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544 FXUS65 KBOU 061937 AFDBOU Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Denver/Boulder CO 1237 PM MST Fri Feb 6 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - Dry with well above normal temperatures through Monday. - Elevated fire weather conditions expected on Saturday with a Red Flag Warning in effect for the northeast plains of Colorado. - A pattern change is coming next week with multiple chances of precipitation. Best chance for snow will be Wednesday into Thursday in the mountains. Plains are not expected to see significant precipitation. && .DISCUSSION /Through Friday/... Issued at 1237 AM MST Fri Feb 6 2026 Not much change in our weather from now through Monday. Colorado happens to be right in between the split flow regime with a slow moving southern stream bowling ball trough expected to move from offshore of Baja CA today to near the Big Bend area of TX/Mexico on Wednesday. The polar jet of course is much too far north to bring any troughs our way short term. Thus, in between, we will remain very warm and dry into Tuesday. First, tonight, mostly clear skies and light winds across most of the area will result in lows in the 20s across the plains and most mountain valleys (teens for the cold spots), but 30s to low 40s across the eastern foothills and adjacent plains where weak but persistent downslope winds are expected to stay up all night long. Saturday a robust pressure gradient sets up via a low in Nebraska. With good mixing, WNW winds across the northeast CO plains could gust to 35 mph, with maybe stronger gusts (40 mph+) along the WY border north of Wellington. RH values are expected to be close to 15% during the warmest part of the afternoon (and windiest part). Have opted for a Red Flag Warning for the Northeast corner of Colorado in collaboration with GLD who included Yuma County and CYS for the NE Panhandle. Elsewhere across the plains it`s less windy and with a tad higher RH. 700 mb temps are actually not that warm (0degC - +1degC), but the downslope compressional warming will be impressive resulting in highs in the mid 60s from the I-25 corridor eastward. Mountain valleys and eastern foothills should ready the uppers 40s to low 50s. Sunday and Monday will be almost identical to Saturday, but with less wind across the northeast plains and no fire weather concerns either afternoon. The pattern change we`ve been advertising for a while now gets started Tuesday. A northern Rockies short wave trough and another faster moving trough off the coast of central CA attempt to phase sometime on Tuesday. As they do, there should be enough moisture in the west flow ahead of the stronger trough across NoCal to start mountain snow. 40-45 kts of flow near ridgetop combined with steep lapse rates (which become steep late Tuesday) should get the snow going, probably light snow maybe up to moderate for short periods especially across the Park/Gore Ranges and the northern Front Range by later in the day Tuesday. The first wave of snow looks to be forced by moisture form the phasing northern trough, after which there could be lull in mountain snow early Wednesday (but probably still really light snow across the highest peaks/ridges), until the main trough moves eastward. This far out the trough for now is very positively tilted and looks to get sheared out on Wednesday as it moves across Wyoming. For now, just light snow is in the forecast throughout the day Wednesday in the mountains. At the same time on Wednesday, perhaps late Wednesday, a 130-140 kt jet is likely somewhere over Colorado, and depending on the position of the jet, that could bring another uptick in snow across the mountains Wednesday night into Thursday. Models overall are in pretty good agreement with the evolution of the phasing troughs and strong jet, but overall the amount of moisture is not terribly impressive. Ensembles agree it is going to snow across the high country, but at this point the mean QPF is 0.2"ish, and a high end of 0.4" late Tuesday into Thursday for the I-70 mountain corridor. Further north, the mean is 0.3ish" with a higher end of 0.5". If you are looking for some good news on mountain snow, Thursday and beyond looks active for snow, at least light snow. What about the plains next week? The wake of the northern trough should force a cold front across the plains during the first half of Tuesday. The air behind the front looks to be dry, and only a handful of ensemble members generate light precipitation for the I- 25 corridor and eastern plains (3-6 members of the GEFS; 1-4 members of the Euro). Thus, overall chances of precipitation are low and even if it does precipitate, it doesn`t look significant. When you slice and dice it using chance of exceedance, the Euro ensemble has 0% chance of 0.1" through Thursday while the GEFS is also 0%, and the Canadian ensemble has 10-20% chance closer to the foothills and WY border. Suffice to say, even though the forecast has 20-30% PoPs for the I-25 corridor and plains spread across the much of the time window over three days, in reality very light precip is all that would occur and probably for a brief period of time. Wet bulb temps next week are in the mid 30s so p-type is also uncertain if it does precipitate. High temps each afternoon continue look above normal but less so than this weekend, looking for now like low 50s && .AVIATION /18Z TAFS through 18Z Saturday/... Issued at 1040 AM MST Fri Feb 6 2026 VFR conditions are expected through this TAF package. Light winds will continue for the next few hours, before winds start to increase from the southeast this afternoon for KDEN and KAPA. Winds will gust around 20kts from the SSE at KAPA starting around 23Z and continue into the late evening. At KDEN, gusts around 19kts are expected between 02Z and 07Z this evening. Winds will turn towards drainage around midnight for KDEN and KAPA, eventually turning more NW and increasing in speed around 18Z tomorrow. Models are showing a Denver Cyclone developing near/north of Denver this afternoon, impacting winds at KBJC today. Winds at KBJC will be light and variable for much of this afternoon and evening. Winds will turn more westerly and strengthen in the mid morning tomorrow. && .FIRE WEATHER... Issued at 1237 AM MST Fri Feb 6 2026 Elevated to near critical fire weather conditions are expected Saturday afternoon. A strong pressure gradient from a high over the MS valley will induce strong west-northwest winds to mix to the surface during the afternoon hours. The strongest winds look to be confined to along the WY border southeast across Washington County. Expect gusts in the 30-35 mph range, and RH should bottom out at or just below 15%. With drought conditions in place across the northeast corner of Colorado, any fire that ignites could spread quickly during the afternoon. Winds die down quickly with the loss of daytime heating, and RH should rise quickly after 4 PM. && .BOU WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ DISCUSSION...Schlatter AVIATION...AP FIRE WEATHER...Schlatter