven flow and hence stronger winds across the region. && .AVIATION /12Z TAFS through 12Z Tuesday/... Issued at 438 AM MST Mon Dec 1 2025 Sufficient drainage winds are developing, which will keep any threat of fog north of KDEN and KBJC this morning. We do anticipate winds becoming light and variable toward 17Z, before a more northerly component develops. However, fog should have dissipated by then so mostly clear skies on tap for the first half of the TAF period, and then only some thickening high cirrus clouds after about 03Z. Therefore, VFR conditions will persist through the entire period. There is some uncertainty to winds this afternoon as an anticyclonic flow pattern is expected to develop due to northwest winds coming across the Cheyenne Ridge. This would support an earlier turn to east/southeast which could happen as early as 20Z, and as late as 23Z. Then winds turn more south/southwest by 01Z and persist around 10-12 kts through about 17Z-18Z Tuesday. KBJC will have a 50-60% chance of mountain wave interaction with a few gusts around 25 kts after 08Z tonight, so added a TEMPO for that. && .BOU WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ UPDATE...20 DISCUSSION...BRQ AVIATION...20