Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Grand Junction, CO

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715 FXUS65 KGJT 282126 AFDGJT Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Grand Junction CO 326 PM MDT Sun Apr 28 2024 .KEY MESSAGES...
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- Showers diminish this evening as the atmosphere stabilizes in the wake of today`s disturbance. - Above normal temperatures return during the first half of the week. - A fast moving system in northwest flow will bring another round of showers and localized thunderstorms to the eastern Uinta Mountains and northwest Colorado Monday night through Tuesday morning.
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&& .SHORT TERM /THROUGH MONDAY NIGHT/...
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Issued at 326 PM MDT Sun Apr 28 2024 Expect showers to diminish this evening in the wake of the weak short wave passing over the forecast area now, along with cooling surface temperatures helping stabilize the atmosphere. Skies clear from west to east during the night, though clouds are likely to hang on over the northern and central Colorado mountains through sunrise Monday. Flow becomes zonal on Monday as a trough sweeps from the West Coast to the Great Basin during the day. An increased pressure gradient across the north should lead to breezy afternoon winds. Warm air advection combined with morning sunshine will lead to warmer temperatures Monday afternoon with readings expected climb to near 5 degrees above seasonal norms for most locations. A modest push of moisture ahead of the trough combined the destabilizing effect of surface warming may lead to isolated showers/thunderstorms over the eastern Uinta Mountains as well as the Elkhead, Park and Flat Top Mountains during the afternoon. Shower chances ramp up Monday evening and become likely across the northwest Colorado plateau and the northern Colorado mountains overnight. This fast moving system is expected to deliver up to 6 inches of new snow across portions of the Park Range, mainly above 9,000 feet. More scattered activity is expected along the I-70 corridor east of the Debeque Canyon and portions of the Grand Mesa and central Colorado mountains. Areas to the south will see little chance for precipitation from this quick hitting storm. Despite pushing a cold front to near the I-70 corridor, overnight lows are expected to show little change as gradient driven winds keep the lower levels mixed.
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&& .LONG TERM /TUESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/...
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Issued at 326 PM MDT Sun Apr 28 2024 Flow becomes zonal on Monday as this weekend`s storm moves to the Upper Midwest, forced east by a mid-level short wave trough ejected from a closed low off the coast of British Columbia. The regional airmass will be largely drier in the westerlies promising quiet weather Monday morning while temperatures climb several degrees above normal during the day. However, model consensus indicated the potential for convective showers over the northern mountains in the afternoon as modest moisture moving ahead of the previously mentioned short wave filters in throughout the day. The short wave trough moves eastward Monday night driving a cold front across the northern half of the forecast area. Meanwhile, moisture and lift along and north of the front is expected to bring another round of precipitation to the northern mountains and northwest Colorado plateau with a chance for showers over the central Colorado mountains and the eastern Uinta Mountains. A bit of a lull in activity is expected Tuesday as flow again becomes zonal in the wake of the disturbance, though scattered instability showers are possible, mainly over the Elkhead, Park and Flat Top Mountains. Despite the passage of the cold front, temperatures are expected to be near, or only a few degrees cooler than on Monday across northeast Utah and northwest Colorado and a few degrees warmer along the I-70 corridor and south. On Wednesday, models were in good agreement showing a positive tilt trough moving over the Intermountain West and Great Basin causing flow aloft to shift to the southwest. As this plays out, moisture ahead of the trough overruns the stalled front over the northern portion of the forecast area resulting in a good chance for showers, especially for the northern and central mountains of Colorado. Meanwhile, a tightening of the pressure gradient ahead of the approaching disturbance will bring breezy conditions to the northern zones Wednesday afternoon and evening. Cloud cover and showers should bring a few additional degrees of cooling to the north while areas to the south can expect little change in temperature and little chance for precipitation. The forecast is less clear for the remainder of the week as the ECMWF slows the eastward progress of the mid-level trough as compared to the Canadian and GFS solutions which were more progressive. The latter two models suggested little chance for additional showers Thursday and Friday while the ECMWF depicted active weather Thursday and Thursday night and lingering Friday with the north again favored. Model blends indicated chance precipitation for the Continental Divide, and particularly for the northern Colorado mountains Thursday and Friday and this seemed to be the appropriate forecast for now. Given trough passage sometime at the end of the week it stands to reason Thursday, and to a lesser extent Friday, will be cooler.
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&& .AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z MONDAY/... Issued at 1145 AM MDT Sun Apr 28 2024 Just as this morning`s low clouds and fog started clearing out, daytime heating and a weak wave moving overhead have allowed clouds to start filling back in. Ceilings will hover between VFR/MVFR across most mountain terminals this afternoon with ILS breakpoints being reached at times as well. Scattered showers and a few storms will be around but will start to diminish after the sun sets. Any shower or storm can produce erratic and gusty winds. More widespread VFR returns late this evening with skies becoming partly cloudy overnight. Quiet weather then prevails through the day on Monday with light, terrain driven winds. && .GJT WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... CO...None. UT...None. && $$ SHORT TERM...NL LONG TERM...MDM AVIATION...TGJT