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338 FXUS65 KBOU 101906 AFDBOU Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Denver/Boulder CO 106 PM MDT Tue Mar 10 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - Gusty north winds up to 50 mph over the plains this evening behind a cold front. - Scattered snow showers for the mountains and rain/snow showers for the northern plains tonight. - Cooler on Wednesday with elevated to critical fire danger at lower elevations near the Wyoming border. - Strong winds and critical fire weather concerns likely (>70% chance) Thursday through Saturday. && .DISCUSSION /Through Tuesday/... Issued at 106 PM MDT Tue Mar 10 2026 Shallow layer of cold air has surged south and west this morning. Making it as far west as the lower foothills (~7000 feet MSL). Temperatures fell into the upper 30s to lower 40s across the Front Range and into the 20s over the far northeast plains. Model guidance did poor job capturing this, with model temperature 2-3 hour forecast off by 20 degrees in some locations. Not surprising, there`s low confidence in the temperature forecast for the rest of today. All the models show west winds mixing down and the temperature shooting up into the upper 60s to lower 70s across the Front Range. Not confident in this, though temperatures are starting to recover. Lowered highs for today, especially across the northeast plains where the colder air is likely to stay in place. As far as the Red Flag Warning goes, plan on canceling it soon unless we see stronger west winds start to spread down the lower foothills and onto the plains. Upper level trough centered near Yellowstone National Park will continue to track southeastward. A cold front associated with this system races south across the area this evening bringing gusty north winds of 40 to 50 mph. Scattered showers are expected to form behind it, most numerous over far northern Colorado where the better lift will reside. For the northern mountains, up to 3 inches of snow will be possible. This system shifts east of the region by Wednesday morning with only a few lingering flurries possible in the mountains. It will be cooler Wednesday behind this system with highs in the 50s over northeast Colorado. Thursday through Saturday, west-northwest flow aloft will prevail through this time range. Warm and dry conditions will occur under this pattern. Highs reach the upper 60s to mid 70s, warmest on Saturday. Relative humidities fall into the teens each afternoon. Saturday will also be the driest day with lower teen and upper single digit relative humidities expected. Flow aloft increases, and is somewhat strong with winds aloft reaching 100 knots. The main jet stays north of the region, but flow aloft is strong enough to bring windy to very windy conditions at times. Strong agreement among the models that a mountain forms Thursday and Thursday night over the foothills. It`s unclear how far east these strong winds spread. We`ve issued a High Wind Watch for the foothills, and also the nearby lower elevations (Zones 38 and 39), mainly for the area near the base of the foothills. Most models keep the stronger winds in the foothills, but this event is just reaching the HiRes model forecast period. Wouldn`t be surprised to see some stronger winds right at the base of the foothills. For the rest of the area, very windy conditions are expected over far northern Colorado (near the Nebraska/Wyoming borders). Channels of gustier winds are also expected across the plains. Decided to issue a Fire Weather Watch for the lower elevations mainly north of I-70 Thursday. Gusty winds will be possible Friday as well with Fire Weather being a concern again. Appears Saturday will be the windiest day ahead of an approaching upper level trough. Widespread windy conditions are expected to develop, with high/strong winds a possibility. This could result in a higher end Red Flag day. Cold front and upper level trough track across the area Saturday night. This will bring a chance for rain/snow to the lower elevations with snow for the mountains. Northwest flow aloft will prevail Sunday bringing cooler temperatures to the area. Snow may continue in the mountains Sunday if enough moisture is present. The mountain snow could even linger into Monday before an upper level ridge takes hold of the weather. A warming trend begins Monday with highs climbing into the 50s over northeast Colorado. For Tuesday, the region sees the full effects of the upper level ridge with temperatures climbing into the 70s across northeast Colorado. && .AVIATION /18Z TAFS through 18Z Wednesday/... Issued at 1238 PM MDT Tue Mar 10 2026 UPDATE: Confidence is increasing that the boundary will make it far enough south to reach KAPA. It`s looking increasingly likely the stronger westerly winds will not mix down, and will be making the same changes to the KAPA TAF that are discussed below for the other TAF sites. PREVIOUS DISCUSSION: Low confidence in this afternoon`s forecast. This morning`s cold front has proven to pack more of a punch than guidance had suggested. This leaves much uncertainty in how the rest of today will play out. The previous forecast called for gusty west winds mixing down with forecast temperatures in the upper 60s to low 70s. The cold front has kept a significant temperature gradient in place across our TAF sites (currently 47F at KDEN, 64F at KAPA), with NE winds continuing to spill across KDEN/KBJC, and gusty SW winds remaining at KAPA. Due to this, it`s looking like there is far greater potential in the gusty west winds mixing down at KAPA, and less likely we warm up enough at KDEN/KBJC (but not impossible). This forecast package comes with some significant changes for today. Guidance has been very slow to catch on to the latest atmospheric changes, and has done little in terms of guiding this morning. Therefore, we have decided that we will be more likely to hang onto the NE winds through the afternoon, with some potential that enough surface heating occurs to allow the stronger westerlies to mix down sometime after the 20Z time frame. Have moved the westerlies into a TEMPO and kept the N/NE winds in the prevailing, but this is still subject to change. A more potent cold front is expected to slide south across the TAF sites between 2-3Z tonight. With this front, a northerly shift is expected with gusts between 30-40 kts and some lower clouds (10-15% chance we see CIG as low as BKN060), but chances for any precip are too low to include in the TAF. If anything were to fall, it would be very light rain. There are some inconsistencies with guidance outputs for after the front. CAMs are showing winds diminishing by 5Z and turning east to southeast, while MOS guidance holds onto the N winds potentially through the afternoon tomorrow. With the CAMs struggling so much with today`s conditions, have leaned more on the MOS for tomorrow`s forecast, but it should be noted that the CAMs do show a second northerly push by 12Z that would align with the MOS. Uncertainties linger into tomorrow afternoon, but the current TAF looks to be a solid starting point. && .FIRE WEATHER... Issued at 106 PM MDT Tue Mar 10 2026 A weak cold front has surged southwest across the urban corridor and eastern plains, reaching about 7000 feet MSL in the northern foothills. It appears the strong west to southwest winds just above the cooler air will not surface, therefore plan on canceling the Red Flag Warning for today. A cold front will bring a strong wind shift to the north this evening with gusts of 40 to 50 mph as the front pushes through. In addition to cooler temperatures and increased moisture, scattered showers are expected to form behind the front, most numerous over far northern Colorado. Cooler conditions will prevail Wednesday behind the front, but breezy north to northwest winds are expected over the northeast plains. Thursday through Saturday is looking like a windy to very windy period under a dry and mild west-northwest flow aloft. Very windy conditions will be possible in and near the foothills as a mountain wave is expected to form. These strong winds are expected to be confined in/near the foothills, but windy conditions will be possible across the plains north of I-70. Windy conditions continue Friday and Saturday with strong winds a possibility again on Saturday. && .BOU WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... High Wind Watch from late Wednesday night through late Thursday night for COZ035-036. High Wind Watch from Thursday morning through late Thursday night for COZ038-039. Fire Weather Watch from Thursday morning through late Thursday night for COZ238-239. Fire Weather Watch from Thursday morning through Thursday evening for COZ240-242>245-248>251. && $$ DISCUSSION...12 AVIATION...9 FIRE WEATHER...12