739  
FXUS65 KBOU 181128  
AFDBOU  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE DENVER/BOULDER CO  
428 AM MST THU DEC 18 2025  
   
KEY MESSAGES
 
 
 
- STRONG WINDS AND CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS CONTINUE  
THROUGH EARLY THIS AFTERNOON FOR THE NORTHEAST PLAINS.  
 
- STRONG DOWNSLOPE WINDS RETURN FRIDAY TO OUR MOUNTAINS, FOOTHILLS  
AND PARTS OF THE URBAN CORRIDOR, WITH WIDESPREAD CRITICAL FIRE  
WEATHER CONDITIONS ANTICIPATED UNDER A DRY AND (RECORD) WARM AIR  
MASS.  
 
- LIGHT TO MODERATE SNOW RETURNS TO THE MOUNTAINS SATURDAY, WITH  
DETERIORATED ROAD CONDITIONS EXPECTED.  
 
- DRIER AND MORE SEASONAL CONDITIONS EXPECTED SUNDAY ONWARDS, WITH  
GENERALLY WEAKER WINDS.  
 

 
   
UPDATE
 
 
ISSUED AT 317 AM MST THU DEC 18 2025  
 
SOME QUICK-HITTING UPDATES FROM THE NIGHT SHIFT...  
 
WINDS HAVE COME DOWN COMPARED TO DAYTIME MAGNITUDES, BUT EVEN  
STILL ARE GUSTING 45-50 MPH ACROSS MUCH OF OUR NORTHERN PLAINS,  
AND THE HIGHER MOUNTAINS MAY CONTINUE TO SEE GUSTS TO 75 MPH  
THROUGH THIS MORNING, WHERE THE HIGH WIND WARNING WAS EXTENDED.  
 
THE FORECAST HASN'T CHANGED MUCH FOR TODAY, WITH THE FOCUS OF  
IMPACTS BEING IN OUR NORTHEAST PLAINS AS STRONG NORTHWEST WINDS  
MIX DOWN TO PRODUCE GUSTS 45-65 MPH THROUGH ABOUT MIDDAY,  
STRONGEST IN SEDGWICK/PHILLIPS COUNTIES. OPTED TO ISSUE A RED FLAG  
WARNING FOR THE WINDIER LOCATIONS DESPITE PROJECTED DIURNAL  
HUMIDITY VALUES OF 15-25%. THE WIND'S ABILITY TO SPREAD FIRE IN  
OUR PLAINS DESPITE MARGINAL HUMIDITY CONDITIONS WAS APTLY  
DEMONSTRATED OVER THE PAST FEW HOURS IN YUMA COUNTY, AND  
CONDITIONS TODAY WON'T BE MUCH DIFFERENT.  
 
REGARDING FRIDAY...THERE'S GOING TO BE A STRONG MOUNTAIN WAVE,  
LITTLE DOUBT ABOUT THAT. WHERE QUESTIONS REMAIN (AS USUAL) IS IN  
THE EASTWARD SPREAD OF STRONG WIND GUSTS > 75 MPH INTO ADJACENT  
LOWER ELEVATIONS FRIDAY AFTERNOON. CAMS STILL DISAGREE  
PARTICULARLY ON THE VERTICAL PLACEMENT OF A STABLE LAYER (THOUGH  
UNANIMOUSLY DEPICT ONE), BUT THERE'S ENOUGH CAUSE FOR CONCERN,  
ESPECIALLY WITH OPTIMAL WIND DIRECTIONS ABOVE RIDGETOPS AND JET-  
INDUCED SUBSIDENCE. THE HRRR IS PARTICULARLY BULLISH WITH BOTH  
SPEEDS AND SPATIAL EXTENT. IN ANY CASE, FRIDAY'S AIR MASS LOOKS  
IMPRESSIVELY WARM AND DRY, SUCH THAT HUMIDITIES IN THE TEENS COULD  
NOT ONLY BE QUITE DURABLE (POTENTIALLY LASTING WELL INTO THE  
EVENING), BUT ALSO EXTEND INTO MUCH OF OUR FOOTHILLS. THIS WILL BE  
A HIGH-END RED FLAG DAY FOR MANY LOCATIONS GIVEN THE ABOVE, WITH  
JUST A LITTLE UNCERTAINTY AS TO JUST HOW WIDESPREAD WINDS WILL BE  
OVER THE LOWER ELEVATIONS. THE FIRE WEATHER WATCH WAS THUS  
EXPANDED TO INCLUDE ALL OF OUR FOOTHILLS, I-25 CORRIDOR, AND SOME  
OF OUR PLAINS, AND EXTENDED THROUGH FRIDAY NIGHT.  
 
UPDATE ISSUED AT 844 PM MST WED DEC 17 2025  
 
MADE A FEW CHANGES THIS EVENING WITH STRONGER WINDS OVER THE  
PLAINS, RESULTING IN AREAS OF BLOWING DUST AND HAZARDOUS TRAVEL  
CONDITIONS. WE EARLIER EXTENDED THE HIGH WIND WARNING FOR THE  
FORT COLLINS TO WYOMING BORDER AREA TIL MIDNIGHT TO ACCOUNT FOR  
THE NORTHWEST WINDS BLASTING ACROSS THE BORDER, WHILE ALSO ADDING  
LIMON TO THE HIGH WIND WARNING AS SHOWER ENHANCEMENT WAS AIDING  
FRONTAL WINDS. THERE HAVE BEEN A FEW IMPRESSIVE GUSTS OVER 70 MPH  
ON THE NORTHEAST PLAINS THIS EVENING!  
 
WINDS HAD SETTLED DOWN (BUT STILL GUSTY) CLOSE TO THE FOOTHILLS,  
SO THE HIGH WIND WARNING FOR BOULDER WAS ALLOWED TO EXPIRE AT 7  
PM. MEANWHILE, WITH THE MID/UPPER LEVEL JET CORE RIPPING ACROSS  
THE MOUNTAINS WE'VE SEEN A FEW OF THE PASSES AND HIGHER MOUNTAINS  
BLAST TO OVER 100 MPH. THOSE TYPES OF WINDS WILL LIKELY REMAIN  
OVERNIGHT WITH THE CORE OF 600 MB WINDS NEAR 80 KTS HOLDING IN  
PLACE. SO ANY SORT OF AMPLIFICATION WILL BRING HIGHER WINDS.  
HIGHER FOOTHILLS WILL ALSO SEE A FEW BLASTS OF THESE MAGNITUDES  
GIVEN DEVELOPING MOUNTAIN TOP STABLE LAYER OVERNIGHT. ALSO, A FEW  
LIGHT SHOWERS SPREADING ONTO THE PLAINS THIS EVENING BUT THOSE AND  
THE MOUNTAIN SNOW/BLOWING SNOW WILL BE DIMINISHING RATHER QUICKLY  
BY MIDNIGHT AS MUCH DRIER AIR ARRIVES.  
 

 
   
DISCUSSION /THROUGH WEDNESDAY/
 
 
ISSUED AT 350 PM MST WED DEC 17 2025  
 
WINDS ARE CURRENTLY PEAKING ACROSS THE FRONT RANGE AND LOWER  
FOOTHILLS, WITH MULTIPLE REPORTS OF 80+ MPH WIND GUSTS. HI-RES  
GUIDANCE CONTINUES TO INDICATE STRONG WINDS CONTINUING FOR THE  
NEXT COUPLE OF HOURS FOR THE LOWER ELEVATIONS BEFORE BACKING UP  
INTO THE MOUNTAINS AGAIN THIS EVENING. WE ARE STILL ON TRACK TO  
LET THE HIGH WIND WARNING EXPIRE FOR THE LOWER FOOTHILLS THIS  
EVENING, AND LET THE HIGH WIND WARNING FOR THE MOUNTAINS TO  
CONTINUE THROUGH TOMORROW MORNING. WHILE THERE WILL BE BRIEF LULLS  
IN STRONG WINDS ALONG THE MOUNTAINS OVERNIGHT, GENERALLY EXPECT  
GUSTS UP TO 80 MPH AT TIMES, WITH A GRADUAL WEAKENING THROUGH  
THURSDAY LATE MORNING/EARLY AFTERNOON.  
 
FOR THE PLAINS, GUSTY WINDS WILL CONTINUE THROUGH EARLY THIS EVENING.  
THEN, A COLD FRONT IS PROGGED TO ENTER THE NORTHERN PLAINS BY 6/7  
PM AND QUICKLY SWEEP SOUTH. QG FIELDS SHOW DEEP SUBSIDENCE OVER  
THE PLAINS, WHICH WILL LIKELY HELP BRING DOWN STRONG WINDS TO THE  
SURFACE. GUSTS UP TO 60 MPH ARE POSSIBLE, PARTICULARLY OFF THE  
CHEYENNE RIDGE. HOWEVER, SHORT-RANGE GUIDANCE HAS CONTINUED TO  
INDICATE THE STRONG WINDS REACHING ALL THE WAY DOWN TO WASHINGTON  
COUNTY, SO HAVE INCLUDED THEM IN THE WARNING. AFTER MIDNIGHT,  
NORTHWEST WINDS WEAKEN BELOW HIGH WIND CRITERIA. HOWEVER, EXPECT  
GUSTY WINDS UP TO 40-50 MPH TO CONTINUE THROUGH THE MORNING HOURS  
THURSDAY.  
 
CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER CONCERNS ARE EXPECTED TO CONTINUE THIS  
AFTERNOON DESPITE MARGINAL RELATIVE HUMIDITY VALUES. STRONG WINDS  
ALONG THE FOOTHILLS AND ADJACENT PLAINS WILL PROMOTE RAPID FIRE  
SPREAD, SHOULD A FIRE OCCUR. HOWEVER, AS WINDS WEAKEN THIS EVENING  
ALONG THE FOOTHILLS, CONDITIONS WILL IMPROVE TO LET THE RED FLAG  
WARNING EXPIRE. IN ADDITION, EVEN WITH THE STRONG WINDS EXPECTED  
WITH THE COLD FRONT, SLIGHTLY HIGHER RELATIVE HUMIDITY VALUES AND  
COOLER TEMPERATURES WILL KEEP FIRE WEATHER CONCERNS AT BAY.  
 
THE WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY WILL CONTINUE THROUGH TONIGHT. CURRENT  
RADAR IMAGERY SHOWS SNOW SHOWERS ONGOING FOR THE NORTHERN MOUNTAINS,  
WITH MINIMAL ACCUMULATIONS SO FAR. HOWEVER, WITH GUIDANCE INDICATING  
STRENGTHENING FRONTOGENESIS ACROSS THE HIGHER TERRAIN, BANDED SNOW  
IS POSSIBLE, WITH SNOWFALL RATES REACHING 1"/HR TO BRIEFLY 2"/HR.  
TOTAL SNOW ACCUMULATIONS OF 3-8" IS STILL ON TRACK, WITH LOCALIZED  
HIGHER AMOUNTS OF 10" POSSIBLE NEAR RIDGETOPS. STRONG WINDS WILL  
CAUSE BLOWING SNOW ALONG HIGH PASSES, WHICH WILL GREATLY REDUCE  
VISIBLITIES.  
 
NOW FOR TOMORROW. IN GENERAL, COOL TEMPERATURES AND GUSTY WINDS ARE  
EXPECTED FOR THE ENTIRE FORECAST AREA. HOWEVER, THE PRIMARY  
CONCERN FOR STRONG WINDS WILL BE ACROSS THE NORTHEASTERN PLAINS IN  
THE MORNING. THE CORE OF THE UPPER LEVEL JET STREAK IS STILL  
PROGGED TO BE OVERHEAD THURSDAY MORNING, WITH THE 700-MB FLOW  
REACHING UP TO 70-80 KTS. MODELED SOUNDINGS INDICATE STEEP LAPSE  
RATES AT THE SAME TIME, WHICH WILL HELP MIX STRONG WINDS DOWN TO  
THE SURFACE. IN ADDITION, HI-RES GUIDANCE HAS CONTINUED TO SHOW  
GUSTS REACHING, OR BARELY EXCEEDING, HIGH WIND CRITERIA. FOR THIS  
REASON, HAVE OPTED TO UPGRADE SEDGWICK AND PHILLIPS COUNTIES TO A  
HIGH WIND WARNING TOMORROW, WITH GUSTS UP TO 55-65 MPH POSSIBLE.  
ELEVATED TO CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS ARE POSSIBLE,  
PARTICULARLY OVER THE EASTERN PLAINS (SEE FIRE WEATHER  
DISCUSSION).  
 
ANOTHER MOUNTAIN WAVE AND HIGH WIND EVENT IS EXPECTED ALONG THE  
FRONT RANGE AND FOOTHILLS LATE THURSDAY INTO FRIDAY. MODELS ARE  
SHOWING CROSS BARRIER FLOW AROUND 70 TO 100KTS AT RIDGE TOP. THERE  
IS A ROBUST PRESSURE GRADIENT SHOWN IN THE SANGSTER, WITH MSL  
DIFFERENCES AROUND 13 TO 14MB BETWEEN GJT AND DEN. MODELS ARE  
HINTING AT A WEAK INVERSION AROUND 600MB IN THE AFTERNOON AND  
SHOWING SOME INVERSE SHEAR IN MID LEVELS (80KTS TO ~50KTS HIGHER  
UP). THE RELATIVELY WEAK NATURE OF THESE INGREDIENTS LOWER  
CONFIDENCE A BIT IN THE WINDS MAKING IT DOWN TOWARDS THE I-25  
CORRIDOR. BUT, AS WE SAW WITH THE CURRENT EVENT, THIS CAN DEFINITELY  
CHANGE AS WE GET CLOSER TO THE EVENT. RIGHT NOW, WE HAVE VERY HIGH  
CONFIDENCE IN STRONG WINDS IMPACTING THE HIGHER ELEVATIONS OF THE  
FRONT RANGE, WITH LOWERING CONFIDENCE OF REALLY STRONG WINDS THE  
FURTHER EAST WE GO. A HIGH WIND WATCH WILL BE IN EFFECT LATE  
THURSDAY THROUGH LATE FRIDAY FOR THE MOUNTAINS AND FRIDAY AFTERNOON  
FOR ZONES 38 AND 39. THE STRONG WINDS AND DRY CONDITIONS WILL LEAD  
TO FIRE WEATHER CONCERNS AS WELL (SEE FIRE WEATHER DISCUSSION).  
 
WEAK QG SUBSIDENCE FRIDAY AFTERNOON WILL TRANSITION TO WEAK ASCENT  
IN THE EVENING AS THE LEFT EXIT REGION OF THE UPPER LEVEL JET  
APPROACHES. THE APPROACH OF THE JET WILL HELP BRING AN END TO THE  
HIGH WIND EVENT AND TRIGGER SOME SNOW SHOWERS IN THE MOUNTAINS. THE  
BEST CHANCE FOR SNOW THIS WEEKEND WILL BE OVERNIGHT FRIDAY INTO  
EARLY SATURDAY AFTERNOON, WITH LOWER CHANCES (<30%) FOR SUNDAY. SNOW  
ACCUMULATIONS THIS WEEKEND ARE FORECAST TO RANGE FROM A TRACE AT  
LOWER ELEVATIONS TO AROUND 8 INCHES FOR THE HIGHEST ELEVATIONS. A  
FRONT WILL MOVE INTO THE PLAINS SATURDAY MORNING. BEHIND THE FRONT,  
WINDS WILL BE FROM THE NORTHEAST, TURNING EAST IN THE EVENING. A  
HANDFUL OF ENSEMBLE MEMBERS TRY TO BRING LIGHT SHOWERS INTO THE  
PLAINS BEHIND THE FRONT, BUT MOST MEMBERS KEEP AREAS EAST OF THE  
FRONT RANGE DRY. THE FRONT WILL BRING HIGHS DOWN A DECENT AMOUNT FOR  
SATURDAY, BUT WILL STILL REMAIN ABOVE NORMAL FOR THIS TIME OF THE  
YEAR.  
 
BROAD UPPER LEVEL RIDGING WILL DEVELOP OVER MUCH OF THE U.S. BY  
MONDAY. THE FRONT RANGE WILL BE BREEZY AGAIN SUNDAY NIGHT INTO  
MONDAY MORNING AT THE HIGHER ELEVATIONS, BUT THIS EVENT WILL NOT BE  
NEARLY ON THE SAME LEVEL AS THE WIND EVENTS THIS WEEK. TEMPERATURES  
WILL REMAIN ABOVE NORMAL THROUGH THE MIDDLE OF NEXT WEEK, WITH HIGHS  
IN THE 50S AND 60S FOR THE PLAINS.  
 

 
   
AVIATION /12Z TAFS THROUGH 12Z FRIDAY/
 
 
ISSUED AT 426 AM MST THU DEC 18 2025  
 
VFR CONDITIONS WILL PREVAIL FOR ALL TERMINALS THROUGH THE TAF  
PERIOD.  
 
LINGERING NW WINDS WITH GUSTS 22-35 KTS WILL CONTINUE THROUGH THE  
NEXT 4-6 HOURS, BEFORE WEAKENING AND FAVORING A MORE NORTHERLY  
DIRECTION LATE MORNING. WIND DIRECTIONS BECOME MORE UNCERTAIN FOR  
THE AFTERNOON PERIOD, BUT FORECAST CONTINUES TO FAVOR ANTICYCLONIC  
CIRCULATION PRODUCING BRIEF PERIOD OF NE THEN SE WINDS ROUGHLY  
EAST OF I-25 BEFORE A RETURN TO DRAINAGE FLOW THIS EVENING.  
 

 
   
FIRE WEATHER
 
 
ISSUED AT 844 PM MST WED DEC 17 2025  
 
HUMIDITIES HAVE INCREASED SUFFICIENTLY TO ALLOW RED FLAG WARNINGS  
TO EXPIRE AT 6 PM EARLIER THIS EVENING. STILL STRONG WINDS AND  
ELEVATED FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS THROUGH THE NIGHT, HOWEVER.  
 
TOMORROW, ELEVATED TO NEAR CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS ARE  
EXPECTED ACROSS THE PLAINS, AS NORTHWEST WINDS WILL GUST UP TO  
40-60 MPH AT TIMES. HOWEVER, RELATIVE HUMIDITY VALUES SHOULD STAY  
ABOVE CRITICAL THRESHOLDS (GENERALLY ABOVE 20%).  
 
NEAR CRITICAL TO CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS ARE EXPECTED  
WEST OF I-25 ON FRIDAY AFTERNOON. WINDS WILL BE FROM THE WEST  
AROUND 20 TO 30 MPH, WITH GUSTS NEAR 85MPH AT TIMES. RELATIVE  
HUMIDITY VALUES WILL BE AS LOW AS 10% TO 20% IN THE AFTERNOON.  
HUMIDITY VALUES TAKE A WHILE TO RECOVER IN THE EVENING, SO THE  
FIRE WEATHER WATCH GOES UNTIL 9PM FRIDAY.  
 

 
   
BOU WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
 
 
HIGH WIND WARNING UNTIL 11 AM MST THIS MORNING FOR COZ033-034.  
 
HIGH WIND WATCH FROM THIS EVENING THROUGH FRIDAY AFTERNOON FOR  
COZ033>036.  
 
FIRE WEATHER WATCH FROM FRIDAY MORNING THROUGH FRIDAY EVENING  
FOR COZ215-216-238>243-245>247.  
 
HIGH WIND WATCH FROM FRIDAY MORNING THROUGH FRIDAY AFTERNOON FOR  
COZ038-039.  
 
RED FLAG WARNING UNTIL 5 PM MST THIS AFTERNOON FOR COZ242-244-  
248>251.  
 
HIGH WIND WARNING UNTIL NOON MST TODAY FOR COZ050-051.  
 

 
 

 
 
UPDATE...BRQ  
DISCUSSION...MAI/AP  
AVIATION...BRQ  
FIRE WEATHER...MAI/AP  
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab CO Page Main Text Page