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105 FXUS65 KBOU 302037 AFDBOU Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Denver/Boulder CO 137 PM MST Tue Dec 30 2025 .KEY MESSAGES... - Lower elevations remaining warm and dry through this weekend, with minor day-to-day temperatures fluctuations. - Dry and mild pattern in the mountains will be interrupted Thursday afternoon into Friday, with light snow expected. Greatest potential for travel impacts will be in and near the Park Range. && .DISCUSSION /Through Tuesday/... Issued at 105 PM MST Tue Dec 30 2025 The tranquil weather pattern will continue into Wednesday as the ridge axis expands into the Western Slope, pushing highs into the lower 60`s for most of the plains/urban corridor and 40`s for our mountain valleys. With this forecast, Denver is projected to wrap up the month with its second warmest December on record, with other Front Range locations including cities such as Dillon, Boulder or Fort Collins making a run for top warmest December. The mountains remain on track for a spell of winter weather beginning Thursday afternoon and continuing through Friday, as the ridge flattens and allows for a weak wave to advect some increased moisture into the high country. Most of the snow will be orographically-forced, generally limiting accumulations outside of the more favored Park Range, where between 3 and 10" of accumulation is expected. The I-70 corridor will be more hard- pressed to see anything as significant, although minor accumulations will still be capable of impacting travel over the passes. Snow ratios will be on the lower end of what is typical for the mountains given the warmer temperatures, and we may even see more of a wintry mix at times for the valleys during the warmer hours of the day Friday. A weak front Thursday evening/night will brush the plains and allow for slight cooling there, but the impact will diminish with proximity to the I-25 corridor where downslope flow should dampen the cooling effect and sustain above-average temperatures. There`s slim potential for a few drop of rain or a wintry mix across the Cheyenne Ridge with this feature, but with frontogenesis lacking, precipitation potential for the lower elevations will be close to zero during this period. Transient ridging will move in for Saturday, for warm and dry conditions regionwide. That looks to give way to a more zonal flow pattern aloft for Sunday onwards, and increased southwest winds with an approaching modest jet. Ensembles become much noisier at this point with varying indications as far as jet positioning/wind strength, moisture availability etc. Close to or slightly over half favor a return of wetter conditions to our high country (note: not the lowlands), and a similar proportion suggest potential for enhanced downslope winds Sunday into early next week, which could leave the door open to some fire weather concerns under the warmer and drier scenarios (which the GEFS HDWI control member alludes too). Either way, an uncertain pattern past Saturday. && .AVIATION /18Z TAFS through 18Z Wednesday/... Issued at 1014 AM MST Tue Dec 30 2025 VFR conditions to persist through the TAF period. Current light and variable winds will transition to the east by 20-21Z across the TAF sites. Expecting generally light winds through the overnight hours, with only some slight enhancement (10-12 kts) with drainage winds after around 6Z. A similar wind pattern is expected for tomorrow morning, with some uncertainties concerning wind directions for the afternoon as an anticyclone develops. Despite uncertainties with direction, winds are expected to remain generally light (under 10 kts) as high pressure dominates over the region. Guidance currently suggests an E to ESE direction will develop by ~20Z, but this could easily change depending on where the anticyclone sets up. && .BOU WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ DISCUSSION...BRQ AVIATION...9