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193 FXUS65 KBOU 192359 AFDBOU Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Denver/Boulder CO 559 PM MDT Fri Jun 19 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - Isolated showers and thunderstorms possible near the southern foothills, Park County, and Palmer Divide today. - Elevated fire weather conditions in the mountains and valleys today with critical conditions expected on Saturday. - Strong to severe storms possible across the eastern plains on Saturday and Sunday. - Scattered coverage of showers and storms on Sunday, Monday, and most of next week across the plains. && .DISCUSSION /Through Friday/... Issued at 131 PM MDT Fri Jun 19 2026 A cold front dropped south across eastern Colorado early this morning bringing northerly winds and a slight increase inmoisture. Denver ACARS soundings show precipitable water around a half inch with a strong inversion. Expect this to limit precipitation chances to Park County and the Palmer Divide where those locations will have the best chance at breaking the cap. Temperatures are currentlyin the 70s across northeast Colorado and should top out in the lower to mid 80s. A surge of east- northeast winds is expected this evening, originatingfrom the thunderstorms currently over Nebraska. This will increase low level moisture tonight and lead to low clouds late tonight and Saturday morning across parts of northeast Colorado. Warmer temperatures are expected Saturday with highs reaching the mid 80s to lower 90s. This combined with the increased low level moisture will lead to an unstable airmass over the eastern plains with MLCAPE reaching 2000-3000 J/kg. Southwest flow aloft over the easterlylow level will produce good shear as well. Bulk shear (0-6km) reaches 40-50 knots, enough for supercell thunderstorms to form. Very large hail, damaging winds, and isolated tornadoes will be possible. The main threat for the strongest storms is expected to be east of the urban corridor. Dry air will be just to the west, over the mountains and foothills and the moist unstable layer is expected to be shallow across the urban corridor. This could change if the easterly push is stronger and deeper than expected. The main threat window looks to be 3PM to 7PM. After this, the strongest storms are expected to move east of the area. For Sunday, we`ll see a shortwave trough pass north of Colorado during the day. A cold front associated with this will drop south across eastern Colorado during the afternoon hours. The best chance for thunderstorms will be over the eastern plains where the best moisture and instability will reside. A few of the storms over the plains could be severe again as MLCAPE reaches 2000 J/kg. Over the mountains and mountain valleys, dry westerly winds will prevail. Highs are expected to reach the mid 80s to lower 90s across northeast Colorado with the coolest temperatures over the northeast corner. For next week, an upper level high over the US/Mexico border will intensify while westerly flow aloft continues over the Central Rockies. The set up next week will be similar to this weekend with dry air over the higher terrain and easterly low level flow over the plains transporting moisture into the state. Each afternoon/evening should bring a round of showers and thunderstorms. The uncertainty being how far west the moisture and thunderstorm development will be. Highs are expected to be in the 80s most days with Tuesday possibly being the coolest with highs in the 70s. && .AVIATION /00Z TAFS through 00Z Sunday/... Issued at 555 PM MDT Fri Jun 19 2026 VFR conditions are expected through at least about 06z tonight. MVFR to IFR conditions are possible tomorrow morning due to stratus. Winds are currently NE to E at all three TAF sites with only sporadic gusts over 12 kts. This is overall a messy and somewhat uncertain forecast as we progress further out in time. A front/outflow boundary from storms to our east is on track to move through KDEN around 03z to 04z bringing some gusty NE winds and increased low-level moisture. This front could briefly reach KAPA and KBJC before sloshing back to the east as a convergence zone. Winds will turn to the north at KDEN and KBJC as the aforementioned convergence zone moves to the east around 08z to 10z. A Denver cyclone is now likely to develop between 10z and 14z with numerous models (HRRR, NAM Nest, NAM MOS, RDPS, RAP13) now supporting this scenario. The cyclone is expected to shift north throughout the early morning leading to light N to NW winds and likely bringing some stratus to the three sites. We have kept the lowered ceilings at all three sites as a result from about 10z to as late as 17z. There is still a small, but decreasing chance that the low clouds do not make it into the three sites. A pseudo-front/boundary with N/NE winds to north of it and SW winds to the south of it should set up somewhere just south of KAPA tomorrow by late morning and afternoon. Models notoriously mix out and bring NW winds to the sites faster than what usually occurs, so have kept near N to NNE winds throughout the afternoon. As the boundary moves to the north and east tomorrow afternoon, showers and thunderstorms could fire off starting as early as 19z with the highest chances currently expected just to the east of KDEN. Have now included a mention of VCTS for KAPA and KDEN for tomorrow afternoon with gusty winds possible from any outflows. && .BOU WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... Red Flag Warning from 11 AM to 9 PM MDT Saturday for COZ211>214- 217-218. && $$ DISCUSSION...12 AVIATION...MV