National Weather Service Forecast Discussion |
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449 FXUS65 KBOU 122049 AFDBOU Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Denver/Boulder CO 149 PM MST Thu Feb 12 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - Increasing chances for light precipitation over portions of the plains Friday evening into Saturday. - Mostly dry and above normal temperatures for the weekend. - Focus shifts to elevated to critical fire weather concerns from Sunday onwards. && .DISCUSSION /Through Thursday/... Issued at 138 PM MST Thu Feb 12 2026 Current radar and observations show light snow is still falling across the higher elevations late this morning. While overnight accumulations didn`t quite live up to their potential, we have received reports ranging from around 2-5 inches across the northern mountains, with the Mount Zirkel SNOTEL site coming in at 9 inches through early this morning. Snow is expected to gradually diminish through the day today allowing for some more time to get additional light accumulations. With the heaviest snowfall behind us and only light accumulations expected from here on out, we have allowed the winter highlights to expire for our mountain zones. For those traveling into the mountains today, there could still be some slick travel conditions over the high mountain passes, but CDOT cams indicate roads are generally just wet at this time. For the rest of today, lingering moisture and cloud cover will help keep above-normal temperatures in place across the forecast area. With drier lower levels in place across the plains, virga showers are expected to move off the higher terrain and bring a shot at some light precipitation reaching the ground this afternoon through this evening, with the most likely locations to benefit being along the Palmer Divide and the Wyoming border. Anything that falls is expected to be light and in the form of rain, but there is potential for some gusty outflows (20-25 kts) to occur as virga passes overhead across the plains. West to WSW winds aloft are expected on Friday as a trough moves across the Desert Southwest, bringing increased Pacific moisture into the Rockies. QG lift will increase ahead of the trough beginning late Friday morning. This will bring another round of light mountain snow beginning Friday morning, increasing with the best lift after around 11 AM. On trend with the 2026 winter season, and as our luck would have it, the best forcings will stay to the south of the forecast area, so the greatest precipitation amounts will do the same. The Central Mountains will be favored in this flow pattern, with 3-6 inches of new snowfall accumulations expected through Saturday morning. Went ahead and lowered PoPs for the northern plains on Saturday, but suspect they will be lowered slightly more in the coming forecast packages, with the southern portion of the plains and the Palmer Divide expected to have the best shot at some accumulating precip. Looking like around .10-.20" of QPF will be possible across portions of Elbert and Lincoln Counties when all is said and done Saturday afternoon. Models are also in agreement that light QPF (a few hundredths to under .10") will be possible along the urban corridor with this passing system, though only areas above 7,500 feet should expect to see snow, as temperatures will be too warm until early Saturday morning at the lower elevation, when things are already starting to wind down. Behind the trough, ridging is expected to rebuild across the region for a few days. Our focus will shift back to developing fire weather concerns by Sunday afternoon. Sunday through mid week is expected to be anomalously warm, with afternoon high temperatures warming into the mid to upper 60s across the plains, and little in terms of moisture expected until at least Tuesday, which is largely expected to remain anchored to the higher elevations. Southwesterly flow is expected to start increasing on Monday, becoming further enhanced on Tuesday and again on Wed, as troughing redevelops over the western CONUS and a potent 250 mb jet (150-180 kts) positions itself from SW to NE across the state through the period. Relative humidity values will drop into the teens each afternoon beginning on Sunday, with elevated fire weather conditions expected to develop over South Park and portions of the eastern plains where winds may reach critical fire weather criteria for a brief time in the afternoon. By Monday, critical fire weather conditions are expected across portions of the southern plains as winds begin increasing. The NBM shows wind gusts could potentially range from 45-60 mph by Tuesday afternoon across a large portion of the lower elevations and foothills. While relative humidities aren`t forecast to reach critical values along the foothills, they will be marginal, and with winds of this magnitude coinciding with multiple days of above-normal temps and dry conditions leading up to this, at a minimum, elevated fire weather conditions are expected along the foothills and urban corridor and eastward across the plains, with similar fire weather conditions expected again on Wednesday, and possibly into Thursday. Stay tuned for more details as we get closer, but we expect fire weather to be our main focus for the week, with plenty of time for details to shift or change as we get closer. && .AVIATION /18Z TAFS through 18Z Friday/... Issued at 1040 AM MST Thu Feb 12 2026 VFR conditions are expected through at least early this afternoon. Winds are currently VRB at both DEN and APA with light NE winds at BJC. Winds at BJC will turn to be E by early afternoon, but stay light. As the afternoon progresses, modeling shows that there will be plenty of virga around the area (potentially affecting all 3 sites), so we expect a broken deck around 6000 ft and the potential for MVFR conditions to occur. If showers are stronger than expected, CIGs could be a little lower than 6000 ft. For this evening, winds at BJC will be northerly and then eventually NW and then SW by tomorrow morning. For DEN and APA, by late this evening into tomorrow morning, winds will become light and variable and then eventually drainage. Overnight, there is the potential for a lower broken deck to occur around 1200 feet, but kept a TEMPO in place for now and will let this be updated in future forecast packages. Models show quite a bit of moisture just off the deck but guidance is uncertain that stratus actually make it to DEN. For tomorrow, a typical diurnal pattern is expected to be in place at DEN with winds turning clockwise from S to NE as the day progresses. && .BOU WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ DISCUSSION...9 AVIATION...MV