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583 FXUS65 KBOU 122054 AFDBOU Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Denver/Boulder CO 254 PM MDT Sun Apr 12 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - Critical fire weather conditions expected today and Monday over the southern portions of the forecast area and the plains near the Wyoming border. - Continued above normal warmth Sunday and Monday with a few, mainly alpine late day showers. - The next system will bring cooler temperatures and a decent chance of precipitation to the forecast area Tuesday and Tuesday evening. Some minor travel impacts possible mountain passes. - Another system capable of widespread precipitation looking possible by the week`s end. .DISCUSSION /Through Sunday/... Issued at 242 PM MDT Sun Apr 12 2026 Water vapor imagery shows our next expected weather system currently spinning off the coast of northern California. Another less defined disturbance is visible just on its heels, with guidance showing these features merging as they progress eastward across the Great Basin and into the Central Rockies over the next few days. The extended forecast period looks to remain fairly active this week, with elevated to critical fire weather conditions mixed in with multiple chances for mountain snow and low elevation precipitation. It`s a rather nice day across the forecast area today, albeit a little breezy across the southern foothills, mountain valleys, and along the Palmer Divide and adjacent plains. Temperatures are already in the 70s across the plains and 50s in the foothills and mountain valleys. With the breezy and dry conditions in place, the main concern for today is with elevated to critical fire weather conditions. Today`s Red Flag Warning remains in place until 8 PM for the southern portion of the forecast area as well as eastern Larimer and northwestern Weld Counties. Relative humidities are already in the teens across the majority of our lower elevations and even along the I-70 mountain corridor , so even where winds are expected to remain below critical thresholds, elevated fire weather conditions are fairly widespread across the forecast area. For tonight, southwesterly flow aloft starts to increase ahead of our next approaching upper-level trough. There will be enough mid- level moisture to bring some very light snow shower chances to the northern mountains. Cooler temperatures aloft will start to filter in on Monday as the trough moves much cooler temperatures our way. Gusty southwesterly winds are expected to increase by late morning while relative humidity values drop as low as 10% across portions of the plains. Due to another day of breezy winds and low RH, have gone ahead and upgraded the Fire Weather Watch to a Red Flag Warning for all fire zones except for Washington County where winds will be more marginal. Like today, with low RH values expected to be below critical thresholds for all of the plains, there will be widespread elevated critical fire weather conditions in place, with some brief patchy critical conditions possible to develop outside the RFW areas, so everyone should continue practicing good fire safety. Ensemble trends have shown a bit of a turnaround over the past few model runs, showing an increase in QPF for Tuesday`s expected trough passage, leading to higher confidence in some Advisory level snowfall totals for our mountains. Moisture will start to ramp up late Monday night across the higher elevations, with deeper moisture not expected to make it over the lower elevations until late Tuesday morning, with the best QG forcings and cold front expected Tuesday afternoon and evening. Expect increasing chances for mountain snow through the day on Tuesday, shifting to the plains by the afternoon in the form of rain showers with some scattered thunderstorms possible. The current forecast would indicate the need for a Winter Weather Advisory for accumulations of 4 to 9 inches possible for elevations above 10,000 feet with this system, though will hold off to see what the hi-res models show and monitor the upwards trend for one more model run before making and decisions. For now, it`s safe to say those traveling into the high country on Tuesday should expect winter driving conditions. Warmer and drier conditions are expected behind Tuesday`s weather maker, as a brief period of upper-level ridging looks to develop on Wednesday. Cross sections show little moisture remaining over the lower elevations by Wednesday morning, and with gusty winds possible over the eastern plains as a lee trough shifts eastward, there could be some elevated fire weather concerns for the afternoon. By Thursday, southwesterly flow aloft starts to ramp up again ahead of another upper-level trough dropping out of the Pacific Northwest. At the surface, another lee trough is expected to develop over eastern Colorado. Critical fire weather concerns will be on the menu once again as RH drops into the single digits over portions of the plains, and winds increase over the higher terrain. For Friday and onward, this next upper-level trough looks to bring greater chances for a decent spring system, but much is still uncertain this far out. && .AVIATION /18Z TAFS through 18Z Monday/... Issued at 1142 AM MDT Sun Apr 12 2026 VFR conditions are expected throughout the TAF period. We are currently transitioning out of drainage flow as the inversion has mixed out according to ACARS soundings. There is some uncertainty on the winds for this afternoon. We have kept in WSW/W winds with gusts around 20-25 kts at all three sites starting between 19z and 22z this afternoon. KAPA is expected to see the strongest gusts. There is a small possibility (20-30%) that the stronger winds do not materialize this afternoon. Winds will lighten up this evening and turn to drainage. They are expected to stay at 10 kts or less through tomorrow around 18z to 21z. We expect another transition from drainage to a WSW/W wind tomorrow afternoon. Wind gusts will once again be around 20-25 kts at all three sites starting around 19z to 21z. The onset of these stronger gusts could be an hour or two earlier at KAPA and slightly stronger than at KBJC and KAPA. && .FIRE WEATHER... Issued at 242 PM MDT Sun Apr 12 2026 Today`s Red Flag Warning remains in place until 8 PM for the southern portion of the forecast area as well as eastern Larimer and northwestern Weld Counties. Relative humidities are already in the teens across the majority of our lower elevations and even along the I-70 mountain corridor, so even where winds are expected to remain below critical thresholds, elevated fire weather conditions are fairly widespread across the forecast area. Due to another day of breezy winds and low RH expected on Monday, have gone ahead and upgraded the Fire Weather Watch to a Red Flag Warning for all fire zones except for Washington County where winds will be more marginal. Like today, with low RH values expected to be below critical thresholds for all of the plains, there will be widespread elevated critical fire weather conditions in place, with some brief patchy critical conditions possible to develop outside the RFW areas, so everyone should continue practicing good fire safety. A weather system is expected to bring mountain snow and widespread precipitation to the lower elevations on Tuesday. Despite the increased moisture, we may still see some critical fire weather conditions develop over southern Lincoln County on Tuesday before the better moisture arrives, where wind gusts between 30-35 mph will be possible coinciding with RH at or just below critical thresholds. && .BOU WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... Red Flag Warning until 8 PM MDT this evening for COZ214-216-238- 241-246-247-249. Red Flag Warning from 11 AM to 8 PM MDT Monday for COZ214-216- 238-241-242-246-247. && $$ DISCUSSION...9 AVIATION...MV FIRE WEATHER...9