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243 FXUS65 KBOU 030515 AFDBOU Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Denver/Boulder CO 1115 PM MDT Tue Jun 2 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - Thunderstorm chances will continue on Wednesday with isolated severe storms, however, locally heavy rain will be possible. - Trending warmer and drier for Thursday and Friday with only a slight chance of thunderstorms. - Afternoon high temps to reach the 90s across the plains by the end of the week and into the weekend. && .DISCUSSION /Through Tuesday/... Issued at 205 PM MDT Tue Jun 2 2026 Water vapor imagery shows a high amplitude ridge over the Central CONUS with a broad upper-level low situated over the Northern Rockies. This is keeping southwesterly flow aloft in place over Colorado this morning. At the surface, enhanced south/southeasterly winds have kept elevated low-level moisture flowing into eastern Colorado overnight, with surface dewpoints currently in the 50s across the plains. Additionally, at the base of the aforementioned low, a shortwave is currently moving across northern Utah and expected to move into western Colorado by this evening. We are looking at another round of thunderstorm potential this afternoon with the possibility for a few stronger to severe storms if temperatures can warm enough to overcome a fairly decent cap (ACARS soundings currently shows 213 J/kg of CIN still in place at ~12:30PM). These storms do not look to be as long-lived or as robust as what we saw across the metro area yesterday, but MLCAPE between 1000-1500 J/kg, steep mid-level lapse rates, and 0-6km Bulk Shear between 35-40 kts expected through the afternoon would support some bigger (1-2") hail potential if we can tap into the greater instability. So far, storms that have developed over the higher terrain have been quickly diminishing as they move eastward over the lower elevations, which is expected to continue while the cap remains in place. With this morning`s cloud cover keeping lower clouds (and temps) over the Palmer Divide northward into the Denver area, it will take some extra effort for surface heating to reach the convective temp. It should be noted that the SPC does have the majority of our lower elevations in a Marginal Risk (1/5 risk level) for severe hail and wind potential. Due to this morning`s cloud cover, have lowered today`s high temps by a few degrees, mainly for areas along and north of the Palmer Divide, but we should still see 80s across a large majority of the lower elevations this afternoon. If convection fails to overcome the cap this afternoon, the aforementioned shortwave moving this way will bring another shot at some evening showers or weaker storms as it brings an uptick in PVA to our region through around midnight tonight. For Wednesday, the upper-level low to our north is expected to progress eastward across the Northern Rockies that will turn flow aloft to a zonal pattern over Colorado. By the afternoon, a convergence zone/dryline is expected to develop associated with a surface low along the lee of the Rockies, with robust dewpoints on the east side and much drier on the west side. Looks like convection is expected to develop along this line, but there are some uncertainties on its exact location (HRRR shows a more eastern line, NAMNST western, and RAP splits the difference). Either way, expecting some showers and storms to develop over the higher terrain by early afternoon and move eastward across the plains and merging into more of a linear mode with storms initiating along the aforementioned convergence zone. While the more robust storms are expected to stay to the north and east of Colorado, can`t rule out a few stronger to severe storms developing, with the better chances being for areas closer to the KS/NE border where the better instability and moisture is expected, but with DCAPE values expected to reach over 1200 J/kg for areas along the I-25 Corridor, can`t rule out some severe gusts occurring in these locations. Afternoon high temps are expected to be in the 80s across the plains, 70s for the mountain valleys. By Thursday, flow aloft will remain generally zonal as we are under weak ridging. A brief warming trend is expected through the weekend, with temperatures expected to warm into the mid 90s by Saturday afternoon. The aforementioned ridge currently over the Central CONUS will shift eastward keeping mid-level Gulf Moisture wrapping around and into the Central Plains through the week, but pushing out of eastern Colorado after Thursday. We should still see enough moisture to allow for typical diurnal convection over the higher elevations on Thursday, before drier conditions are expected for Friday and into the weekend. && .AVIATION /06Z TAFS through 06Z Thursday/... Issued at 1109 PM MDT Tue Jun 2 2026 There have been a few microbursts late this evening due to high based showers. Have left in a prob30 for APA until 07z to account for this. Otherwise VFR conditions overnight. Winds will become southerly by 07z and then transition to more SSW by 10z. On Thu, winds will gradually become N or NNE by 17z. Sct showers and tstms will be possible between 20z and 00z with brief gusty winds up to 40 mph. Tstm activity should decrease after 00z with winds becoming SSE. && .BOU WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ DISCUSSION...9 AVIATION...RPK