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128 FXUS65 KBOU 051922 AFDBOU Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Denver/Boulder CO 122 PM MDT Sun Apr 5 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - Dry through Monday with a chance of light showers late day Tuesday and Wednesday. - Elevated to critical fire weather conditions over the plains and foothills Wednesday. - Unsettled weather pattern to end the week. && .DISCUSSION /Through Sunday/... Issued at 116 PM MDT Sun Apr 5 2026 Northwesterly flow aloft and dry conditions are visible across the region in this morning`s water vapor imagery. A fairly mild day is expected across the forecast area today as temperatures hover just above normal under mostly clear skies. A rather laxed pressure gradient will keep winds nice and light for a welcomed change. There have been a few early morning fire starts along the Front Range this morning that show how susceptible fuels are. Fortunately, the aforementioned light winds will benefit the fire fighting efforts. A backdoor cold front will usher in cooler temperatures for Monday, especially for the northeast corner of the state where afternoon high temperatures will be 10-15 degrees cooler than today`s. A tightening pressure gradient will increase winds throughout the day, but with increasing dewpoints expected with the cold front, RH values are expected to remain above any critical fire thresholds, keeping any critical fire weather concerns at bay. Flow aloft becomes more zonal Monday where it will persist through the majority of the week. A weak shortwave will pass through the southern tier Monday night into Tuesday. While the best moisture looks to remain to our south, we could get a little spillover into our mountains, with a few hundredths to around a tenth of QPF possible trough Tuesday, mainly for the Central Mountains and Palmer Divide, though we could see some very light precipitation over the northeast corner too. With the zonal flow aloft, temperatures will begin to warm on Tuesday, bringing us back up to 5-10 degrees above seasonal norms. An upper-level low will start to slide out of the Pacific Northwest through the day on Tuesday and cross the northern Rockies on Wednesday. Downsloping winds will strengthen as lee troughing deepens ahead of the low, and increasing critical fire weather conditions are expected across portions of the foothills and plains where relative humidities will drop into the low to mid teens. There could be a few hours of mountain wave enhancement Wednesday morning when cross-barrier flow increases to 45-50 kts with northern Colorado on the subsident side of a 60 kt, 700 mb jet max. So far, soundings don`t show an inversion near ridgetop and Sangster output only shows dp/dn values near 150. However, the RRFS does show a few hours of 60-70 mph wind gusts for our typical windier foothills locations of Boulder and Larimer Counties in the morning, with some fingers of 30-40 mph westerly gusts channeling their way across the I-25 corridor and Cheyenne Ridge through the afternoon. We will likely need some fire highlights, but will have a better idea of what we are looking at once more hi-res guidance comes into play. Mid-level moisture should increase enough to bring some light precipitation to the mountains in the afternoon, and a cold front stemming from the low could bring some light precipitation to the plains Wednesday evening. For the end of the week, mid- and upper-level moisture will begin to increase as flow aloft transitions to the southwest ahead of our next approaching trough. This will bring better chances for more widespread precipitation across the forecast area through the weekend. && .AVIATION /18Z TAFS through 18Z Monday/... Issued at 1156 AM MDT Sun Apr 5 2026 VFR conditions through the TAF period. Overall light winds through tomorrow (