440  
FXUS65 KBOU 012339  
AFDBOU  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE DENVER/BOULDER CO  
539 PM MDT SUN JUN 1 2025  
   
KEY MESSAGES  
 
- MORE WIDESPREAD AND LOCALLY HEAVY RAINFALL STILL EXPECTED LATE  
MONDAY - MONDAY NIGHT. AVERAGE PRECIPITATION AMOUNTS HAVE  
DECREASED SOMEWHAT, HOWEVER.  
 
- SNOWMELT PLUS RAINFALL WILL LEAD TO HIGH FLOWS ON MOUNTAIN STREAMS.  
 
- COOLER TUESDAY WITH A DECREASE IN SHOWERS. THEN GRADUAL WARMING  
TREND REST OF THE UPCOMING WEEK, BUT A ROUND OF SCATTERED  
SHOWERS/STORMS MOST DAYS.  
 
 
   
DISCUSSION /THROUGH SUNDAY/  
 
ISSUED AT 212 PM MDT SUN JUN 1 2025  
 
SCATTERED SHOWERS AND STORMS ARE GETTING GOING OVER THE HIGH  
COUNTRY, AND CIN IS WEAKENING SUFFICIENTLY TO ALLOW SOME OF THESE TO  
DRIFT ONTO THE I-25 CORRIDOR AND ADJACENT PLAINS. DESPITE GREATER  
CIN ON THE EASTERN PLAINS, WE DO EXPECT ENOUGH LIFT FROM GUSTY  
OUTFLOWS TO GENERATE AT LEAST ISOLATED CONVECTION IF NOT A BIT MORE  
ON THE EASTERN PLAINS THROUGH THIS EVENING. GUSTY OUTFLOW WINDS TO  
45+ MPH WILL BE THE MAIN THREAT WITH DCAPE (DOWNDRAFT) OF  
1300-1500 J/KG, BUT MLCAPE (UPDRAFT) NEAR 1000 J/KG SO COULDN'T  
TOTALLY RULE OUT A BRIEF SEVERE/NEAR SEVERE STORM WITH MARGINAL  
HAIL/WIND.  
 
THE MAIN CONCERN FOR THIS FORECAST CYCLE SHIFTS TO POTENTIAL FOR  
LOCALLY HEAVY RAINFALL LATE MONDAY AFTERNOON AND MONDAY NIGHT. AS  
EARLY DISCUSSED, THERE IS NOT GREAT LINKAGE BETWEEN THE TROUGH  
EJECTING FROM THE DESERT SOUTHWEST AND THE TROUGH ARRIVING FROM THE  
NORTHWEST. HOWEVER, THERE IS STILL A BRIEF PERIOD VERY LATE  
MONDAY AFTERNOON TO LATE EVENING WHERE THINGS DO LINE UP,  
PROVIDING OUR HIGHEST THREAT OF LOCALLY HEAVY RAINFALL THEN.  
INGREDIENTS COME TOGETHER IN THIS SENSE; DEEPER MOISTURE  
ASSOCIATED WITH THE SOUTHWEST EJECTING TROUGH ARRIVES 20Z-00Z,  
COINCIDENT WITH PEAK HEATING AND INSTABILITY. THAT SHOULD SET OFF  
THE FIRST ROUND OF STORMS, SPREADING FROM THE MOUNTAINS ONTO THE  
PLAINS. A FEW OF THOSE STORMS COULD BECOME SEVERE ON THE NORTHEAST  
PLAINS AS MLCAPE INCREASES TO 1200-1800 J/KG AS SURFACE DEWPOINTS  
HOLD IN LOWER TO MID 50S. THE GREATEST RISK OF SEVERE WOULD BE  
ROUGHLY EAST OF LINE FROM CHEYENNE TO FORT MORGAN TO AKRON. THIS  
IS ALSO WHEN MORE UNCERTAINTY STARTS TO ENTER THE FORECAST. WE'LL  
STILL BE IN FAVORABLE SYNOPTIC LIFT AREA AND A COLD FRONT ARRIVES  
5 PM - 8 PM. THUS, STORMS COULD EITHER REGENERATE BEHIND THE  
INITIAL ROUND OF STORMS, OR THE STRONGER STORMS COULD CONGEAL INTO  
A MORE ORGANIZED MCS AND HEAD INTO NEBRASKA - AND THEN WE JUST  
REDEVELOP A MORE SHOWERY/ISOLATED EMBEDDED STORM EVENT INTO THE  
MONDAY EVENING AND OVERNIGHT HOURS. WE THINK THE LATTER IS THE  
MOST LIKELY SCENARIO AT THIS TIME. THAT'S ANOTHER REASON BOTH  
ENSEMBLE AND DETERMINISTIC QPF AMOUNTS HAVE DECREASED OVER THE  
LAST 24 HOURS. NONETHELESS, WE THINK MOST AREAS ALONG/EAST OF THE  
FRONT RANGE HAVE A HIGH PROBABILITY (>70% CHANCE) OF GREATER THAN  
0.50" OF RAIN, AND A 40% CHANCE OF GREATER THAN 1". THOSE  
PROBABILITIES WOULD BE SLIGHTLY LOWER/HIGHER THE FARTHER  
NORTH/SOUTH ONE PROGRESSES, RESPECTIVELY. ALSO WORTH NOTING,  
STRONGER STORMS WILL CERTAINLY BE CAPABLE OF PRODUCING LOCALLY  
HEAVY RAIN. THERE IS A SMALL RISK OF FLASH FLOODING FROM 1) AN  
ISOLATED STRONG STORM MOVING OVER A BURN SCAR MONDAY AFTERNOON AND  
2) STRONGER STORMS MERGING OR TRAINING ON THE NORTHEAST PLAINS IN  
THE LATE AFTERNOON AND EVENING. MORE IN THE HYDRO DISCUSSION  
BELOW.  
 
FOR TUESDAY, WE EXPECT MOST PRECIPITATION TO BE SHIFTING OFF TO THE  
SOUTH/EAST AS THE NORTHERN U.S. TROUGH CONTINUES TO PUSH  
SOUTHEAST, AND RATHER RAPID DRYING/STABILIZATION OCCURS BEHIND  
IT. FORECAST SOUNDINGS SHOW IT WILL BE DIFFICULT TO REGENERATE ANY  
CONVECTION WITH DAYTIME HEATING AS IT WILL BE LIMITED BY THE  
COOLER BOUNDARY LAYER, SO MAIN CHANCE OF SHOWERS/ISOLATED STORMS  
FOR THE AFTERNOON WOULD BE OVER THE HIGH COUNTRY.  
 
WEDNESDAY THROUGH THE END OF THE WEEK...THE AIRMASS WILL GRADUALLY  
WARM AND DESTABILIZE. ANOTHER TROUGH IS EXPECTED TO EJECT OUT OF THE  
DESERT SOUTHWEST LATE WEDNESDAY OR WEDNESDAY NIGHT WHICH SHOULD  
BRING ANOTHER ROUND OF AT LEAST SCATTERED OR GREATER COVERAGE OF  
SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS. THIS PATTERN IS LIKELY TO CONTINUE  
THROUGH THE LATTER PART OF NEXT WEEK AS IT APPEARS MODEST MID  
LEVEL MOISTURE WILL COMBINE WITH ADDITIONAL SHORTWAVES (THESE IN  
THE NORTHERN BRANCH). MLCAPE IS GENERALLY ON THE MODEST SIDE  
THROUGH THE WEEK, BUT IT'S EARLY JUNE SO CERTAINLY ANY OF THESE  
DAYS COULD SEE A THREAT OF A COUPLE SEVERE STORMS.  
 
 
   
AVIATION /00Z TAFS THROUGH 00Z TUESDAY/  
 
ISSUED AT 535 PM MDT SUN JUN 1 2025  
 
TS WILL CONTINUE TO TRACK EASTWARD INTO THE PLAINS THROUGH THIS  
EVENING WITH BRIEF PERIOD OF TS-DRIVEN N/NE OUTFLOWS POSSIBLE  
THROUGH ~02Z (8PM MT). OTHERWISE, EXPECT A FAIRLY QUICK TRANSITION  
TO LIGHT SOUTHERLY DRAINAGE FLOW FOR THE OVERNIGHT PERIOD.  
 
MONDAY, WINDS WILL ROTATE CLOCKWISE THROUGH THE MORNING AND ARE  
FAVORED TO BECOME NE NEAR MIDDAY. SCATTERED TS WILL DEVELOP IN THE  
AREA AFTER ~22Z AND MAY AGAIN PRODUCE GUSTY AND VRB OUTFLOW WINDS  
WITH GUSTS UP TO 35 KTS POSSIBLE.  
 
VFR CONDITIONS WILL PREVAIL FOR ALL TERMINALS THROUGH MON PM. BY  
MID-EVENING, A LOW STRATUS DECK WILL FILL IN ALONG WITH MORE  
PERSISTENT RA, WITH INCREASING POTENTIAL FOR CIGS TO LOWER BELOW  
010 AFTER 03-05Z AT KDEN.  
 
 
   
HYDROLOGY  
 
ISSUED AT 212 PM MDT SUN JUN 1 2025  
 
CONTINUED SNOWMELT AND MODEST RAINFALL WILL BE ENOUGH TO CAUSE  
ADDITIONAL RISES ON STREAMS IN THE MOUNTAINS. AT THIS TIME, ONLY  
THE UPPER COLORADO RIVER IS UNDER ENOUGH THREAT OF RISES FOR  
MINOR FLOODING, AND A FLOOD WATCH REMAINS IN EFFECT FOR A SMALL  
SECTION ABOVE GRAND LAKE MONDAY EVENING THROUGH TUESDAY.  
 
THE MAIN THREAT OF FLOODING ALONG AND EAST OF THE FRONT RANGE  
WOULD BE MORE LOCALIZED AND "FLASHIER", GIVEN STORMS WILL STILL BE  
CAPABLE OF PRODUCING HEAVY RAIN, BUT THE TOTAL AMOUNTS WILL LIKELY  
BE LOWER THAN EARLIER ANTICIPATED. THE RISK OF FLASH FLOODING  
WOULD BE FROM 1) AN ISOLATED STRONG STORM MOVING OVER A BURN SCAR  
MONDAY AFTERNOON OR 2) STRONGER STORMS MERGING OR TRAINING ON THE  
NORTHEAST PLAINS IN THE LATE AFTERNOON AND EVENING. WARM CLOUD  
DEPTH BRIEFLY INCREASES TO 6,000 FEET ON THE PLAINS, SO STORMS  
WOULD BE EFFICIENT RAINERS. A STRONGER STORM IN THE FOOTHILLS  
COULD PRODUCE A QUICK INCH OF RAIN (LESS DEEP WARM CLOUD DEPTH) IN  
30 MINUTES, WHILE A STRONGER STORM ON THE EASTERN PLAINS IN A  
RICHER ENVIRONMENT COULD PRODUCE 2 INCHES OF RAIN IN 45 MINUTES,  
SO SOMETHING TO STILL WATCH CONSIDERING POTENTIAL FOR TRAINING OR  
MERGING STORMS. MEANWHILE, THE I-25 CORRIDOR SEEMS TO BE CAUGHT  
IN BETWEEN FOR THE MOST PART, AND WE EARLIER COLLABORATED WITH WPC  
TO REDUCE THE FLASH FLOOD THREAT TO MARGINAL FROM SLIGHT RISK.  
 
 
   
BOU WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
NONE.  
 
 
 
 
 
DISCUSSION...BARJENBRUCH  
AVIATION...RODRIGUEZ  
HYDROLOGY...BARJENBRUCH  
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab CO Page
Main Text Page