175  
FXUS65 KBOU 261727  
AFDBOU  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE DENVER/BOULDER CO  
1027 AM MST THU FEB 26 2026  
   
KEY MESSAGES
 
 
 
- ELEVATED TO CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS THROUGH FRIDAY.  
 
- COOLER TEMPERATURES AND ANOTHER WAVE OF MOUNTAIN SNOW POSSIBLE  
LATE THIS WEEKEND INTO EARLY NEXT WEEK.  
 

 
   
UPDATE
 
 
ISSUED AT 406 AM MST THU FEB 26 2026  
 
A FEW UPDATES TO DISCUSS THIS MORNING. FIRST, SNOW HAS BEEN MORE  
PERSISTENT ACROSS THE HIGHER MOUNTAINS THAN EXPECTED. WEBCAMS SHOW  
WINTRY CONDITIONS ACROSS I-70 FROM SILVER PLUME THROUGH VAIL PASS,  
ALONG WITH SOME SNOW ON BERTHOUD PASS AND HIGHER PORTIONS OF  
HIGHWAY 72 NEAR WARD. WATER VAPOR SATELLITE SHOWS THE BETTER  
MOISTURE CONTINUING TO SLOWLY SINK SOUTH, AND I WOULD IMAGINE SNOW  
SHUTS OFF PRETTY QUICKLY THROUGH THE MORNING HOURS, WITH LITTLE OR  
NO SNOWFALL AFTER NOON. I DID CONTEMPLATE RE-HOISTING AN ADVISORY  
FOR THE I-70 MOUNTAINS ZONE, BUT ULTIMATELY HELD OFF GIVEN THE  
RELATIVELY SHORT-LIVED DURATION.  
 
SOME UNCERTAINTY ALSO STILL REMAINS REGARDING THE WIND FORECAST  
ACROSS THE PLAINS. THERE'S A NOTABLE SPLIT BETWEEN SOME OF THE  
HIGHER RESOLUTION GUIDANCE (AND NOW INCLUDES THE HRRR WHICH HAS  
SHIFTED CAMPS) AND SOME OF THE GLOBAL DETERMINISTIC AND  
STATISTICAL GUIDANCE. OUR CURRENT FORECAST LIES SOMEWHAT IN  
BETWEEN THESE TWO SOLUTIONS. AT THIS POINT A BRIEF PUFF OF  
NORTH/NORTHWEST WIND LOOKS LIKELY LATE THIS MORNING INTO THE EARLY  
AFTERNOON IN A CAA REGIME FOLLOWING THE PASSAGE OF A WEAK  
SHORTWAVE... WITH A STEADY WEAKENING TREND THIS AFTERNOON AND  
EVENING WHEN RH IS DRIEST. LIKE THE PREVIOUS FEW FORECASTERS, I  
DID NOT HAVE ENOUGH CONFIDENCE TO GO WITH A RED FLAG WARNING AND  
THUS WE'VE CANCELLED THE WATCH FOR TODAY. THERE MAY STILL BE  
SPOTTY CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS IN WIND PRONE AREAS (ALONG  
CO-93, ON THE CHEYENNE RIDGE). MEANWHILE, TOMORROW'S WINDS LOOK A  
LITTLE STEADIER ACROSS THE PLAINS AND SO WE'VE ISSUED A FIRE  
WEATHER WATCH FOR FRIDAY AFTERNOON INSTEAD.  
 

 
   
DISCUSSION /THROUGH WEDNESDAY/
 
 
ISSUED AT 1113 PM MST WED FEB 25 2026  
 
THE WIND FORECAST FOR TOMORROW IS A BIT TRICKY. MODELS DIFFER  
PRETTY SIGNIFICANTLY IN THE PLACEMENT AND TIMING OF THE BREEZIER  
WINDS, WHICH MAKES FIRE WEATHER PRODUCT DECISIONS A BIT DIFFICULT  
(MORE ON THIS IN THE FIRE WEATHER DISCUSSION). OCCASIONAL GUSTS  
AROUND 25 TO 35MPH WILL BE POSSIBLE THURSDAY AFTERNOON ON THE  
PLAINS, BUT THE EXACT PLACEMENT OF THE HIGHER WINDS IS UNCERTAIN.  
WINDS WILL BE BREEZY AGAIN FROM THE NORTHWEST ON FRIDAY, LEADING  
TO ANOTHER DAY OF POTENTIALLY CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS.  
 
ON SATURDAY A BACKDOOR COLD FRONT WILL PUSH INTO OUR NORTHEASTERN  
COUNTIES. THE FRONT WILL NOT HAVE A HUGE IMPACT ACROSS THE AREA,  
BUT THE SURFACE HIGH PRESSURE THAT PUSHED IT INTO OUR AREA WILL  
HELP KEEP WINDS MORE FROM THE EAST BEHIND THE FRONT, TURNING MORE  
SOUTHEAST BY MONDAY FOR A GOOD PORTION OF THE PLAINS. THESE WINDS  
WILL HELP BRING A BIT OF MOISTURE INTO THE PLAINS AND WILL HELP  
KEEP TEMPERATURES LOWER (UNLIKE THE WARM,DRY DOWNSLOPE  
WEST/NORTHWEST WINDS WE'VE HAD RECENTLY). IN ADDITION TO THIS,  
MODELS ARE SHOWING A STREAM OF UPPER LEVEL ENERGY MOVING INTO THE  
AREA OVER THE WEEKEND AND INTO MONDAY. THIS WILL BRING SOME LIFT,  
HIGHER MOISTURE ALOFT FROM THE PACIFIC, AND INCREASED CLOUD COVER.  
THE INCREASED CLOUD COVER, FLATTENED UPPER RIDGE, AND WIND SHIFT  
WILL ALLOW TEMPERATURES TO DROP A FEW DEGREES FOR BOTH SUNDAY AND  
MONDAY (STILL ABOVE NORMAL BUT NOT NEAR RECORD VALUES). WITH THIS  
SYSTEM, WE'LL ALSO BE ON THE LOOKOUT FOR PRECIPITATION CHANCES  
BOTH IN THE MOUNTAINS AND THE PLAINS. CERTAINTY IN MOUNTAIN PRECIP  
IS MUCH HIGHER THAN PLAINS PRECIP, BUT IT IS WORTH NOTING THAT THE  
MAJORITY OF ENSEMBLE MEMBERS ARE GIVING AT LEAST SOME PRECIP FOR  
THE PLAINS SOMEWHERE IN THE SUNDAY NIGHT TO TUESDAY AFTERNOON TIME  
PERIOD. SOME OF THE MEMBERS ARE EVEN BRINGING A BIT OF SNOW INTO  
THE PLAINS FOR THIS TIME PERIOD. THE TIMING OF THE PRECIP WILL  
HAVE A BIG IMPACT ON PRECIP TYPE, AS TEMPERATURES FOR MUCH OF THE  
DAY WILL BE TOO WARM TO SUPPORT SNOW. HOWEVER, THERE COULD BE A  
FEW HOURS OVERNIGHT/EARLY MORNING WHERE WE COULD SEE SOME LIGHT  
SNOW THROWN INTO THE MIX (IF IT PRECIPITATES AT ALL).  
 
OUR NEXT CHANCE FOR PRECIP WILL BE WITH AN UPPER LEVEL CLOSED LOW,  
WHICH IS EXPECTED TO APPROACH COLORADO TUESDAY INTO WEDNESDAY.  
THERE IS STILL A LOT OF UNCERTAINTY WITH THIS SYSTEM, IN TERMS OF  
TIMING AND TRACK. BUT IT SHOULD BRING SOME ADDITIONAL SNOW TO THE  
MOUNTAINS, WITH THE POTENTIAL FOR SOME PRECIP ACROSS THE PLAINS ON  
WEDNESDAY.  
 

 
   
AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z FRIDAY/
 
 
ISSUED AT 1023 AM MST THU FEB 26 2026  
 
THE POTENTIAL FOR GUSTIER WINDS AT KDEN TODAY HAS DIMINISHED  
CONSIDERABLY, AND HAVE THUS REMOVED MENTION OF GUSTS ABOVE 20 KTS  
FROM THE TAF. THESE WILL REMAIN MORE LIKELY AT KAPA AND KBJC, AT  
LEAST THROUGH EARLY AFTERNOON, BEFORE WIND GUSTS RECEDE CLOSER TO  
THE FOOTHILLS LATER IN THE DAY.  
 
KDEN'S WIND DIRECTION IS THE MOST DIFFICULT FORECAST COMPONENT  
TODAY. A WEAK NW TO SE BOUNDARY IS CURRENTLY LOCATED JUST SOUTH OF  
THE TERMINAL, AND APPEARS TO BE KEEPING THE WESTERLY GUSTS AT BAY.  
FORECASTS FAVORS CONTINUATION OF THIS NNE/NE FLOW BEHIND THE  
BOUNDARY FOR THE NEXT FEW HOURS. WITH TIME, FLOW SHOULD BEGIN TO  
TREND BACK TOWARDS THE NORTHWEST AS WINDS WEAKEN AND THIS BOUNDARY  
PRESUMABLY WASHES OUT, WITH A RETURN TO LIGHT DRAINAGE FLOW MID TO  
LATE EVENING.  
 
VFR CONDITIONS WILL PREVAIL FOR ALL TERMINALS THROUGH THE TAF  
PERIOD.  
 

 
   
FIRE WEATHER
 
 
ISSUED AT 1113 PM MST WED FEB 25 2026  
 
THE FIRE WEATHER FORECAST FOR TOMORROW IS A TRICKY ONE. MODELS DO  
NOT HAVE A GOOD HANDLE ON WHAT THE WINDS ARE GOING TO DO THURSDAY  
AFTERNOON, WHICH IS PUTTING QUITE A BIT OF UNCERTAINTY IN THE  
FIRE WEATHER FORECAST FOR TOMORROW. SOME MODELS ARE PUTTING THE  
HIGHEST WINDS IN OUR NORTHERN COUNTIES IN THE AFTERNOON, WHILE  
OTHERS MOVE THE STRONGER WINDS OUT OF OUR NORTHERN COUNTIES BY THE  
LATE MORNING, MOVING THE STRONGER WINDS TO OUR SOUTHERN COUNTIES  
FOR THE AFTERNOON. MINIMUM RH VALUES ARE EXPECTED TO DROP INTO THE  
11% TO 20% RANGE ACROSS THE PLAINS BY THURSDAY AFTERNOON. A FEW  
AREAS ON THE PLAINS SHOULD SEE WIND GUSTS IN EXCESS OF 25 MPH IN  
THE AFTERNOON, BUT IT'S WHETHER THEY'LL OVERLAP WITH THE CRITICAL  
RHS OR LAST FOR MORE THAN 3 HOURS THAT'S THE QUESTION. CONFIDENCE  
HAS NOT INCREASED ENOUGH AT THIS TIME TO UPGRADE THE FIRE WEATHER  
WATCH TO A WARNING FOR TOMORROW.  
 
THERE IS POTENTIAL FOR CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS AGAIN ON  
FRIDAY. RHS WILL DROP INTO THE 9% TO 16% RANGE ACROSS THE PLAINS  
IN THE AFTERNOON. WIND GUSTS WILL BE NEARING CRITICAL THRESHOLDS  
FOR THE URBAN CORRIDOR AND I-70 CORRIDOR. AREAS TO THE NORTH OF  
THESE AREAS WILL HAVE A HIGHER CHANCE OF REACHING THE WIND GUSTS  
NECESSARY FOR CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS. PORTIONS OF THE  
NORTHERN PLAINS COULD SEE GUSTS AROUND 30 TO 45MPH FRIDAY  
AFTERNOON. THERE'S POTENTIAL FOR ELEVATED FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS  
IN THE NORTHERN PLAINS ON SATURDAY, AS RHS REMAIN NEAR CRITICAL  
AND WIND GUSTS SIT AROUND 20MPH. AN INFLUX OF MOISTURE WILL  
INCREASE RHS AND LIMIT FIRE WEATHER CONCERNS FOR SUNDAY INTO EARLY  
NEXT WEEK.  
 

 
   
BOU WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
 
 
FIRE WEATHER WATCH FROM FRIDAY MORNING THROUGH FRIDAY AFTERNOON  
FOR COZ238>240-242>245-248>251.  
 

 
 

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

The Nexlab CO Page Main Text Page