816  
FXUS65 KBOU 191757  
AFDBOU  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE DENVER/BOULDER CO  
1157 AM MDT THU MAR 19 2026  
   
KEY MESSAGES
 
 
 
- ALL TIME MARCH RECORD HIGH TEMPERATURES HAVE A HIGH PROBABILITY  
TO BE SET (80% CHANCE) WITH UPCOMING HEAT THROUGH SATURDAY.  
DAILY RECORDS ALMOST A CERTAINTY.  
 
- PROLONGED ELEVATED TO CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS DUE TO  
RECORD HEAT AND EXTREMELY LOW HUMIDITY LEVELS. SATURDAY IS  
SHAPING UP TO BE THE MOST CRITICAL DAY AS WINDS INCREASE.  
 
- BRIEF DROP TO NEAR NORMAL TEMPERATURES SUNDAY  
 
- RETURN OF UNSEASONABLE WARMTH AND POTENTIAL RECORD HEAT AGAIN  
AND MORE FIRE WEATHER CONCERNS BY TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY OF NEXT  
WEEK.  
 

 
   
DISCUSSION /THROUGH WEDNESDAY/
 
 
ISSUED AT 1044 PM MDT WED MAR 18 2026  
 
NOT MUCH HAS CHANGED FOR THE FORECAST THIS WEEK AS THE ANOMALOUSLY  
STRONG UPPER LEVEL RIDGE CONTINUES TO DOMINATE OUR WEATHER PATTERN  
FOR COLORADO THROUGH SATURDAY. RECORD-BREAKING HEAT IS STILL  
EXPECTED FOR THE NEXT THREE DAYS, WITH ELEVATED-TO-CRITICAL FIRE  
WEATHER CONDITIONS (SEE FIRE WEATHER DISCUSSION BELOW). HOWEVER,  
THERE IS A CHANCE FOR TEMPERATURES TO BE EVEN WARMER THAN  
FORECASTED, ESPECIALLY SATURDAY.  
 
700-MB TEMPERATURES WERE AROUND +10 DG C TODAY (WEDNESDAY), WHICH  
USUALLY TRANSLATES TO SURFACE TEMPERATURES IN THE MID-TO-HIGH  
70S. HOWEVER, WITH THE DOWNSLOPING WINDS THROUGHOUT THE DAY, ACARS  
SOUNDINGS SHOWED STEEP LAPSE RATES (ALMOST DRY ADIABATIC ALL THE  
WAY UP TO 500 MB!), ALLOWING WARM WINDS TO MIX DOWN TO THE  
SURFACE. THIS RESULTED IN DIA RECORDING A HIGH TEMPERATURE OF 81  
DG F.  
 
AS THE AREA OF HIGH PRESSURE CONTINUES SOUTHEAST INTO MEXICO, 700-MB  
TEMPERATURES WILL INCREASE TO +12 DG C ON THURSDAY/FRIDAY AND UP TO  
+15 DG C ON SATURDAY. THIS WILL SUPPORT TEMPERATURES IN THE LOW-TO-  
MID 80S FOR THE NEXT TWO DAYS (WINDS WILL BE WEAKER AS WELL, SO WE  
ARE NOT EXPECTING BREEZY DOWNSLOPING WINDS), AND HIGH 80S ON  
SATURDAY. HOWEVER, FLAT UPPER LEVEL RIDGING IS EXPECTED ON SATURDAY  
DUE TO A PASSING SHORTWAVE TROUGH NORTH OF COLORADO. THIS WILL  
RESULT IN GUSTY DOWNSLOPE WINDS ACROSS THE PLAINS. WITH  
COMPRESSIONAL HEATING, IT IS NOT OUT OF THE QUESTION THAT WE COULD  
GET UP TO 89/90 DG F ON SATURDAY. THIS IS FURTHER SUPPORTED BY  
SOME OF THE CANADIAN AND ECMWF ENSEMBLE SOLUTIONS SHOWING MAX  
TEMPERATURE AT DIA OF 90 DG F (GEFS/AIGEFS CONTINUE TO BE ON THE  
COOLER END OF GUIDANCE).  
 
ALL THIS TO SAY THAT WE WILL LIKELY BEAT DAILY HIGH TEMPERATURE  
RECORDS THURSDAY, FRIDAY, AND SATURDAY FOR MANY LOCATIONS ACROSS THE  
FORECAST AREA. AND, WE WILL LIKELY BEAT THE ALL TIME MARCH HIGH  
TEMPERATURE RECORD ON SATURDAY. FURTHERMORE, WITH WEDNESDAY'S HIGH  
TEMPERATURE RECORDING OF 81 DG F AND THE EXPECTED 80+ DG DAYS  
THROUGH SATURDAY, WE WILL HAVE CREATED ANOTHER RECORD FOR THE  
LONGEST CONSECUTIVE 80 DG DAYS IN MARCH FOR THE DENVER AREA. THE  
PREVIOUS 'RECORD' WAS IN 1907, WHERE THERE WERE 3 CONSECUTIVE DAYS  
OF 80 DG TEMPERATURES. BELOW IS AN UPDATED MAX FORECAST  
TEMPERATURES FROM THE PREVIOUS DISCUSSION:  
 
CURRENT RECORDS AND FORECAST DAILY HIGH TEMPERATURES FOR DENVER (DIA):  
 
THURSDAY, MARCH 19: 81 (1907) / FORECAST HIGH: 83  
FRIDAY, MARCH 20: 80 (1907) / FORECAST HIGH: 84  
SATURDAY, MARCH 21: 78 (1995) / FORECAST HIGH: 88  
 
EXISTING MONTHLY RECORD TEMPERATURES FOR MARCH AND MAX FORECASTS  
THROUGH SATURDAY:  
 
DENVER: 83 (1971) / FORECAST MAX 88  
FORT COLLINS: 81 (2012) / FORECAST MAX 90  
BOULDER: 83 (1910) / FORECAST MAX 87  
GREELEY: 85 (2010) / FORECAST MAX 90  
FORT MORGAN: 85 (2010) / FORECAST MAX 91  
JULESBURG: 88 (1967) / FORECAST MAX 91  
ESTES PARK: 70 (1925) / FORECAST MAX 76  
DILLON: 63 (2012) / FORECAST MAX 70  
 
AS MENTIONED ABOVE, GUIDANCE IS IN GOOD AGREEMENT OF AN UPPER  
LEVEL SHORTWAVE TROUGH TREKKING ACROSS THE NORTHERN UNITED STATES  
OVER THE WEEKEND, WITH AN ASSOCIATED COLD FRONT (ACTUALLY MORE  
LIKE A 'COOL' FRONT) SWEEPING ACROSS THE FORECAST AREA LATE  
SATURDAY. TEMPERATURES WILL MODERATE TO THE 60S, WHICH WILL STILL  
BE SLIGHTLY ABOVE NORMAL. MID-LEVEL MOISTURE WILL BE ADVECTED INTO  
THE REGION, WHICH COULD LEAD TO SCATTERED SHOWERS SUNDAY/MONDAY,  
MAINLY FOR THE MOUNTAINS. HOWEVER, ANY PRECIPITATION THAT DOES  
FALL WILL LIKELY BE VERY LIGHT. THE 90TH PERCENTILE OF QPF FOR  
ECMWF/ECMWF AIFS/GEFS/AIGEFS SHOWED 0.10"-0.15" OF QPF FOR THE  
MOUNTAINS AND LESS THAN 0.10" OF QPF FOR THE PLAINS. DESPITE THE  
LACK OF APPRECIABLE PRECIPITATION, SUNDAY WILL SEE A BRIEF  
REPRIEVE OF CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS.  
 
WARM AND DRY WEATHER RETURNS ON MONDAY AND THROUGH THE MIDDLE OF THE  
WEEK, AS THE UPPER LEVEL RIDGE BEGINS TO RESTRENGTHEN OVER THE  
SOUTHWESTERN UNITED STATES. TEMPERATURES WILL LIKELY REACH BACK UP  
INTO THE 70S AND POSSIBLY THE 80S BY WEDNESDAY. IN ADDITION,  
GUIDANCE HAS INDICATED A FLATTENING OF THE RIDGE, PARTICULARLY  
TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY, WHICH WOULD BRING GUSTY WESTERLY WINDS AND  
ANOTHER ROUND OF ELEVATED-TO-CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS.  
 

 
   
AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z FRIDAY/
 
 
ISSUED AT 1157 AM MDT THU MAR 19 2026  
 
VFR CONDITIONS WILL PERSIST THROUGH THE TAF PERIOD, WITH MOSTLY  
CLEAR SKIES AND ONLY FEW CIRRUS CLOUDS. WINDS ARE LIGHT SOUTHERLY  
AND EVEN TRYING TO TRANSITION TO VRB THROUGH 20Z. AFTER THAT, IT'S  
A WASH (EQUAL CHANCES) AT KDEN OF WHETHER WE STAY VRB, GO  
WESTERLY (DUE TO MIXING), OR LIGHT NORTH/NORTHEAST DIURNAL  
UPSLOPE. KBJC WILL HAVE A HIGHER (70% CHANCE) OF BECOMING W-NW  
WITH GUSTS TO 20-25 KTS.  
 
FOR TONIGHT, IT LOOKS LIKE A SLOWER TRANSITION ONCE AGAIN TO  
NORMAL SOUTHWEST WINDS 04Z-06Z. THEN, WE'LL LIKELY SEE VRB WINDS  
FOR A COUPLE HOURS 17Z-20Z FRIDAY, BEFORE A MORE NORTHERLY BUT  
STILL LIGHT DIURNAL WIND DEVELOPS.  
 

 
   
FIRE WEATHER
 
 
ISSUED AT 525 AM MDT THU MAR 19 2026  
 
FOR THURSDAY, CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS ARE EXPECTED FOR  
AREAS NEAR THE CHEYENNE RIDGE, WHERE A CURRENT RED FLAG WARNING IS  
IN EFFECT FROM 11 AM - 7 PM. NEAR-CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS  
ARE POSSIBLE IN THE VALLEYS OF NORTH PARK, AS RELATIVE HUMIDITIES  
ARE EXPECTED TO DIP DOWN TO AROUND 15% AND FUELS HAVE JUST BEEN  
DEEMED CRITICAL. HOWEVER, WINDS WILL BE RELATIVELY MARGINAL, WITH  
GUSTS UP TO 20 MPH ARE EXPECTED, WITH BRIEF GUSTS OF 30 MPH. HAVE  
OPTED OUT OF INCLUDING NORTH PARK IN A RFW FOR NOW. HOWEVER, IF  
NEW GUIDANCE SHOWS STRONGER WINDS, WILL NEED TO INCLUDE THAT AREA  
FOR TOMORROW. FOR THE REST OF THE REGION, WIDESPREAD ELEVATED FIRE  
WEATHER CONDITIONS ARE EXPECTED THROUGHOUT THE DAY. HOWEVER, WINDS  
WILL BE WEAKER ON THURSDAY THAN THEY HAVE BEEN FOR THE PAST TWO  
DAYS. WEST/NORTHWEST WIND GUSTS WILL GENERALLY STAY BELOW 25 MPH,  
WITH ONLY THE URBAN CORRIDOR OCCASIONALLY SEEING GUSTS UP TO 30  
MPH AT TIMES IN THE AFTERNOON.  
 
ELEVATED FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS ARE EXPECTED ACROSS THE FORECAST  
AREA ON FRIDAY WITH THE CONTINUED WARM AND DRY CONDITIONS.  
HOWEVER, WINDS WILL BE THE LIMITING FACTOR FOR ANY CRITICAL FIRE  
WEATHER CONDITIONS, AS WEST/NORTHWEST WIND GUSTS SHOULD GENERALLY  
REMAIN UNDER 25 MPH. THE ONLY EXCEPTION WOULD BE THE NORTHERN  
PLAINS NEAR THE CHEYENNE RIDGE WHERE GUSTS UP TO 30 MPH MAY OCCUR  
SO HAVE ISSUED A WATCH FOR FIRE ZONES 238 AND 242.  
 
SATURDAY REMAINS TO BE THE HIGHEST CONCERN FOR WIDESPREAD NEAR-  
CRITICAL TO CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS, AS THAT WILL BE THE  
WARMEST AND 'DRIEST' DAY. FUELS WILL CONTINUE TO BE CRITICAL  
ACROSS THE PLAINS, AND FUELS HAVE JUST RECENTLY BEEN DEEMED  
CRITICAL IN AREAS ALONG THE HIGH TERRAIN. MINIMUM RELATIVE  
HUMIDITY VALUES WILL RANGE BETWEEN SINGLE DIGITS IN THE PLAINS,  
AND TEENS-TO-LOW-20S ACROSS MOUNTAINS AND VALLEYS. IN ADDITION,  
WITH THE UPPER LEVEL RIDGE FLATTENING DUE TO A PASSING SHORTWAVE,  
WIDESPREAD GUSTY WESTERLY WINDS ARE EXPECTED.  
 
THERE WILL BE A BRIEF REPRIEVE OF FIRE DANGER ON SUNDAY, AS A COLD  
FRONT WILL BRING IN A SLIGHTLY COOLER AIR MASS AND SOME MOISTURE.  
HOWEVER, THAT WILL BE SHORT-LIVED AS WARM AND DRY CONDITIONS WILL  
RETURN WITH THE UPPER LEVEL RIDGE REBUILDING. ELEVATED TO CRITICAL  
FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS ARE POSSIBLE TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY.  
 

 
   
BOU WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
 
 
RED FLAG WARNING UNTIL 7 PM MDT THIS EVENING FOR COZ238-242.  
 
FIRE WEATHER WATCH FROM FRIDAY MORNING THROUGH FRIDAY EVENING  
FOR COZ238-242.  
 
FIRE WEATHER WATCH FROM SATURDAY MORNING THROUGH SATURDAY  
EVENING FOR COZ238>240-242>245-248>251.  
 

 
 

 
 
DISCUSSION...MAI  
AVIATION...20  
FIRE WEATHER...MAI/RPK  
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab CO Page Main Text Page