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371 FXUS65 KBOU 101844 AFDBOU Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Denver/Boulder CO 1244 PM MDT Fri Jul 10 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - Isolated to scattered showers and a few thunderstorms with gusty winds into early this evening. - Prolonged period of hot temperatures arrives Saturday, lasting through most of next week. - Hints of monsoon moisture reaching the high country by late next week, but considerable uncertainty depending on positioning of upper level ridge. && .DISCUSSION /Through Friday/... Issued at 1244 PM MDT Fri Jul 10 2026 One last somewhat active weather day before a prolonged dry and hot spell sets in. Isolated to scattered convection is developing along the Front Range early this afternoon. These showers and storms will be moving generally east-southeast across the plains through late afternoon and early evening, before finally ending in the Lincoln County area closer to 10 pm. There is some low level moisture advection into east central Colorado on the heels of easterly winds, so MLCAPE should build toward around 1000 J/kg. Thus a couple strong to severe storms would be possible southeast of Denver, currently where a Marginal Risk of severe storms is in place from SPC. On Saturday, the upper level ridge that will dominate our weather for the week ahead will start to build northward. That means hotter temperatures and drier weather. Isolated high based showers/virga or a lone storm is still possible in the afternoon due to strong diurnal heating, but these should be confined to the Palmer Divide and Park County area as other areas remain drier. High temperatures will warm several degrees from those observed today as the heat dome builds in. High temperatures are expected to climb into the 90s across almost all of the plains, with the hottest readings (upper 90s) along the I-25 Urban Corridor into Greeley. Heat will remain the main concern through much of the upcoming week. There is strong model agreement that the anomalously strong upper high (500 mb heights near 601 decameters, or ~3 standardized anomalies) builds from Wyoming into North & South Dakota. The highest 850 mb temperature anomalies are still forecast to stay well to our north, while the heart of the mid level thermal ridge stays off to our north and west. As ironic as this sounds, we`ll have weak "cool" advection across the plains with deep southeast flow in place. By all means, that does not suggest we will be cool, but instead we won`t be approaching all time record highs east of the Rockies and will also likely stay a couple degrees shy of daily records. However, the same can`t be said for our high mountain valleys west of the Front Range. Those locations will be underneath the mid level thermal ridge and also have a downslope component to aid compressional heating. Thus, near all time record highs can be expected at least early this coming week for places like Dillon (89F), Kremmling (93F), and Grand Lake (88F). With regard to potential highlights, highs are expected to hold in the upper 90s across most of the plains and I-25 Corridor, so we`ll at least be approaching Heat Advisory conditions by Monday. Skies will be all but clear, so sunshine will add to the heat load/ component. However, at the same time decent radiational cooling and recovery is expected overnight. There is some uncertainty on those cooler temperatures however, where enhanced drainage winds could hold in this southeast flow regime - especially for the south/east parts of metro Denver. The only, and slight, chance of an afternoon shower/storm would be over the Park County area in this flow regime Sunday into early next week. Some models show a little mid level moisture into the mountains as early as Wednesday, with a further increase of monsoonal moisture building under/just west of the ridge axis through late next week. However, we are uncertain as to whether or not that ridge retrogrades too much and shunts the deeper monsoonal moisture further to our west. So, something to keep an eye on as wherever the plume does shift should see a significant uptick in daily showers/storms and chances for wetting rains. For now, it appears that stays mostly west of the Front Range until potentially the following weekend. Until that changes, hot/mainly dry weather will prevail given this monster of a ridge. && .AVIATION /18Z TAFS through 18Z Saturday/... Issued at 1117 AM MDT Fri Jul 10 2026 VFR conditions will prevail for all terminals through the TAF period. Winds have begun to shift to the NE and will take on an increasingly easterly component through mid to late afternoon. Primary concern today remains the potential for high-based convection. The window has shifted slightly later, focused between 23Z and 03Z this evening, with the highest chances of impacts to KDEN between 01-03Z. Confidence in true TSRA impacts is lower than that for outflow winds (~30% vs 50-60% respectively). Winds will swing to the southeast this evening before settling into drainage flow for the overnight period. && .BOU WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ DISCUSSION...20 AVIATION...BRQ