National Weather Service Forecast Discussion |
Thornton Weather Forecast Today's Forecast Story |
029 FXUS65 KBOU 191147 AFDBOU Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Denver/Boulder CO 547 AM MDT Tue May 19 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - Near freezing temperatures and frost/freeze highlights for most of the plains through 8am. - Unsettled Tuesday through Friday with scattered to numerous showers and a few storms, most numerous in/near the Front Range. - Warming and drying trend for the weekend. && .DISCUSSION /Through Monday/... Issued at 146 AM MDT Tue May 19 2026 Scattered drizzle and light showers will continue throughout the overnight period, clearing by the late morning. We do still have some snow showers in the northern Front Range as well, that will likely last into the early morning. Temperatures as of 1:30AM are near freezing for the Palmer Divide and in the mid to upper 30s for much of the plains. Thick low level clouds will make it hard for temperatures to cool significantly, but the Freeze Warning and Frost Advisory still look to be on track. The forecast for this work week looks unsettled and cooler than normal. An upper level trough is forecast to sit just off to our west through Thursday. Upper level disturbances will move through the flow aloft, providing some ascent. Additionally we`ll be sitting under the right entrance region of the jet today and Wednesday, providing another source of lift for the area. With the upper level support and surface moisture, we`ll have rain chances for much of the area with snow chances for the higher mountains elevations. We`ll see higher moisture for Wednesday, which will allow for slightly better coverage of showers, higher precip amounts, and potentially some instability for thunderstorms. Surface return flow on Thursday will bring increased moisture, with dewpoints increasing into the 40s and 50s for the afternoon. Higher moisture and increased instability will combine with strong low level lapse rates and decent shear to provide a chance for a few strong to severe thunderstorms across the plains Thursday afternoon and evening. A cold front is forecast to move into northern Colorado sometime late Thursday into early Friday. If that front ends up moving through more Thursday evening rather than Friday morning, it could act as a trigger for storms, potentially increasing storm coverage. The upper trough, which is a major player in our rain chances for the week, is finally forecast to move over the area and to the east overnight Thursday through Friday morning. However, models are showing a secondary weaker trough following the original, which could bring us another day of scattered showers for Friday. Temperatures will remain below normal for Friday thanks to the front and cloudy conditions. Storms will be less likely for Friday compared to Thursday due to the more stable airmass following the overnight front. Upper level ridging begins to build over the area Saturday into early next week, allowing temperatures to rise back above normal by late this weekend. && .AVIATION /12Z TAFS through 12Z Wednesday/... Issued at 522 AM MDT Tue May 19 2026 Light drizzle will continue near the TAF sites for a couple more hours, before it clears out. Ceilings will remain IFR to MVFR through the morning, with occasional LIFR CIGs at KAPA. Ceilings will rise to around 3000ft to 5000ft this afternoon, before CIGs start to drop again as rain moves into the area. Scattered showers will return in the late afternoon through late evening. The highest coverage of rain looks to be between 06Z and 10Z Wednesday, but rain could impact the terminals off and on starting around 21Z and continuing through Wednesday morning. Winds will generally remain below 12kts today. && .BOU WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... Frost Advisory until 8 AM MDT this morning for COZ038-042>051. Freeze Warning until 8 AM MDT this morning for COZ041. && $$ DISCUSSION...AP AVIATION...AP