National Weather Service Forecast Discussion |
Thornton Weather Forecast Today's Forecast Story |
258 FXUS65 KBOU 182331 AFDBOU Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Denver/Boulder CO 531 PM MDT Thu Jun 18 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - Elevated fire weather conditions in the mountains and valleys today and Friday with critical conditions expected on Saturday. - Strong to severe storms possible across the eastern plains on Saturday. - Scattered coverage of showers and storms on Sunday and Monday. && .DISCUSSION /Through Thursday/... Issued at 220 PM MDT Thu Jun 18 2026 Water vapor imagery shows dry air aloft over our forecast area with northwesterly flow aloft. This has lead to a pleasant day today with mostly sunny skies and near normal temperatures. Ridging aloft will move over Colorado on Friday with weakening winds aloft. The subsident flow will keep most of our forecast area dry tomorrow. The exception will be over the southern foothills and Palmer Divide. There is a weak boundary that will move through tonight and will turn winds to the northeast in those locations which will provide upslope flow. This will allow for a few showers and storms to develop despite the limited moisture. These storms could produce gusty winds up to 45 mph. PoPs were increased in those areas to get a mention of storms in the forecast. Saturday will be an active weather day for multiple reasons. There will likely be critical fire weather conditions across the mountains and mountain valleys due to warm, dry, and windy conditions. Relative humidity will drop to 10-15 percent with gusts between 35-45 mph. Across the plains, there will be moderate south-southeasterly winds that will bring in moisture and low clouds across the eastern plains. Dew points will likely reach the 60s from Limon to Fort Morgan and eastward. Fog will be possible mainly in Lincoln and Washington Counties. A dryline will develop across the eastern plains of Colorado with model guidance mostly showing it near Sterling to Akron. However, in these cases, the dryline and moisture are often farther west than models predict and it could be much closer to Denver International Airport. There will be a shortwave moving across Colorado with moderate deep layer shear between 45-55 knots, and with moderate to high instability around 2,500 j/kg, strong to severe storms are possible. Large hail and damaging wind gusts will be the primary threats with a lower tornado threat. SPC may have to expand the slight risk of severe storms in our forecast area farther westward. Another shortwave trough will be over Colorado on Sunday. Any storms Saturday evening may push moisture westward towards the foothills. Scattered showers and storms will develop again mainly over the eastern plains. Monday will be similar although there will be more zonal flow aloft. It is too early to have an idea about the severe storm chances both days. However, at this time is does appear there will be enough instability and deep layer shear to produce at least a couple strong to severe storms each day. Tuesday and Wednesday look cool with continued rain chances. Temperatures will warm back up by the following weekend. && .AVIATION /00Z TAFS through 00Z Saturday/... Issued at 529 PM MDT Thu Jun 18 2026 VFR through the TAF period. Denver cyclone continues to sit over the metro this afternoon, with the center of it near KBKF. DEN remains in ENE flow with light/variable winds at BJC and APA at the moment. Expect this to continue through 02-03z before the cyclone lifts and drainage flow develops at DEN/APA. A weak front is expected to reach the terminals by about 13-15z on Friday morning, with a shift back to light northerly flow. Winds should then slowly turn towards the northeast during the day with speeds again remaining near about 10kt. && .BOU WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... Fire Weather Watch from Saturday afternoon through Saturday evening for COZ211>214-217-218. && $$ DISCUSSION...Danielson AVIATION...Hiris