502  
FXUS65 KBOU 032054  
AFDBOU  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE DENVER/BOULDER CO  
254 PM MDT SUN MAY 3 2026  
   
KEY MESSAGES
 
 
 
- ONE LAST MILD DAY ACROSS THE REGION MONDAY, WITH SCATTERED  
AFTERNOON SHOWERS AND A FEW THUNDERSTORMS.  
 
- SIGNIFICANT WINTER (SPRING) STORM STILL ON TRACK ACROSS MOST OF  
THE FRONT RANGE MOUNTAINS AND FOOTHILLS FROM MONDAY NIGHT  
THROUGH WEDNESDAY.  
 
- INCREASING CONFIDENCE IN SEEING SNOWFALL ACROSS MOST OF THE I-25  
CORRIDOR AND ADJACENT PLAINS (>80% CHANCE). CLOSELY WATCHING THE  
POTENTIAL FOR SEVERAL INCHES OF SNOW (40-60% CHANCE) TUESDAY  
NIGHT INTO WEDNESDAY.  
 
- RETURN TO A WARMER PATTERN LIKELY AGAIN BY THE LATTER HALF OF  
THE WEEK.  
 

 
   
DISCUSSION /THROUGH SUNDAY/
 
 
ISSUED AT 144 PM MDT SUN MAY 3 2026  
 
IT'S BEEN A RELATIVELY QUIET EARLY MAY DAY TODAY, WITH SOME WIDELY  
SCATTERED HIGH-BASED SHOWERS NOTED ON RADAR THIS AFTERNOON.  
TEMPERATURES HAVE WARMED INTO THE LOW TO MID 70S ACROSS MOST OF  
THE PLAINS DESPITE THE EARLIER CLOUD COVER.  
 
MONDAY WILL BE A BIT OF A TRANSITION DAY, AS OUR TWO MAIN PLAYERS  
THIS WEEK GET A LITTLE CLOSER TO THE AREA - THE STRONGER NORTHERN  
STREAM TROUGH LOCATED OVER THE NORTHERN GREAT PLAINS NEAR THE  
CANADIAN BORDER, AND A CUTOFF UPPER LOW OVER CALIFORNIA. A WEAK  
SHORTWAVE WILL ATTEMPT TO SQUEEZE BETWEEN THESE TWO FEATURES  
DURING THE AFTERNOON MONDAY, LEADING TO ISOLATED TO SCATTERED  
SHOWERS/THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE HIGH COUNTRY, WHICH SHOULD  
EVENTUALLY SPREAD INTO THE PLAINS DURING THE LATTER HALF OF THE  
AFTERNOON HOURS. A COLD FRONT IS EXPECTED TO PUSH IN MONDAY  
EVENING... SETTING THE STAGE FOR ONE LAST SIGNIFICANT WINTER  
STORM.  
 
FOR THE SAKE OF THE READER, I'VE ATTEMPTED TO ORGANIZE SEVERAL  
HOURS OF THOUGHTS INTO A COUPLE DISTINCT SECTIONS BELOW:  
 
SYNOPSIS...  
A RATHER COMPLEX WINTER STORM SETUP IS STILL ADVERTISED BY TODAY'S  
12Z MODEL SUITE. THE GENERAL EVOLUTION OF BOTH THE NORTHERN STREAM  
TROUGH AND THE SOUTHWESTERN CUTOFF LOW HAS BEEN DISCUSSED AT  
LENGTH IN PREVIOUS DISCUSSIONS, SO TODAY MOST OF OUR FOCUS IS  
RELATED TO MODEL TRENDS/SENSITIVITY (I.E., WHAT COULD GO WRONG)  
AND HOW THAT TRANSLATES TO THE ACTUAL GRIDDED FORECAST. WHILE  
GUIDANCE HAS GENERALLY BEEN CONSISTENT FROM DAY TO DAY, THERE WAS  
STILL A RATHER LARGE SPREAD IN QPF AND SNOWFALL AMOUNTS ACROSS A  
LARGE CHUNK OF OUR CWA. WHY WAS THAT?  
 
A CRUDE SENSITIVITY ANALYSIS SUGGESTED THAT THIS WAS ALMOST  
ENTIRELY DUE TO UNCERTAINTY REGARDING THE STRENGTH AND POSITION OF  
A SHORTWAVE ROTATING AROUND THE WEST/SOUTHWESTERN PERIPHERY OF  
THE NORTHERN STREAM TROUGH. THERE WAS A FAIRLY LARGE SHIFT TO THE  
WEST WITH THIS SHORTWAVE TODAY, WITH NEARLY EVERY MODEL AND  
ENSEMBLE MEAN TRENDING TOWARDS A MUCH CLEANER PHASE, AND (PERHAPS  
MORE IMPORTANTLY) PHASING OCCURRING MUCH FURTHER WEST THAN  
PREVIOUSLY ADVERTISED. THIS IS SHOWN WELL IN 500MB  
HEIGHT/VORTICITY D(MODEL)/DT CHARTS BETWEEN 00-12Z WEDNESDAY. WE  
NOW HAVE MUCH BETTER AGREEMENT ACROSS THE DETERMINISTIC/ENSEMBLE  
SUITE... LEADING TO A GENERAL INCREASE IN QPF WITH TODAY'S RUNS,  
WHILE SIMULTANEOUSLY SHRINKING THE OVERALL SPREAD IN QPF. ALL BUT  
ONE ECMWF ENSEMBLE MEMBER HAS OVER 1" OF LIQUID FOR KDEN... WITH  
49/51 MEMBERS PRODUCING >1.5" OF QPF AT BJC/BDU.  
 
THAT LEAVES TWO PRESSING QUESTIONS AS WE GET INTO THE SHORT-RANGE  
MODEL PERIOD. FIRST, ARE THE MODEL SNOW OUTPUTS SEEN TODAY  
REALISTIC (OR EVEN POSSIBLE?). THE SIMPLE ANSWER IS YES, BUT NOT  
THE STANDARD 10:1 SNOW RATIO MAPS AVAILABLE ONLINE. MARGINAL  
TEMPERATURES AND A MAY SUN ANGLE WILL LIMIT ACCUMULATION  
POTENTIAL IN THE LOWER ELEVATIONS, BUT A MAJORITY OF THE SNOW IN  
THE METRO WOULD FALL TUESDAY NIGHT WHEN TEMPERATURES WOULD  
SUPPORT ACCUMULATIONS, ESPECIALLY DURING PERIODS OF HEAVIER  
RATES. A RATHER LARGE PORTION OF CIPS ANALOGS IN THIS PERIOD  
PRODUCED LOWER ELEVATIONS SNOWFALL, INCLUDING A HANDFUL OF  
WARNING-CRITERIA SNOWFALL EVENTS. SECOND, WILL WE SEE ANY  
SIGNIFICANT SHIFTS IN THE QPF AXIS? RECENT RAPID SHIFTS TO STORM  
TRACKS INSIDE 48 HOURS WILL OF COURSE LEAD TO SOME (DESERVED)  
SKEPTICISM OF TODAY'S FORECAST. WAS TODAY'S MODEL SHIFT A  
CORRECTION, OR THE START OF A MORE SIGNIFICANT TREND? ONLY TIME  
WILL TELL. HOWEVER, IT WOULD BE RATHER DIFFICULT TO SHIFT THE  
SLOW-MOVING FGEN ZONE AWAY FROM WHERE ITS BEEN MODELED FOR THE  
LAST SEVERAL DAYS. IN THIS FORECASTER'S OPINION, THE OVERALL  
FORECAST PATTERN SUPPORTS BOTH A HIGHER FLOOR AND CEILING FOR  
PRECIPITATION ACROSS NEARLY ALL OF OUR CWA COMPARED TO THE LAST  
SEVERAL SPRING STORMS.  
 
THE ACTUAL FORECAST & IMPACTS...  
SO, THAT'S A LOT OF WORDS. WHAT DOES IT MEAN FOR YOU, THE READER?  
IN GENERAL, THE FORECAST GRIDS HAVE NUDGED SNOWFALL TOTALS UPWARD  
ACROSS ALL OF THE FRONT RANGE AND URBAN CORRIDOR. A WINTER STORM  
WATCH HAS BEEN ISSUED FOR ALL OF THE FRONT RANGE MOUNTAINS AND  
FOOTHILLS. OUR STORM TOTAL SNOWFALL FORECAST GENERALLY CALLS FOR  
OVER A FOOT OF SNOW FOR MOST LOCATIONS ALONG/NORTH OF I-70 AND  
ABOVE 8000 FEET. WITH 90TH PERCENTILE QPF VALUES EXCEEDING 2", IT  
WOULDN'T BE SURPRISING TO SEE ISOLATED TOTALS OF 18-24" OVER THE  
BOULDER/LARIMER COUNTY MOUNTAINS. TRAVEL IMPACTS ARE LIKELY ACROSS  
THESE AREAS, ESPECIALLY LATE TUESDAY INTO EARLY WEDNESDAY.  
 
FOR THE URBAN CORRIDOR, THE SNOWFALL FORECAST REMAINS HIGHLY  
UNCERTAIN. AS IT STANDS NOW, WE GENERALLY HAVE ABOUT 2-4" IN THE  
GRIDS, BUT THIS WILL BE HIGHLY DEPENDENT ON SNOWFALL RATES TUESDAY  
NIGHT WITH MARGINAL TEMPERATURES THROUGH THE EVENT. THAT MUCH SNOW  
COULD LEAD TO SOME IMPACTS, ESPECIALLY TO THE NOW FULLY-LEAFED OUT  
TREES AROUND THE METRO. HIGHER END SOLUTIONS (>8" OF SNOW, 20-30%  
CHANCE) WOULD LEAD TO MORE SIGNIFICANT TREE/POWER LINE IMPACTS AND  
POTENTIALLY SOME WEDNESDAY MORNING TRAVEL ISSUES. WE DID CONSIDER  
A WINTER STORM WATCH FOR THE I-25 CORRIDOR, BUT ULTIMATELY PASSED  
FOR REASONS NOTED IN THE PREVIOUS SECTION. ON THE OTHER HAND, ANY  
DECREASE IN QPF OR INCREASE IN TEMPERATURES WOULD LEAD TO  
LITTLE/NO IMPACTS FOR MOST OF THE LOWER ELEVATIONS.  
 
FURTHER EAST...A MAJORITY OF THE PRECIPITATION SHOULD FALL AS  
RAIN. SOME SLUSHY ACCUMULATION WOULD BE POSSIBLE, BUT NOT ENOUGH  
FOR ANY SIGNIFICANT ISSUES.  
 
AFTER THE STORM... GUIDANCE REMAINS IN FAIRLY GOOD AGREEMENT THAT  
THE COLDER AIRMASS WILL QUICKLY PEEL AWAY FROM THE FRONT RANGE,  
LEADING TO A FAIRLY QUICK RETURN TO NEAR/ABOVE NORMAL TEMPERATURES  
FOR THE LATTER HALF OF THE WEEK. BROAD NORTHWESTERLY FLOW ALOFT IS  
EXPECTED AS A RIDGE BUILDS TO THE WEST, BUT A FEW SHORTWAVES MAY  
BRING AT LEAST A CHANCE AT A FEW MORE SHOWERS ACROSS THE REGION.  
 

 
   
AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z MONDAY/
 
 
ISSUED AT 1205 PM MDT SUN MAY 3 2026  
 
DIA'S WINDS ARE SLOW IN GOING NORTHWESTERLY AS PER MODEL GUIDANCE.  
THE VAD WIND PROFILER SHOWS WIND DIRECTIONS IN THE 300-310 DEGREE  
RANGE ABOUT 4000 FEET ABOVE THE SURFACE. MOST LIKELY NOT MIXED  
DOWN YET BECAUSE OF THE CLOUDINESS. IT SHOULD EVENTUALLY. WILL GO  
WITH DRAINAGE WINDS TO KICK IN AROUND 05Z LATE THIS EVENING, WITH  
MODELS SHOWING SOME WESTERLY DOWNSLOPING MIXED IN. FOR TOMORROW  
AFTERNOON, WE WENT WITH A PROB30 AFTER 21Z FOR -TSRA AND  
VRB20G35KT. THERE WILL BE NO CEILING ISSUE TODAY AND TONIGHT.  
 

 
   
BOU WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
 
 
WINTER STORM WATCH FROM LATE MONDAY NIGHT THROUGH WEDNESDAY  
MORNING FOR COZ033-035.  
 
WINTER STORM WATCH FROM TUESDAY MORNING THROUGH WEDNESDAY  
AFTERNOON FOR COZ034-036.  
 

 
 

 
 
DISCUSSION...HIRIS  
AVIATION...66  
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab CO Page Main Text Page