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410 FXUS65 KBOU 221135 AFDBOU Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Denver/Boulder CO 435 AM MST Thu Jan 22 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - Arctic air moves into the area tonight and holds through at least Sunday morning, with below zero wind chills for the plains. - Areas of mainly light snow for the plains Friday - Friday night, lingering into Saturday morning. Mountains will see several inches for a change. - Lots of uncertainty regarding any potential moderation Sunday. Stronger signal of temperatures returning to near normal for Monday through much of next week. && .UPDATE... Issued at 336 AM MST Thu Jan 22 2026 Forecast is on track for the arctic air intrusion. Yesterday`s crew did a great job with knocking down forecast temperatures to anticipated levels, and we just reiterated that forecast again tonight. The leading edge of arctic air is marching south from Canada and is currently pushing into northeast Montana and northern South Dakota in these wee morning hours. While we won`t see a true "arctic blast" with strong and gusty winds, it will be more like an "arctic ooze" as the strongest cold advection occurs across the Central Plains and Midwest tonight. With a more easterly flow pattern, the arctic air only slowly backs in from the east overnight. One interesting note to consider is for the forecast temperatures tomorrow. It`s a bit tricky as latest indications are that we`ll attempt to erode some of this shallow arctic air off the Palmer Divide. This is a tough task indeed, but even some of our trustier low level cold air models like the NAM and NAMNest even show some moderation into the upper 20s/lower 30s in parts of Denver. However, experience would suggest this would only be a relatively narrow sliver in the southern suburbs of north slope of the Palmer since a Denver cyclone would wrap up. That feature would essentially anchor the arctic air in place (or even reinforce it into the norther suburbs of Denver) so we`ve continued with the colder than guidance forecast. The same can be said for the rest of this forecast, leaning heavily toward the colder ECMWF ensemble guidance. A stiff easterly wind over the plains tonight through Friday evening all but ensures wind chill readings will drop to less than -15F, so we`ve issued a Cold Weather Advisory for those areas. This Advisory does not include the I-25 Urban Corridor, since our winds will be weaker and temperatures will be just a few degrees "warmer". This doesn`t mean it won`t be COLD! So bundle up accordingly. Also, for the Advisory, rather than worrying about some slight moderation in wind chill readings during the day Saturday as winds subside, we`ll use the keep it simple approach and have a long duration Advisory that goes from late tonight all the way through early Sunday morning. Low temperatures Saturday night should drop below zero over almost all of the plains. And with fresh but light snow cover air temperatures of -10 to -20F would be possible in the cold spots on the plains Saturday night if we clear out. With regard to snow, We`re still on track for eventual moistening of the boundary layer in the arctic airmass late tonight and Friday. That will likely bring in some light snow or flurries onto the plains. Moisture deepens Friday afternoon through Friday night under persistent weak QG synoptic forcing, some frontogenesis, and then arrival of mid level plume originating off the upper level trough over the southwest United States. That is still expected to bring an uptick in snowfall to the mountains starting tomorrow afternoon, and then onto the plains in the deepening moisture/weak upslope profile Friday night into Saturday morning. There was just a slight increase in total QPF, but still looks like just a light snow event of 1-3 inches of fluffy dry snow over the plains, 2-4 inches for the foothills and Palmer Divide, and 3-8 inches most of the mountains. Somewhat heavier totals of 4-10 inches can be expected in the mountains of Summit County and the I-70 Corridor, so we`ve issued a Winter Weather Advisory there from 11 am Friday through Saturday. Look for impacts to ski travel and potential lengthy commute times for those looking for some rare fresh powder. Finally, the potential warmup for Sunday is looking less and less likely. Even the GFS/GEFS is showing another wave dropping south into the back of the impressive snow/ice storm that will hit a large chunk of the Southern Plains, TN/OH River Valleys, and points east/northeast through Central Atlantic states and portions of New England. We`re not as cold as some guidance suggests (teens), but trending to highs only in the lower 20s for now. There`s a 40-50% chance (and growing) that we don`t even hit 20F. The warmup for Monday into much of next week is still on track. && .SHORT TERM /Through Thursday/... Issued at 225 PM MST Wed Jan 21 2026 Relatively quiescent conditions continue this afternoon under a broad area of dry, northwesterly flow aloft. Temperatures have generally made it into the mid to upper 40s across the plains (with DEN at 48F so far) with slightly cooler temperatures closer to our northern CWA border. Surface obs indicate another cold front is creeping into our forecast area this afternoon, and this should bring some cooler temperatures into the region for tonight and tomorrow. Highs on Thursday should remain in the 30s as cold air continues to slowly push into the region during the day. There should be a gradual increase in cloud cover through the day, but otherwise the weather should remain quiet. && .LONG TERM /Thursday night through Wednesday/... Issued at 225 PM MST Wed Jan 21 2026 Longwave trough over eastern North America is still on track to bring arctic air to the central and eastern parts of the country, including eastern Colorado. A strong surface high sinks south into the Northern Plains Friday. We won`t see a sharp cold front, but persistent northeast to east low level flow will advect the arctic air into the region. Most of the model show highs of 15 to 25F Friday and 5 to 15F for Saturday across northeast Colorado, but the GFS/GEFS are about 10F warmer. If memory serves me right, the GFS/GEFS were warm outliers for arctic events last winter and the colder solutions (most other models) were more accurate. Feel this is the same case with this upcoming arctic blast, so lowered temperatures for Friday through Sunday. Saturday is on track to be the coldest day with highs 5 to 15F degrees over northeast Colorado. Saturday night is expected to be the coldest night. How cold is still unclear, it will depend on how much clearing we see overnight. Where it clears, lows for Saturday night have the potential to reach -10F to -20F. Cold Weather Advisories may be needed over eastern Colorado Friday night through Sunday morning if models continue to push wind chills below -15F. As far as snow goes, we`ll likely see light snow/flurries Friday over eastern Colorado associated with the easterly upslope low level flow. For late Friday, Friday night, and into Saturday, there are a few features out there that could bring us snow. First, moisture is expected to increase from the southwest. For lift, we`ll see an upper level trough drop southward across the region and the right entrance region of the jet will be over the region. Placement of the best lift is still somewhat uncertain, but the latest model cycle favors central and southern Colorado for the best lift and snowfall. For areas north and northeast of Denver, up to 2 inches of snow looks on track with slightly more possible over the mountains and over/south of Denver. Drier air moves in from north Saturday/Saturday night with dry conditions expected over the area by midnight Saturday night. Flow aloft turns west-northwest and a lee side surface trough forms over eastern Colorado Monday. This will bring milder Pacific air to the region. High temperatures are expected to climb above freezing with highs in the upper 30s to mid 40s. West-northwest flow aloft with possibly some ridging is expected over the Central Rockies Tuesday and Wednesday. Near normal temperatures (highs in the mid to upper 40s) and dry conditions are expected Tuesday and Wednesday. && .AVIATION /12Z TAFS through 12Z Friday/... Issued at 435 AM MST Thu Jan 22 2026 VFR will persist through most of this TAF period, but areas of stratus and MVFR ceilings expected toward 12Z Friday. With regard to the winds...light southwest winds are expected to prevail through about 15Z-16Z. Then they`ll become light and VRB for a couple hours before making the transition to NE-E winds at 8-12 kts 18Z and beyond. However, after about 03Z Friday there is considerable uncertainty with wind progression as a weak cyclone is expected to develop right near KDEN. While that would almost certainly bring NNW winds to KBJC, other airports like KAPA and KDEN will be on the edge of the shear zone/cyclone. As a result, the slightly enhanced E-SE winds 00-03Z could become VRB anytime after 03Z, and more likely toward 06Z. There is higher probability (but only 50-60%) that we turn more northerly at KDEN late in the night after 10Z. Boundary layer moisture remains quite limited despite the frontal surge through tonight, but eventually we moisten sufficiently for areas of stratus around 2,000 ft AGL to develop after 10Z, and most likely toward 12Z-15Z Friday. && .BOU WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... Winter Weather Advisory from 11 AM Friday to 5 PM MST Saturday for COZ034. Cold Weather Advisory from 3 AM Friday to 9 AM MST Sunday for COZ042-044>051. && $$ UPDATE...20 SHORT TERM...Hiris LONG TERM...12 AVIATION...20