Your favorites:

Henderson, Colorado Weather Forecast Discussion

701
FXUS65 KBOU 061109
AFDBOU

Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Denver/Boulder CO 509 AM MDT Sat Sep 6 2025

.KEY MESSAGES...

- Still hazy/smoky through this evening.

- Isolated to scattered showers and storms most days this week, but mainly over the higher terrain.

- Warmer for much of the week ahead, but chance of storms may increase along with cooler temperatures by the end of the week.

&&

.DISCUSSION /Through Friday/... Issued at 137 PM MDT Fri Sep 5 2025

An upper level ridge centered over the Great Basin will produce a northwest flow aloft. This will continue to help transport wildfire smoke from the Pacific Northwest and western Canada into Colorado today and Saturday. There will be enough moisture and instability for scattered showers and thunderstorms. The showers/storms will be most numerous across the higher terrain south of I-70. For the lower foothills and eastward, cloud cover and smoke will help keep the airmass cool and capped. Chances for showers or storms to move off the higher terrain are low. If a couple happen too, they are expected to be weak and short lived. Much of the same is expected for Saturday, though high temperatures warm up into the mid to upper 70s.

The ridge flattens some by Sunday as it begins to drift eastward. Temperatures warm more with highs expected to reach to the lower to mid 80s across northeast Colorado. Another round of afternoon and evening showers and thunderstorms are expected over the higher terrain. Chances for showers and thunderstorms will be higher across the urban corridor and eastern plains Sunday, due better instability, weaker cap, and westerly flow pushing the storms more eastward.

For next week, the upper level ridge will slide east across Colorado Monday. This will bring warmer temperatures with highs climbing into the 80s across northeast Colorado. There may be enough moisture for weak showers and storms over the higher terrain, but most areas should remain dry.

The upper level ridge will be east of Colorado Tuesday and stays east of the state through Thursday. This will produce a southwest flow aloft through at least Thursday. High temperatures will be above normal under this pattern with mid to upper 80s expected over northeast Colorado each day. The GFS and ECMWF ensemble members don`t favor any organized waves or precipitation events Tuesday through Thursday. However, there`s just enough moisture for isolated/scattered showers and thunderstorms, mostly over the higher terrain each day.

For Friday and into next weekend, models trending towards an upper level trough digging south into the Desert Southwest or southern California. This should produce some sort of southwest to southerly flow aloft across Colorado. Too soon to tell how much, but this pattern should be able to tap into some subtropical moisture. Will trend temperatures down and PoPs up for this pattern, but if this pattern is slow to evolve, we could see another warm and dry day.

&&

.AVIATION /12Z TAFS through 12Z Sunday/... Issued at 509 AM MDT Sat Sep 6 2025

VFR conditions will persist, but the main issue will be smoke and reduced arrival rates due to IMC during daylight hours. It appear the smoke plume will stay largely unchanged from yesterday, so we`ll mention FU in the TAFs (surface vis should stay above 6SM but slant range visibility will be affected). We do expect some convective cloud buildups 18Z-03Z, but the main threat of any passing showers or storms would stay confined to the high country and Palmer Divide, and chances less than 20% for the TAF sites. Normal diurnal wind patterns will persist, with speeds around 10 kts or less.

&&

.BOU WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None.

&&

$$

DISCUSSION...Meier AVIATION...Barjenbruch

NWS BOU Office Area Forecast Discussion

WeatherForYou.com, LLC is not responsible for any damages or problems caused by this service. Current weather conditions are obtained from the closest government operated station, a personal station contributing to the PWSweather.com network or from the Meteorological Assimilation Data Ingest System (MADIS). Some weather information is powered by XWeather. WeatherForYou.com, NOAA, AerisWeather and their data providers disclaim liability of any kind whatsoever, including, without limitation, liability for quality, performance, merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose arising out of the use or inability to use the data. Like all things, this site belongs to Jesus Christ ... He just trusts us to maintain it. If you have any questions or comments please use the suggestion box.

Copyright © 1999 - 2025, WeatherForYou.com LLC. All rights reserved.