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803 FXUS65 KBOU 050035 AFDBOU Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Denver/Boulder CO 635 PM MDT Sat Jul 4 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - Scattered strong to severe storms expected this afternoon and early evening, with large hail and gusty winds the main hazards. - A few storms expected each day of the coming week, with the highest probabilities shaping up for Tuesday and Wednesday from the Front Range eastward. - Isolated dry thunderstorms in mountains could spark new wildfires. - Good agreement that significant heat wave arrives by next weekend. && .DISCUSSION /Through Saturday/... Issued at 120 PM MDT Sat Jul 4 2026 Convective initiation has occurred in the front Range Mountains and Foothills as expected. As of 1 pm, the cap on the nearby plains has nearly eroded per latest ACARS soundings. MLCAPE was growing to 1000+ J/kg roughly along and east of a line from Greeley to Strasburg and Kiowa, with values expected to grow to 1500+ J/kg over the northeast plains prior to convective development there. Meanwhile, MLCAPE was lower (~500 J/kg) farther west including much of the I-25 Corridor. Therefore, it appears the main threat of severe weather would now be shifting eastward to the richer CAPE environment along and east of the aforementioned line. Effective bulk shear isn`t too strong, but slowly increasing to 25-35 kts (strongest south). That should still be enough for supercells, that could potentially organize into more linear structures and high wind producers as they move east across the plains. Large hail will also be a growing threat as storms move/develop into the more unstable airmass across the plains. Most of the storms should exit the far eastern plains toward 8-9 pm. Weak subsidence is still noted to build in for this evening, and the airmass will stabilize further post this initial round of convection and with loss of daytime heating. Thus, most mid to late evening activities should be relatively quiet weather-wise. However, post outflow winds from the southeast could spell breezy conditions lingering into any evening fireworks shows. For Sunday and Monday, an upper level ridge will amplify across Colorado. While this will tend to stabilize things a bit, it will still be hot and residual moisture means a chance of storms each afternoon and evening. The majority of these should be focused over Park County and the Front Range Mountains into the Palmer Divide area, with probabilities dropping off rather quickly to the north and east. High temperatures will likely reach the lower to mid 90s over the plains. For Tuesday and Wednesday, the upper level ridge is forecast to flatten with weak zonal flow developing across the forecast area. Modest low level moisture is expected to remain in place east of the Rockies. In addition, a weak embedded shortwave or two during this time should support an uptick in storm coverage. Instability also builds slightly and shear improves so scattered thunderstorms are expected both days, with potential for a couple severe storms. Temperatures will remain a few degrees above normal, although slight cooling is expected with higher probabilities of a frontal push by Wednesday. The more unsettled weather could linger into Thursday especially along/east of the Front Range. Drying is expected by Friday as there is still good confidence that the ridge over the southwest U.S. starts to amplify again. However, we could still see enough moisture for a few storms east of the Front Range. Temperatures will likely start to warm as the ridge builds, and ensembles show average highs pushing into the mid to upper 90s across the plains and I-25 Corridor. We will have to watch potential (>70% chance) for an extended heatwave by next weekend into early the following week. There remains excellent agreement in the various ensembles of a high amplitude closed upper level high building over the Great Basin and Central Rockies. This appears to be on the higher end of climatology, with forecasts generally residing anywhere between 600 and 604 decameter (dm) 500 mb heights. Even ensemble averages had a 600 dm contour by next Sunday! Ensemble members show average high temperatures near or slightly above 100F in Denver starting next Saturday, the 11th, which could potentially last a good 4 days before monsoonal moisture gradually builds under this monster of a ridge. Finally, mountain areas may be prone to isolated dry lightning as they reside on the edge of better low level moisture and instability for the next several days. Thus, new fire starts will be possible. The only favorable parameter with regard to fire weather in the coming days will be generally light breezes under a fairly dominant ridge. && .AVIATION /00Z TAFS through 00Z Monday/... Issued at 628 PM MDT Sat Jul 4 2026 A few showers are still lingering around the Denver metro area at this time. There are also numerous weak outflows moving in from the north and east due to the ongoing convection over the eastern CO plains. As such, we have opted to extend the PROB30s for the three airports until 02Z. Shower activity is expected to exit the Denver metro area by around 03Z. SSW drainage winds will return to KDEN and KAPA by 06Z tonight, with variable or light westerly winds at KBJC through the early morning. Smoke concentrations are expected to diminish over the next couple of days and we have decided to keep any mention of smoke out of the TAF for now. However, light smoke could briefly impact slant- range visibility between 11Z and 14Z tomorrow morning as the sun rises. Winds tomorrow afternoon are expected to remain light and turn to the SSE- SE in the early afternoon. There will be a slight chance (20%-30%) for a few high- based showers in the vicinity of the terminals starting at 20Z, although KAPA will see the better chance for an isolated thunderstorm as weak convection initiates over the Palmer Divide. Wind gusts up to 35KT will be the main concern with the strongest showers that develop. && .BOU WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ DISCUSSION...20 AVIATION...AA