326  
FXUS65 KBOU 170539  
AFDBOU  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE DENVER/BOULDER CO  
1039 PM MST TUE DEC 16 2025  
   
KEY MESSAGES  
 
 
- STRONG DOWNSLOPE WINDS TO IMPACT THE MOUNTAINS, FOOTHILLS, AND  
I-25 CORRIDOR WEDNESDAY INTO WEDNESDAY NIGHT, WITH POTENTIAL  
FOR WIDESPREAD GUSTS 60-85 MPH, STRONGEST NEAR THE BASE OF THE  
FOOTHILLS. BREEZY CONDITIONS WILL EXTEND INTO THE PLAINS THROUGH  
THURSDAY MORNING.  
 
- CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS CAN BE EXPECTED WEDNESDAY  
AFTERNOON FOR THE URBAN CORRIDOR.  
 
- MOUNTAINS TO SEE DETERIORATED TRAVEL CONDITIONS WEDNESDAY  
AFTERNOON/EVENING DUE TO BANDED SNOWFALL AND WIND.  
 
- ANOTHER ROUND OF GUSTY WINDS AND HIGH FIRE DANGER LOOKS LIKELY  
(75% CHANCE) ON FRIDAY.  
 
 
   
UPDATE  
 
ISSUED AT 832 PM MST TUE DEC 16 2025  
 
FORECAST IS ON TRACK. WE SEE CONSISTENT OUTPUT IN THE 00Z SHORT  
RANGE/MESOSCALE MODELS REGARDING HIGH WIND EVENT THAT STARTS IN  
THE MOUNTAINS AND FOOTHILLS WEDNESDAY MORNING, AND SPREADS ONTO  
THE NEARBY ADJACENT PLAINS WEST OF I-25 WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON. NO  
CHANGES TO EXISTING SUITE OF HIGH WIND AND RED FLAG WARNINGS, OR  
THE WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY FOR THE NORTHERN TIER OF MOUNTAINS.  
 
 
   
DISCUSSION /THROUGH TUESDAY/  
 
ISSUED AT 350 PM MST TUE DEC 16 2025  
 
WITH BREEZY WINDS GUSTING UP TO 40-50 MPH AND RELATIVE HUMIDITY  
VALUES RANGING BETWEEN 17-25%, ELEVATED FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS ARE  
EXPECTED TO CONTINUE THIS AFTERNOON. HOWEVER, WINDS SHOULD GRADUALLY  
WEAKEN AROUND SUNSET, WHICH WILL DECREASE THE FIRE WEATHER THREAT.  
THIS EVENING WILL BE RELATIVELY QUIET COMPARED TO A VERY ACTIVE  
WEATHER DAY TOMORROW. WE HAVE MULTIPLE HIGHLIGHTS OUT IN THE NEAR  
FUTURE, SO LET'S DIVE IN:  
 
HIGH WINDS (THROUGH WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON): CONFIDENCE HAS  
CONTINUED TO INCREASE IN STRONG WINDS IMPACTING THE MOUNTAINS,  
FOOTHILLS, AND I-25 CORRIDOR WEDNESDAY MORNING AND AFTERNOON.  
UPPER LEVEL FLOW WILL INCREASE AND FLATTEN AS A SHORTWAVE TO OUR  
NORTH TREKS ACROSS THE NORTHERN UNITED STATES. CROSS-BARRIER FLOW  
WILL REACH 60-75 KTS DIRECTLY FROM THE WEST, AND THERE WILL BE  
VERY FAVORABLE POSITIVE OMEGA VALUES, PROMOTING DEEP SUBSIDENCE  
AHEAD OF THE FRONT WEDNESDAY EVENING. HIGH-RESLUTION SKEW- T  
SOUNDINGS ALONG THE BASE OF THE FOOTHILLS HAVE NOW SHOWN A DEEP  
TEMPERATURE INVERSION, WITH REVERSE SHEAR ABOVE THE RIDGETOP (~70  
KTS AT 700-650 MB WEAKENING TO 20-30 KTS AT 400 MB). DESPITE NO  
INDICATION OF A WAVE-INDUCED CRITICAL LAYER, THESE INGREDIENTS ARE  
FAVORABLE FOR DOWNSLOPING WINDS REACHING TO THE BASE OF THE  
FOOTHILLS AND POSSIBLY ADJACENT PLAINS. HIGH RESOLUTION GUIDANCE  
HAS CONTINUED TO FAVOR THIS SCENARIO, WITH GUSTS UP TO 90 MPH AT  
HIGH ELEVATIONS THROUGHOUT THE DAY, AND GUSTS UP TO 60-80 MPH  
REACHING JUST WEST OF THE I-25 CORRIDOR. WEST OF I-25, THE  
STRONGEST WINDS WILL LAST ABOUT 3-4 HOURS EARLY WEDNESDAY  
AFTERNOON.  
 
RED FLAG CONDITIONS (SEE FIRE WEATHER DISCUSSION FOR MORE DETAILS):  
ACROSS THE PLAINS, RELATIVE HUMIDITY VALUES WILL LIKELY RANGE  
BETWEEN 17-30%, HOWEVER THERE IS SOME UNCERTAINTY WITH EXACTLY HOW  
LOW WE WILL GET. DESPITE MARGINAL RELATIVE HUMIDITY VALUES, STRONG  
WINDS WILL PROMOTE RAPID FIRE SPREAD, SHOULD A FIRE OCCUR. WITH THE  
ARRIVAL OF THE FRONT WEDNESDAY EVENING, INCREASE IN DEWPOINTS WILL  
HELP MITIGATE FIRE WEATHER CONCERNS.  
 
WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY: WITH DECENT QG FIELDS SHOWING ASCENT UNDER  
THE LEFT EXIT REGION OF THE JET, AND AREAS OF STRONG FRONTOGENESIS,  
BANDED SNOW IS POSSIBLE FOR OUR NORTHERN MOUNTAINS. SHORT RANGE  
GUIDANCE HAS CONTINUED TO INDICATE THAT THE HEAVIEST SNOW WILL OCCUR  
WEDNESDAY EVENING, WITH ACCUMULATIONS BETWEEN 4-10" LIKELY. IN  
ADDITION, WITH WINDS GUSTING UP TO 80-90 MPH AT TIMES, BLOWING SNOW  
WILL DRASTICALLY REDUCE VISIBILITIES, PARTICULARLY WHERE BANDED SNOW  
FALLS. FOR THIS REASON, HAVE OPTED IN TO ISSUE A WINTER WEATHER  
ADVISORY FROM 11 AM TO 11 PM WEDNESDAY.  
 
A COLD FRONT IS FORECAST TO ENTER NORTHERN COLORADO AROUND 5PM  
WEDNESDAY, MOVING SOUTHEAST THROUGH THE AREA IN THE EVENING. BEHIND  
THE FRONT, WINDS WILL SWITCH TO MORE OF A BORA EVENT VERSUS A  
CHINOOK EVENT, WITH WINDS TURNING FROM THE NORTHWEST. THE STRONG  
SUBSIDENCE BEHIND THE FRONT COULD BE ENOUGH TO BRING THE HIGHER MID  
LEVEL WINDS DOWN TO THE SURFACE IN THE NORTHERN PLAINS, WITH  
OCCASIONAL GUSTS AROUND 50 TO 60 MPH FROM 5PM TO MIDNIGHT. HOWEVER,  
DUE TO THE ISOLATED NATURE OF THE GUSTS AND THE UNCERTAINTY IN  
WHETHER THEY WILL REACH THE 58 MPH HIGH WIND WARNING THRESHOLD, WE  
HELD OFF ON UPGRADING THE HIGH WIND WATCH TO A WARNING AT THIS TIME.  
 
OVERNIGHT WEDNESDAY INTO THURSDAY A MID LEVEL LOW IS FORECAST TO  
DEVELOP OVER SOUTHERN CANADA AND MOVE SOUTH INTO THE DAKOTAS,  
TOWARDS IOWA BY THURSDAY AFTERNOON. THIS WILL PUT A DECENT TROUGH TO  
OUR EAST/NORTHEAST THURSDAY MORNING. STRONG SUBSIDENCE AND STRONG  
WINDS ON THE BACKSIDE OF THE TROUGH WILL CAUSE ADDITIONAL WIND  
CONCERNS FOR THE PLAINS THURSDAY MORNING AND EARLY AFTERNOON. THE  
POSITIONING OF THIS TROUGH AND THE ASSOCIATED WIND MAX WILL IMPACT  
WHETHER OUR EASTERN COUNTIES SEE THE STRONGER WIND GUSTS OR NOT.  
RIGHT NOW, MODELS VARY ON WHERE THEY'RE PUTTING THE 700MB JET (70 TO  
90KTS). SOME KEEP IT OFF TO OUR EAST, WHILE OTHER PUSH IT INTO OUR  
NORTHEASTERN COUNTIES IN THE LATE MORNING. THE CLOSER THE 700MB JET  
IS TO OUR AREA, THE HIGHER THE WINDS WILL BE. CONFIDENCE IS TOO LOW  
AT THIS TIME IN GUSTS REACHING 58+, SO WE WILL HOLD OFF ON ISSUING A  
HIGH WIND WATCH FOR THE PLAINS THURSDAY MORNING.  
 
WE'RE MONITORING THE POTENTIAL FOR ANOTHER MOUNTAIN WAVE AND STRONG  
WIND EVENT ON FRIDAY. MODELS ARE SHOWING CROSS BARRIER FLOW AROUND  
70 TO 85 KTS ALONG THE FRONT RANGE AND GUSTS AROUND 90 MPH IN THE  
HIGHER ELEVATIONS. IT'S DIFFICULT TO GET AN EXACT IDEA OF HOW FAR  
EAST THE EXTREME GUSTS WILL PROGRESS THIS FAR OUT IN TIME, BUT WE  
ARE CONFIDENT THAT THE MOUNTAINS AND LOWER FOOTHILLS WILL SEE VERY  
BREEZY CONDITIONS AGAIN ON FRIDAY. WE WILL HOLD OFF ON ISSUING ANY  
WIND PRODUCTS THIS FAR OUT, BUT THE HIGHER ELEVATIONS (IF NOT MORE  
OF OUR AREA) WILL NEED A WATCH AS WE GET CLOSER. THE OTHER CONCERN  
ON FRIDAY WILL BE FIRE WEATHER. STRONG WINDS AND DRY CONDITIONS WILL  
LEAD TO SIGNIFICANT FIRE WEATHER CONCERNS (MORE ON THIS IN THE FIRE  
WEATHER DISCUSSION BELOW).  
 
THE WEATHER SHOULD CALM DOWN FOR MOST OF THE AREA THIS WEEKEND.  
MOISTURE WILL INCREASE IN THE MOUNTAINS LATE FRIDAY INTO SATURDAY.  
THIS MOISTURE COMBINED WITH WEAK UPSLOPE FLOW, WILL LEAD TO LIGHT  
SNOW SHOWERS IN BOTH THE PARK RANGE AND NORTHERN FRONT RANGE ON AND  
OFF THIS WEEKEND. ACCUMULATIONS LOOK TO STAY ON THE LIGHTER SIDE ,  
WITH ACCUMULATIONS OF ONLY A FEW INCHES FOR THE HIGHEST ELEVATIONS.  
 
 
   
AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z THURSDAY/  
 
ISSUED AT 1025 PM MST TUE DEC 16 2025  
 
MAIN CONCERN WILL BE THE WINDS. TO START THIS TAF CYCLE, WINDS  
HAVE SETTLED TO A NORMAL SOUTH/SOUTHWEST DIRECTION AND WILL HOLD  
THERE OVERNIGHT. HOWEVER, WITH INCREASING PRESSURE GRADIENTS, WE  
DO ANTICIPATE SOME ENHANCEMENT WITH GUSTS TO 20-24 KTS POSSIBLE  
AFTER 11Z-12Z.  
 
THE DIFFICULTY WITH THE FORECAST LIES MOSTLY WITH THE EXPECTED  
MOUNTAIN WAVE AND ENHANCEMENT WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON. KBJC WILL SEE A  
HIGH PROBABILITY (>90%) OF BLASTING WEST WINDS DEVELOPING BY ~20Z  
WITH STRONGER GUSTS TO 50 KTS OR EVEN MORE POSSIBLE 21Z-24Z.  
MEANWHILE, AT KDEN AND KAPA WINDS SHOULD STAY INITIALLY STAY  
LIGHTER THROUGH 18Z-20Z WITH ANY GUSTS LESS THAN 20-25 KTS FROM A  
SOUTHWESTERLY DIRECTION (OR MAY EVEN BE BRIEFLY VARIABLE) IN THE  
LEE OF THE MOUNTAIN WAVE. THE WAVE IS EXPECTED TO PROPAGATE  
EASTWARD OFF THE FOOTHILLS, MOST LIKELY TO PUSH TOWARD KDEN AND  
KAPA TOWARD 22Z-24Z. WE DO HAVE HIGHER CONFIDENCE (70-80%) FOR AT  
LEAST GUSTY WINDS 32-38+ KTS WITH NORTH-SOUTH RUNWAY RESTRICTIONS  
DUE TO STRENGTH OF CROSSWINDS 22Z-02Z, AND A LOWER CONFIDENCE  
(30-40% CHANCE) OF GUSTS TO 45 KTS OR GREATER. THOSE WINDS ARE  
EXPECTED TO LAST ABOUT 2-3 HOURS, BEFORE SOME WEAKENING SHOULD  
OCCUR AS THE WAVE BREAKS DOWN AND RETREATS INTO THE MOUNTAINS. AT  
THE SAME TIME, WE'LL BE GETTING INTO LARGE SCALE SUBSIDENCE SO  
WE STILL LOOK FOR GUSTY (JUST NOT AS STRONG) NORTHWEST WINDS TO  
24-32 KTS INTO THE EVENING. EVENTUALLY, A WEAK ANTICYCLONE IS  
EXPECTED TO DEVELOP BY 12Z THURSDAY FOR DIMINISHING WINDS AT ALL  
TAF SITES.  
 
VFR CONDITIONS WILL PREVAIL FOR THIS PERIOD. ONLY SCT-BKN MID AND  
HIGH CLOUDS WITH A PASSING SPRINKLE POSSIBLE 00Z-03Z THURSDAY.  
 
 
   
FIRE WEATHER  
 
ISSUED AT 350 PM MST TUE DEC 16 2025  
 
DOWNSLOPE WINDS WILL INCREASE THROUGH THE DAY AND BECOME STRONG BY  
THE EARLY AFTERNOON, WHERE THEY ARE THEN EXPECTED TO SPREAD EAST  
OF THE FOOTHILLS AND INTO THE URBAN CORRIDOR. GUSTS UP TO 80-90  
MPH ARE VERY LIKELY FOR THE MOUNTAINS AND FOOTHILLS ABOVE 9,000  
FEET. FOR THE LOWER FOOTHILLS AND WESTERN URBAN CORRIDOR, GUSTS UP  
TO 65-75 MPH ARE POSSIBLE, BUT WILL BE SHORTLIVED (LASTING ABOUT  
3-4 HOURS IN THE EARLY AFTERNOON). AREAS ADJACENT TO THE  
FOOTHILLS/URBAN CORRIDOR COULD SEE WIND GUSTS UP TO 30-40 MPH AT  
TIMES. DESPITE MARGINAL RELATIVE HUMIDITY VALUES (17-30% RANGE),  
STRONG WINDS WILL PROMOTE RAPID FIRE GROWTH. AS OF NOW, PRIMARY  
CONCERN WILL BE BETWEEN 1 PM TO 5 PM, WHEN THE STRONGER WINDS ARE  
EXPECTED TO SPREAD EAST TO LOWER ELEVATIONS. BY WEDNESDAY EVENING,  
A COLD FRONT WILL ARRIVE, WHICH WILL INCREASE DEWPOINT  
TEMPERATURES ACROSS THE PLAINS AND HELP MITIGATE FIRE WEATHER  
CONCERNS. ALTHOUGH WIND GUSTS UP TO 60 MPH ARE POSSIBLE BEHIND THE  
FRONT, PARTICULARLY IN THE NORTHERN PLAINS.  
 
POCKETS OF ELEVATED FIRE WEATHER WILL BE POSSIBLE THURSDAY.  
RELATIVE HUMIDITY VALUES WILL DROP INTO THE TEENS TO LOWER  
TWENTIES IN THE AFTERNOON. WINDS WILL BE BREEZY IN THE MORNING  
FOR OUR NORTHEASTERN COUNTIES. HOWEVER, WINDS WILL BEGIN TO WEAKEN  
AT THE SAME TIME RELATIVE HUMIDITIES DROP. SO, THERE SHOULD JUST  
BE A BRIEF WINDOW OF FIRE WEATHER CONCERNS LATE THURSDAY  
MORNING/EARLY AFTERNOON.  
 
STRONG WINDS WILL RETURN TO THE MOUNTAINS AND FOOTHILLS ON FRIDAY.  
MINIMUM RH VALUES WILL DROP INTO THE LOWER TEENS TO MID TWENTIES  
EAST OF THE MOUNTAINS. HIGH WINDS AND DRY CONDITIONS WILL LEAD TO  
NEAR-CRITICAL TO CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS FRIDAY AFTERNOON.  
 
 
   
BOU WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY FROM 11 AM TO 11 PM MST WEDNESDAY FOR  
COZ031-033.  
 
HIGH WIND WARNING FROM 8 AM WEDNESDAY TO 5 AM MST THURSDAY FOR  
COZ033>036.  
 
RED FLAG WARNING FROM 11 AM TO 6 PM MST WEDNESDAY FOR COZ238>243-  
245.  
 
HIGH WIND WARNING FROM 11 AM WEDNESDAY TO MIDNIGHT MST WEDNESDAY  
NIGHT FOR COZ038-039.  
 
HIGH WIND WATCH FROM WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON THROUGH WEDNESDAY  
EVENING FOR COZ042-044-048.  
 
 
 
 
 
UPDATE...20  
DISCUSSION...AP/MAI  
AVIATION...20  
FIRE WEATHER...AP/MAI  
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab CO Page
Main Text Page