Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Grand Junction, CO

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860 FXUS65 KGJT 190551 AFDGJT Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Grand Junction CO 1151 PM MDT Sat May 18 2024 .KEY MESSAGES... - Warm and breezy this weekend with temperatures remaining at least 5 to 10 degrees above normal. - Isolated to scattered showers are storms are expected today and Sunday. The higher terrain along the Divide will be favored with gusty outflow winds and small hail being the primary concerns from storms. - A larger system moves through early next week resulting in cooler and wetter conditions. Drier weather looks to return by midweek. && .SHORT TERM /THROUGH SUNDAY/...
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Issued at 138 PM MDT Sat May 18 2024 A boundary that went through the area yesterday is beginning to lift back to the north. This is in part due to a shortwave approaching from the southwest. The wave is getting absorbed into the main flow therefore it is fairly weak. Although this has caused midlevel confluence in the vicinity of the boundary, which is where moisture is pooled. High based showers and a few storms have already formed across the southern half of the forecast area. This development will go into the afternoon as surface heating continues and the boundary lifts northward. Strong outflow winds will be possible with storms with gusts of 40 to 50 mph likely. Outside of convection today, we can expect mostly to partly sunny skies with occasional breezy conditions as 700mb winds remain in the 20 to 25 kt range. Showers and perhaps a few storms will continue tonight as the weak shortwave lifts over the northern half of the forecast area. Not much rainfall or snowfall is expected with the showers today or tonight. The boundary will stall across northeast UT and northwest CO tomorrow as the main trough deepens down the coast. This will result in showers and storms through out the day mainly along and north of the I-70. South of that dry air will inhibit any instability so do not expect any convection there. The wave that moves through tonight looks to steepen the lapse rates, which should result in a bit more instability. So some storms tomorrow may be capable of small hail.
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&& .LONG TERM /SUNDAY NIGHT THROUGH SATURDAY/... Issued at 138 PM MDT Sat May 18 2024 The southwest gradient will tighten on Monday ahead of a trough dropping southward into the Great Basin from the Intermountain West. H7 winds out ahead of it increase to 35 kts with H5 winds up to 60 kts. A 120 kt subtropical jet sets up over the Four Corners region, stretching up through southeast Utah and southwest to west-central Colorado. Wind gusts of 30 to 45 mph are possible Monday afternoon. Due to influence from the subtropical jet, deep mixing is expected with any shower activity confined mostly to northeast Utah and northwest Colorado as a frontal boundary remains stalled over that area. Temperatures will remain cooler across the north due to increased coverage of clouds and showers and due to the stalled frontal boundary. However, along and south of I-70, temperatures will remain warm averaging 5 degrees above normal. The aforementioned trough will drop through the area Monday night into Tuesday, bringing increasing coverage of showers as well as much cooler temperatures, with highs on Tuesday falling to as much as 10 to 15 degrees below normal. The extent of this trough seems to reach as far south as the San Juans, with a much lesser chance of precipitation across the southern valleys. Snow levels drop to around 8000 feet with the passage of this trough Tuesday, but any accumulating snow seems to remain above 10kft with a couple inches at best, favoring the northern and central mountains. Although, impacts are expected to be minimal to non-existent as roads likely remain wet given the time of day and year that most of the precipitation is expected to fall. The trough exits into the Central Plains by Tuesday night and Wednesday morning, taking the precipitation with it, leaving a drier westerly flow for Wednesday. Meanwhile, another low pressure trough enters the PacNW and inconsistencies crop up with regards to what happens to this PacNW low as it moves further inland. The GFS wants to dig this trough into the Great Basin, with potential unsettled weather by the end of the week. On the other hand, the ECMWF takes this trough north of our area, leaving us drier. The blended approach seems most reasonable given the differences at this time, with isolated to scattered showers favoring the northern high terrain for the latter half of the week. Following the passage of the trough on Tuesday, temperatures should bounce back from the cooldown with highs trending towards normal or slightly below normal late this week. && .AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z MONDAY/...
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Issued at 1139 PM MDT Sat May 18 2024 A few scattered showers will linger over northwest CO and northeast UT tonight along a stalled frontal boundary. Most of this activity will break up by daybreak. However, the frontal boundary will remain in place and help with showers and thunderstorms north of I-70 Sunday afternoon as things warm up. Winds aloft remain strong and are expected to mix down to the surface with gusty southwest winds around the region. Terminals will see winds gusting around 25-35 mph, with a few stronger bursts from thunderstorm outflows. Small hail remains a concern as well Sunday afternoon. Showers and winds will quiet down towards the end of this TAF period Sunday night.
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&& .GJT WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... CO...None. UT...None. && $$ SHORT TERM...KJS LONG TERM...MDA AVIATION...TGJT