Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Grand Junction, CO

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859 FXUS65 KGJT 240605 AFDGJT Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Grand Junction CO 1205 AM MDT Fri May 24 2024 .KEY MESSAGES... - A cold front will be bring scattered showers and potentially a thunderstorm or two to the central northern Colorado mountains late this afternoon and evening. - Widespread gusty winds of 30 to 40 mph will diminish this evening. - Another storm blows through on Saturday bringing the likelihood for showers and mountain snow to all but extreme southeast Utah and southwest Colorado with the norther half of the forecast area favored. - Temperatures become much warmer early next week. && .SHORT TERM /THROUGH SATURDAY/... Issued at 241 PM MDT Thu May 23 2024 The cold front driven southward by the latest trough to impact the forecast area was just south of the I-70 corridor as of 20Z this afternoon. Strong, gusty southwest winds ahead of the front ranged from 15 to 25 mph with occasional gusts to 40, and as high as 48 mph. Meanwhile, north of the front light showers were ongoing over a portion of the northwest Colorado plateau and the Elkhead and northern Park mountains. The trough is expected to continue to shift east this evening and as a result, showers will continue over the northern mountains and Steamboat basin while spreading into the central Colorado mountains. Snowfall at higher elevations is expected to be relatively light with accumulations by Friday morning only amounting to an inch or two above treeline. Since the trough axis will shift east of the Continental Divide early this evening the resultant subsidence in it wake will cause showers to diminish by midnight with dry conditions and clearing during the remainder of the night. A low amplitude transitory ridge moves over the area on Friday as the next trough moves over the Great Basin later in the day. Modest moisture in the 700-500 mb layer will generate increased clouds over the area, mainly in the afternoon over the northern portion of the forecast area. However, the dryness indicated in the subcloud layer is likely to inhibit showers from occurring, though virga is likely. Winds will be significantly reduced below the ridge, largely hold to normal diurnal patterns. As the axis of the Great Basin trough shifts to the western border of Utah late Friday night jet divergence and overrunning southwest flow is expected to generate scattered showers over northeast Utah and northwest Colorado with only slight chances along the I-70 corridor with little to no chance south of there. Temperatures will continue to run a bit below normal during the period, though that`s not an entirely bad thing. && .LONG TERM /SATURDAY NIGHT THROUGH THURSDAY/... Issued at 241 PM MDT Thu May 23 2024 The next wave drags across the CWA on Saturday, ramping up another round of afternoon showers and thunderstorms. The cold(er) pool associated with this trough won`t dig much further south than the northern aspect of the San Juan`s, so the Four Corners region doesn`t appear to see much in terms of moisture or a temperature gradient in the front`s wake. However, best PVA, source of lift and instability will be focused along and north of the I-70 corridor by mid afternoon. As such, stronger potential for thunderstorms and bursts of heavy rain drifting off mountainous terrain appear to be over counties north of Mesa and Pitkin in western CO. This quick moving system lifts east of the Divide Sunday night with dry northwest flow invading the Western Slope through the end of the weekend. Ridging builds along the spine of the Rockies on Memorial Day, which returns a warming trend for eastern Utah and western Colorado. Forecast guidance is consistent across the board of ensembles with maximum heights straddled overhead through Tuesday. The southern extent of the next PacNW trough varies by days 6 and 7, though consensus remains consistent that southwest winds dominate flow aloft by the end of the forecast period. As a result, 90 degree weather filters back into the region early next week, reaching the Grand Valley by mid week. Readings across the board run about 5 to 8 degrees above normal for the end of May, and extended guidance doesn`t show a relief from this warm pool even as we head into June. Snowmelt will ramp back up in response to next week`s warming trend, so we expect to see river stage and flows gradually rising in sequence. Higher terrain across the upper Gunnison, Colorado Headwaters and Yampa River basins are still sitting at, or just above normal in terms of snowpack. Therefore, seasonal peaks in flow could be just around the corner if this prolong period of warm and dry weather persists. Fortunately, probability remains low for flooding this runoff season. && .AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z SATURDAY/...
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Issued at 1204 AM MDT Fri May 24 2024 Behind the front, northwesterly winds will gust 20-30 knots for an hour or so before slowly weakening. Skies will rapidly clear behind the front, as is already being seen at terminals in eastern Utah and northwestern Colorado. VFR to MVFR conditions will be likely along the front, with VFR conditions expected to prevail through the next 24 hours. Light winds tonight will be northerly before transitioning to more variable and terrain driven patterns. Afternoon gusts up to 25 knots will return for most terminals tomorrow.
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&& .GJT WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... CO...None. UT...None. && $$ SHORT TERM...NL LONG TERM...ERW AVIATION...TGJT