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150 FXUS65 KBOU 251130 AFDBOU Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Denver/Boulder CO 530 AM MDT Wed Mar 25 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - Record heat for Wednesday. We may approach or tie monthly record highs set just last week. - Elevated to locally critical fire weather conditions, mainly on Wednesday. - A cold front arrives sometime Thursday, with the coolest day on Friday. - Temperatures warm well above normal again for the weekend into early next week. && .UPDATE... Issued at 423 AM MDT Wed Mar 25 2026 Consistent downslope flow has kept calm winds at bay and is sustaining exceptionally warm conditions through the current hour across the Front Range urban corridor, with temperatures hovering between 65-74 degrees along the Hwy 93/US-36 corridors as of 4:30AM. Have adjusted temperatures upward for today, including a slight upward nudge in daytime highs given the warm start and potential for relatively late (~3-4pm) development of increased mid-level cloud cover. If we`re able to warm up fast enough before this occurs, all- time March records will be within reach for some locations. The latest suite of guidance has put a pause on the acceleration of Thursday`s cold front or even slowed it, thus providing a greater opportunity for temperatures to warm more readily across the southern half of our forecast area. Thus, have also modestly increased high temperatures for Thursday for the I-70 and I-25 corridors in particular. && .DISCUSSION /Through Tuesday/... Issued at 1112 PM MDT Tue Mar 24 2026 Upper level high centered along the US/Mexico border will dominate the weather pattern Wednesday with record highs expected for most locations. Skies have cleared some over the past few hours, but the next batch of high clouds over the Great Basin will move over the area towards sunrise Wednesday morning. These clouds move off around midday, then during the afternoon hours we see an increase in mid level clouds. By late afternoon, soundings show we could even see some virga with gusty outflow winds to 40 mph. The ridge is knocked down Thursday by a shortwave trough. At the surface a cold front pushes southwest across eastern Colorado during the late morning and afternoon. Ahead of it, temperatures stay mild, but winds turn northerly Thursday morning as surface pressure lowers over southeast Colorado and Kansas. With this setup, would not be surprised the front arrive earlier, possibly several hours early than the models show. Thus, the temperature forecast is highly uncertain and depends when the cold front arrives. The front will be strong enough that temperatures are expected to fall through the afternoon hours. Low and mid level moisture increases behind the front, and models show deep enough upslope flow for light rain/snow showers along the Front Range Thursday evening. Precipitation amounts will be light and are expected to be less than a tenth inch. On Friday, we lose the mid level clouds, but hang onto the low level moisture/clouds through most or perhaps all day. The cooler air and cloud cover will keep temperatures cool with highs in the 50s across northeast Colorado. For the weekend, temperatures quickly warmup with a flat upper level ridging rebuilding over the region. The main upper level high will be centered over Texas with low aloft becoming more southwesterly Sunday and into next week. For Sunday and Monday, highs are expected to reach the upper 70s to lower 80s, which will be close to record highs. With the help of a weak upper level trough, moisture increases over the region Sunday and into early next week. The mountains will see rain/snow showers and times with a slight chance for light rain east of the mountains. && .AVIATION /12Z TAFS through 12Z Thursday/... Issued at 524 AM MDT Wed Mar 25 2026 VFR conditions will prevail for all terminals through the TAF period. SW drainage flow is expected to persist at the terminals through mid-morning, and is subsequently favored to transition to westerly flow 16-18Z as daytime mixing increases. Although surface troughing to the northeast would tend to favor easterly flow, suspect it may be too far removed most of the day for this to materialize, and downslope flow has also been quite consistent during the early morning hours of Wed. The greater uncertainty with the wind directions arrived mid-afternoon, with increasing mid-level moisture and potential for weak high-based convection/virga, mainly after 23Z. The bulk of this activity is expected to remain closer to the Palmer Divide, but would drive increased potential for a period of southeasterly outflow, primarily for KDEN/KAPA. Although precip is unlikely with any of this convection, it would be capably of gusty convective outflows, and thus PROB30 groups have been maintained for those two terminals. As the weak mid-level convection moves east, winds will return to southerly drainage relatively quickly Wed evening. && .FIRE WEATHER... Issued at 1112 PM MDT Tue Mar 24 2026 Record warmth is once again expected Wednesday with relative humidity levels dropping to around 10% across the plains. In the foothills and mountains valleys, relative humidities bottom out at 13-20 percent. The flow aloft is not very strong, so even during peak heating we think most wind gusts will stay under 25 mph. However, the winds are a little stronger to the north so gusts closer to 30 mph can be expected from Jackson County into the far northern foothills near the Wyoming border. Humidity levels there, will be more marginal. Therefore, the overlap of having both RH and wind gust criteria met in the same location is rather limited and not widespread enough for any Red Flag Warnings. On Thursday, elevated to locally critical conditions, will be possible in the mountain valleys with west winds gusting to 20 to 30 mph. Over the plains, a cold front pushes through during the late morning and early afternoon. The morning may be warm and dry, but falling temperatures and increasing relative humidities are expected during the afternoon. && .BOU WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ UPDATE...BRQ DISCUSSION...12 AVIATION...BRQ FIRE WEATHER...12