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967 FXUS65 KBOU 020028 AFDBOU Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Denver/Boulder CO 628 PM MDT Wed Apr 1 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - Mountain snow will continue through this evening, with travel impacts for higher passes during heavier snow. - Numerous rain showers are expected on the plains this afternoon and evening. Isolated thunderstorm or two possible. - A brief warm up Thursday, with potential for locally critical fire weather conditions. - Windy and cooler Friday with another round of snow for the mountains. Plains look to be dry (80% confidence). - Dry and warming trend expected over the weekend and into next week. && .DISCUSSION /Through Wednesday/... Issued at 236 PM MDT Wed Apr 1 2026 Forecast remains generally on track, with current radar showing ongoing mountain snow showers and developing scattered light rain showers on the plains. The upper level shortwave is currently entering western Colorado, as evident on water vapor satellite imagery. It will continue trekking east this afternoon/evening, with colder air being advected into the mountains. This will result in mountain valleys likely seeing a transition from rain/snow mix to all snow later today, with better snow-to-liquid ratios for the high terrain. However, this will still be wet and heavy snow as SLRs are only expected to reach up to around 13:1. Additional accumulations of 2-8" is expected across most of the mountains, with localized higher amounts likely for Park Range, as that area has more favorable moisture content and synoptic lift. For the plains, lee-cyclogenesis is still favored to develop over southeastern Colorado this afternoon with the arrival of the upper level shortwave. This will help bring a round of more widespread rain showers through this evening. Overall, precipitation will be light. However, with hi-res guidance continuing to show instability building this afternoon, and ACARS soundings showing abundant moisture being advected into the plains (current PWAT values of ~0.54", which is above the climatological 90th percentile for this time of the year), thunderstorms and briefly moderate to heavy rainfall is expected at times. Ensemble guidance still in agreement of QPF amounts generally ranging between 0.05-0.25", with localized higher amounts up to 0.50" under the heavier showers. However, there is a low chance (~30%) of QPF amounts higher than 0.50", particularly for the northeastern plains. Precipitation should gradually end across the forecast area overnight tonight, as subsidence increases aloft. Flat ridging on Thursday will bring warm, dry, and breezy conditions for the mountains and plains. Ensemble guidance is still in agreement of temperatures rising back up tot the low 70s across the plains. However, downslope winds could aid in compressional heating and raise temperatures slightly higher than forecasted. Gusty southwest winds (up to 35-40 mph at times) along the southern and eastern plains will promote elevated-to-briefly-critical fire weather conditions. However, these conditions will be heavily dependent on the precipitation (amount and location) this afternoon. Have decided to keep Fire Weather Watch as is, as Lincoln County and the eastern portions of Elbert county are still expected to receive minimal rainfall amounts, and will allow the next forecast package to see if there is a need to upgrade, expand, or cancel the watch. The next system is progged to arrive Thursday night, with a 500-mb closed low trekking just north of Colorado. This will bring another round of mountain snow through Friday, particularly for our northern mountains, as the best QG lift, mid-level frontogenesis, and upper level jet line up. As of right now, snowfall amounts are not impressive, but next few forecast packages may warrant a Winter Weather Advisory if guidance continues to trend towards higher QPF amounts. For the plains, a dry but strong cold front will traverse the region overnight, bringing wind gusts up to 40-50 mph at times through Friday afternoon. Combined with marginal relative humidity values, this could bring another round of elevated fire weather conditions. However, relative humidities still look to be marginal, hovering around 15-20%. Dry and warming conditions are expected through the weekend and early next week as weak ridging aloft dominates the weather pattern. Ensemble guidance is in good agreement of temperatures reaching up in the 60s each day through Monday, with the heat peaking mid-week with temperatures in low 70s. Daily elevated fire weather concerns are possible for South Park and portions of the plains, however relatively weak winds will be the limiting factor. && .AVIATION /00Z TAFS through 00Z Friday/... Issued at 627 PM MDT Wed Apr 1 2026 Recent observations show a line of showers extending over KDEN and KAPA and moving east, as well as ceilings lowering to around 4000ft-6000ft under the rain showers. Some additional showers could make their way off the Foothills and east over the airports early this evening but we expect rain activity to taper off by 04Z or slightly earlier. Winds remain mainly from the north across the region with some small variations due to weak outflows. Model guidance suggests a moderate (40%) chance for fog later tonight between 06Z and 10Z so we decided to introduce a TEMPO group for lower ceilings (500ft) as well as visibilities around 3-5SM. Otherwise, clouds will clear by sunrise and winds will gradually turn to SW-SSW. Mostly clear skies are expected tomorrow, and there is potential (70% chance) for some higher wind speeds aloft to mix down to the surface resulting in brief periods of 25kt gusts late in the afternoon at 21Z-01Z. && .BOU WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... Winter Weather Advisory until 9 PM MDT this evening for COZ031- 033-034. Fire Weather Watch from Thursday afternoon through Thursday evening for COZ246-247. && $$ DISCUSSION...MAI AVIATION...AA