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109 FXUS65 KBOU 130627 AFDBOU Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Denver/Boulder CO 1127 PM MST Thu Feb 12 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - Brief shot of snow in the mountains late Friday and Friday night with light rain showers over most of the plains. - Dry with above normal temperatures on the weekend. - Elevated to critical fire weather conditions Park County on Sunday, then over most of the plains much of next week. && .DISCUSSION /Through Thursday/... Issued at 1127 PM MST Thu Feb 12 2026 Area radars are indicating scattered light rain showers, mainly over the northern half of the CWA`s plains. The showers are dissipating as they move east. The northern border counties actually have dew point readings in the mid 30s F right now. Some places may actually be getting a few hundredths of measurable rain! There are also some light snow showers in the mountains at present. The CAMs keep the scattered showers going over the CWA until about 07Z-09Z tonight. Southwesterly flow aloft will decrease overnight and on Friday as an upper trough moves eastward towards Colorado. This trough moves across the CWA Friday night into Saturday morning bringing a quick shot of precipitation to the CWA. A brief period of deep moisture accompanies the trough Friday afternoon and evening for most of the CWA, especially over the mountains. There is limited synoptic scale energy with the trough on the QG Omega fields, with the best energy still progged south of Colorado. There is little to no cold air advection for the CWA. Cross sections indicate virtually no alpine orographic snowfall enhancement as mountain top winds are very light and due northerly in direction. So, there will be a brief period of light to moderate snow anywhere from 2 to 6 inches. The highest amounts look to be in zone 34. Expected snowfall amounts do not warrant any highlights. Over the plains, the trough will bring likely pops for all but the northeast corner, mainly just Friday evening, decreasing after midnight. It looks warm enough for it to all all rain. There is upper ridging west of the CWA early on Saturday with moderate northwesterly flow aloft. The ridge axis is over Colorado by Saturday night into Sunday. Moisture is sparse Saturday into Saturday night, then some upper level moisture moves in through Sunday night. It will be dry. With the warming expected on Sunday, fire weather conditions will become elevated, especially over Park County by afternoon. Temperatures continue to stay above seasonal normals Friday and Saturday with highs in the lower 50s to 60 degrees over the plains. On Sunday, readings warm further with highs in the lower to mid 60s. For the later days, models have southwesterly flow aloft dominating Monday through Wednesday. This flow becomes quite strong from Monday night through Wednesday with jet level speeds as high at 170 knots. The flow aloft weakens considerably on Thursday as upper troughing approaches from the west. There is plenty of moisture around Monday, but mostly aloft. Cross sections show low level moisture increasing in the mountains and significant mountain top winds Tuesday and Wednesday with snow a good bet both days. Even though wind decrease on Thursday, there still looks to be a chance of alpine snow. Over the plains, models continue to show elevated to critical fire weather conditions during the afternoon hours all four days, Monday through Thursday. Humidity levels drop below 20 percent during the afternoon hours each day and strong west and southwesterly winds are progged. Tuesday, especially is of concern, where models are showing wind gusts up to 50 mph by afternoon over the plains. Temperatures will continue to be well above seasonal normals Monday and Tuesday, cooling a bit Wednesday and Thursday. The plains are dry all four days. && .AVIATION /06Z TAFS through 06Z Saturday/... Issued at 1053 PM MST Thu Feb 12 2026 Rain showers just north of the Denver area are expect to move off over the next few hours, by 09Z. Dew points where it has rained to the north of Denver are in the mid to upper 30s. Where it hasn`t rained dew points are in the mid to upper 20s. Expect the threat for fog to stay north of DEN, with FNL and GXY possibly seeing fog 09-15Z. Winds at DEN and APA are expected to turn south around 09Z and should pull in drier air to prevent fog from forming. However, if winds stay a northerly component fog will be possible. For now, handled the possibility for fog with few001 in the TAFs. VFR conditions are expected through Friday afternoon (as long as there is no morning fog). Light south winds turn to the north after 18Z. The next storm system moves into the area towards 00Z Saturday with ceilings lowering and showers forming. Rain showers are expected across the Denver area 00-06Z Saturday with ceilings falling to 1000 to 3000 feet. Drier air moves in 06-12Z with VFR conditions expected by 12Z Saturday morning. && .BOU WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ DISCUSSION...66 AVIATION...12