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972 FXUS65 KBOU 261957 AFDBOU Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Denver/Boulder CO 157 PM MDT Thu Mar 26 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - Much cooler air on the way, with below normal normal temperatures for Friday. - Light showers tonight into Friday morning, mostly concentrated in/near the Front Range. A few snowflakes possible down into the I-25 Urban Corridor. - Temperatures warm to much above normal again for the weekend into early next week. - Pattern change by the mid to latter portions of next week, but highest chances of meaningful precipitation still focused on the mountains. && .DISCUSSION /Through Thursday/... Issued at 157 PM MDT Thu Mar 26 2026 Earlier frontal push this morning was stronger and faster than advertised (consistent model bias here in the High Plains). As a result, we earlier reduced forecast high temperatures by a few degrees although sunshine and mixing is offsetting some of the cold advection and upslope flow. The stronger cold front with temperatures in the upper 30s and 40s behind it is still moving this way from eastern Wyoming and Nebraska, and will push across the plains during the mid to late afternoon hours. That`s when more significant cooling occurs, along with sufficient moisture advection to bring clouds and a few showers. It appears we`ll have upslope deepen to about mountain top, and there is some instability (MUCAPE 100-200 j/kg) and weak frontogenesis. However, as has been the case most of this winter/spring season, moisture profiles are quite shallow. Thus, we expect only light rain and snow showers. Snow levels will gradually lower this evening with cold advection. A few snowflakes are still expected down into the I-25 Corridor but zero accumulation, while foothills should see a dusting to locally 1-2" possible in a couple spots. Also, with the upslope being the main forcing mechanism we`ll continue to have the highest PoPs in/near the foothills. Finally, a smoke plume originating from the Ashby and Minor Fires in the Sandhills of Nebraska has already brought some visibility restriction to areas around Fort Morgan and Akron this morning and early afternoon. We`ve included some smoke in the forecast due to continued advection from the east, although some thinning should be noted with some mixing through the rest of the afternoon and then light precipitation overnight. Some of the light rain and snow showers/drizzle may linger into the morning hours Friday before dissipating with slight drying and daytime heating. This will also aid the stratus breakup for the afternoon. However, temperatures will be rather cool with high pressure locked over the Central Plains and a weak upslope component through the day. Highs are forecast to be several degrees below normal for a change. A quick warmup is in store this weekend, as lee troughing develops allowing downslope flow to resume. At the same time, flat ridging occurs with further warm advection. The downslope means a quick return to above normal temperatures for Saturday, with highs pushing near the 80 degree mark once again. Similar temperatures can be expected Sunday, with a couple records possibly being broken across the area this weekend. Denver`s record for Sunday the 29th is 79F, for example. There is enough heating and lingering moisture for just a slight chance of a light shower or virga each afternoon/evening, but most locations will remain dry. By Monday, the ensembles and operational runs are still indicating a bit of subtropical moisture sneaking up from the southwest, just enough to bring an increasing chance of light showers or even a weak storm to the mountains. We`ll finally get into a more active and precipitation productive weather pattern by late Tuesday or Wednesday as a shortwave or two impacts the region. Moisture will continue to improve in this flow pattern as additional moisture arrives from the Pacific, and ensembles continue to show a change to above normal precipitation anomalies during the latter half of next week. For the plains, it`s still 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. That would only result in very light precipitation amounts for the lower elevations. However, if the storm track is slightly farther south we may be able to tag some upslope with beneficial precipitation (30% chance of QPF > 0.3-0.4"). Considerable uncertainty enters the picture with regard to temperatures as well, with large spreads of 15 degrees F just in the 25-75th percentile alone. Thus, a lot of model variability dealing with surface pressure patterns and frontal locations as well. && .AVIATION /18Z TAFS through 18Z Friday/... Issued at 1149 AM MDT Thu Mar 26 2026 A lot of uncertainty for the near term at all terminals today. A pre-frontal surge arrived earlier today, with NE winds gusting up to 25 kts. Winds have since turned ENE. The actual cold front is progged to arrive at DEN between 21Z and 22Z (slightly later at BJC and an hour later at APA). Gusts between 30-35 kts are possible from 22Z-06Z, although expect a gradual weakening of gusts around 03-06Z. There is a chance (