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557 FXUS65 KBOU 060530 AFDBOU Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Denver/Boulder CO 1130 PM MDT Sun Jul 5 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - A few storms expected each day this week, with the highest probabilities shaping up for Tuesday through Thursday from the Front Range eastward. - Isolated dry thunderstorms in mountains could spark new wildfires. - Significant heat wave arrives this coming weekend, with minimal chance of any thunderstorms for heat relief. && .DISCUSSION /Through Sunday/... Issued at 204 PM MDT Sun Jul 5 2026 Satellite shows paltry convection over the mountains early this afternoon, but a bit more instability exists over/south of the Palmer Divide where isolated to scattered high based storms are still expected. They will produce gusty outflow winds with DCAPE already analyzed at 1400-1800 J/kg, so an isolated severe microburst is possible. To the northeast of Denver, the airmass is more stable so chances of convection from the northern suburbs through Greeley and points northeast look minimal. On Monday, the upper level and thermal ridge over Colorado is forecast to amplify. This means a couple degrees of warming, with highs expected to push into the mid to upper 90s across the plains. There is some mid/upper level moisture moving this way, and some of this will infiltrate the mountains by late afternoon/evening as a shortwave lifts northeast from the northern Great Basin into the northern Rockies. Thus, we`ve ever so slightly increased PoPs for the late afternoon and early evening, as a few storms may be able to survive/develop onto the plains with just a hint of lift/moisture. Like today, these will produce more gusty winds than any meaningful rainfall. By late Tuesday, the northern Rockies shortwave is forecast to have enough influence to help flatten the ridge. This sets the stage for a few more days of more active weather that could start late Tuesday and last through Thursday. Tuesday`s convection still appears relatively high based, but at the same time mid and upper level moisture will support higher (scattered) shower/storm coverage. Low level moisture is forecast to return on the plains and I-25 Corridor which means a couple late day strong/severe storms would be possible as mid level winds and bulk shear increase slightly. It appears Wednesday and possibly even into Thursday would support the greatest risk of severe storms as both bulk shear and instability increase further, 30-40 kts and 800-1400 J/kg, respectively. Mountain areas should get in on isolated to scattered showers and storms as well as there will be greater mid level moisture, but that also means a risk of new fire starts from lightning as low level moisture will still be lacking. The airmass begins to dry from the west late Thursday into Friday, and humidities will be dropping again. With zonal flow aloft, we do see breezy conditions in the mountains which leads to at least elevated fire weather conditions. The plains should be drying Friday, although some risk of a dryline storm or two on the eastern plains. We are still monitoring a heat wave that`s forecast to arrive next weekend. Ensembles are still in very good agreement that a dominating ridge of high pressure builds over the Central Rockies and centers itself over Wyoming and Colorado toward Sunday. 500 mb heights are still advertised to reach 2+ standardize anomalies, and >50% chance that 500 mb heights rise to greater than 600 decameters. Right now, the operational runs keep the greatest 850 mb temperature anomalies to our north, at least initially as the low and mid level thermal ridge stays off to our north and west. As a result, ensembles did back off ever so slightly on the initial blast of this heatwave. In any case, we`ll still be looking at hot temperatures with highs near 100F across the plains and I-25 Corridor by next weekend. There a high probability (>70%) that we`ll be reaching Heat Advisory criteria either Saturday or more likely Sunday. In fact, the heat will likely build further with 100-105F readings likely (>60% chance) for the plains and I-25 Corridor through the following Monday and Tuesday, as long as the thermal ridge shifts across our forecast area. Record highs will be possible Sunday to Tuesday (Records for Denver are 102F, 100F, and 101F for those three days, so Monday`s and Tuesday`s records are well within expectations). && .AVIATION /06Z TAFS through 06Z Tuesday/... Issued at 1116 PM MDT Sun Jul 5 2026 Southerly winds are in place across the Denver TAF sites late tonight. Expecting elevated smoke concentrations by sunrise again this morning, bringing potential for slant-range vis reductions for a few hours until better mixing occurs. Main concerns for today will be similar to yesterday, with high-based showers bringing potential for gusty outflows/microbursts between 21Z-1Z. Shower coverage does look slightly more than Sunday, with KAPA having the greatest chances once again. && .BOU WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ DISCUSSION...20 AVIATION...9