National Weather Service Forecast Discussion

Thornton Weather Forecast   
Today's Forecast Story   
567
FXUS65 KBOU 311754
AFDBOU

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Denver/Boulder CO
1154 AM MDT Tue Mar 31 2026

.KEY MESSAGES...

- Cooler today behind a cold front. Mountain snow develops late
  in the afternoon and continues into Wednesday.

- Better chances for precipitation (50-70%) across the plains
  Wednesday afternoon and evening.

- A brief warm up on Thursday, but an unsettled pattern continues
  with another storm system possible Thursday night into Friday.

&&

.DISCUSSION /Through Monday/...
Issued at 1139 PM MDT Mon Mar 30 2026

A well-defined cold front is pushing through Wyoming tonight, and
should reach our forecast area by the early morning hours...
leading to a much cooler Tuesday across the plains. A couple
showers may try to develop behind the front, but cross sections
and model soundings don`t show sufficient moisture for more than a
a few areas of stratus and a sprinkle or two across the plains.
High temperatures during the afternoon hours will likely be about
20F cooler than Monday, with highs generally near 60F.

Meanwhile, we should see a gradual increase in precipitation
across the higher elevations through the day as a broad upper
level trough begins to sharpen and shift eastward. A broad plume
of moisture embedded within the west-southwesterly flow aloft
should spread across Colorado during the latter half of day.
Moisture content is rather anomalous for the region - with
integrated vapor transport values peaking near 200 kg/m/s across
the western edges of our CWA, with both IVT and 500mb specific
humidity values near or outside of the ECMWF/GEFS ensemble
climatology at times Tuesday night into Wednesday. It will likely
take most of the day to fully saturate the column, with rain and
snow gradually developing during the afternoon and evening hours
across the higher elevations.

The more meaningful QPF is expected to come Tuesday night through
Wednesday, with synoptic scale ascent gradually increasing as the
trough strengthens and continues to push towards Colorado. Mean
700-500mb winds out of the southwest may limit overall
precipitation coverage/intensity over the high country, and
unsurprisingly guidance heavily favors the western half of the
state through the first half of Wednesday. Mean winds are
generally expected to turn towards the west/west-northwest by the
latter half of Wednesday as the primary shortwave pivots across
the region and ejects into the Central Great Plains. Rapid lee
cyclogenesis is expected over southeastern Colorado Wednesday
afternoon, leading to a more pronounced push of
north/northeasterly boundary layer flow across the plains. If the
plains are going to see precipitation in this setup, it should
come sometime late Wednesday afternoon into the overnight hours.
Guidance remains reasonably consistent developing precipitation
across the I-25 corridor and northeast plains, though QPF amounts
are generally unimpressive (generally 

NWS BOU Office Area Forecast Discussion