FXUS65 KBOU 241147 AFDBOU Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Denver/Boulder CO 547 AM MDT Fri Oct 24 2025 .KEY MESSAGES... - Mountain snow showers become more numerous this afternoon and evening, and isolated rumbles of thunder also possible. Slick travel over high mountain passes, mainly in the mountains around Summit County tonight including I-70. - Scattered light rain showers tonight on the plains, mainly south of I-70. - Potential for an impactful system late Sunday into Monday of next week. Most likely impacts will be strong winds and mountain snowfall. && .DISCUSSION /Through Thursday/... Issued at 241 PM MDT Thu Oct 23 2025 An upper level low will track from the Four Corners east across the southern Colorado border through Friday. This will bring several rounds of showers to the southern half of the state as it moves through, but northern Colorado will be on the edge of the area with lift and instability. Our main feature will be the shower band now over central and south central Colorado as it lifts north and rotates around the low. This should bring a decent round of showers to areas from Winter Park and Summit county southward in the late afternoon and evening, then the focus of this should shift north and westward, bringing some light showers with some accumulation to areas further north. Lighter showers will likely persist in the central mountains and over the ridges after this feature is done, but there shouldn't be much more accumulation. It's still warm and there's not much temperature advection, so most of the accumulation should be above 10,000 feet. For the plains, the east end of that shower band should rotate through Denver between 7 and 10 PM. There could be some rain reaching the ground, but probably not more than a few hundredths. Further east a deeper dry layer and less cooling aloft will mark the east edge of the showers. On Friday, the showers on the back edge of the system should be dragging across the plains south of I-70, while lingering mountain showers diminish. There may still be some minor instability to keep some very light showers going over the mountains into the afternoon, but the accumulation should be done. While the showers will likely stay to the south, Denver will probably be under the cloud shield of this system all day, and between that and about 10 degrees of cooling, it will feel like a fall day. There will likely be some clearing along the northern border in the afternoon. Saturday should be one of the nicer days of the week, with temperatures in the upper 60s and light winds as we sit in between storm systems. A broad trough is expected to push eastward Sunday into next week, with west-northwesterly flow aloft quickly strengthening over the region. At least one fairly good push of moisture is expected to reach the mountains by late Sunday afternoon, leading to orographic snow showers most of Sunday night into Monday. The ECMWF ensemble is a little wetter across our northern mountains than the GEFS, but both would suggest light to moderate snowfall totals, mainly over the Park Range. Across the plains, the continued WNWerly flow will limit precipitation potential and most ensemble members have zero QPF. The bigger impacts across the lower elevations will be increasingly gusty winds as the mid-level flow strengthens. Guidance isn't particularly sold on where the strongest 700mb winds are (not a surprise for a Day 5-6 forecast) but there's good confidence in a brief period of cool/breezy conditions early next week. Guidance favors a return towards a warmer/drier pattern by the middle of the week, with broad support from most ensemble members across the 12z suite. && .AVIATION /12Z TAFS through 12Z Saturday/... Issued at 528 AM MDT Fri Oct 24 2025 VFR conditions expected throughout the TAF period. Light westerly winds will turn to northerly or northeasterly during the late morning and will persist throughout the day. Some very light rain showers or sprinkles could occur over the terminals but they will not impact operations. Ceilings are expected to stay around 10,000 feet but could drop to as low as 7,000 feet if a shower were to move over a terminal. && .BOU WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ DISCUSSION...Gimmestad/Hiris AVIATION...Danielson