


Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Grand Junction, CO
Issued by NWS Grand Junction, CO
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645 FXUS65 KGJT 021724 AFDGJT Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Grand Junction CO 1124 AM MDT Sat Aug 2 2025 .KEY MESSAGES... - Red Flag Warnings remain in effect for much of eastern Utah and western Colorado as widespread critical fire weather conditions setup. - Isolated to scattered showers and storms will favor the central mountains and areas north today. - Some smoke and haze from wildfires will remain visible today but should diminish tomorrow. && .SHORT TERM /THROUGH SUNDAY/... Issued at 317 AM MDT Sat Aug 2 2025 Another little wave is moving over central western Colorado at the moment, with plenty of lightning accompanying this line. If you heard thunder in the Grand Valley this morning, you weren`t imagining it. For the remainder of today, isolated to scattered showers and storms will fire this afternoon but will favor the central mountains and areas north. Like we`ve seen recently, some gusty winds of around 45 mph will be possible along with some small hail and brief heavy downpours. Most critical fire weather conditions will occur for the next several days amid a drying pattern. Critical fire weather conditions become more widespread today as humidities drop and gusts increase to over 30 mph in some locations. Thus, the Red Flag Warnings along the CO/UT border remain in effect. Scattered showers are expected again this afternoon and evening, the convection will fire off the higher terrain. Outside of convection, deeper mixing will bring widespread gusty surface winds of 20 to 30 mph to the surface today, mainly for eastern Utah and far western Colorado. With dry conditions in place, Red Flag Warnings remain in place as described below. Sunday, high pressure remains over southern Arizona as a ridge axis sets up over the CWA. While RH values drop into the single digits/low teens for many areas, light winds will keep critical fire weather conditions to a minimum. High temperatures will remain several degrees above more normal early August values. && .LONG TERM /SUNDAY NIGHT THROUGH FRIDAY/... Issued at 317 AM MDT Sat Aug 2 2025 A period of hot, dry, and windy conditions is expected through at least midweek. High pressure centered to our south will allow southwesterly flow to keep a dry airmass in place through at least Tuesday night. PWAT anomalies will be well below normal during this period, getting as low as 25-50% of normal Monday afternoon. As such, PoPs are near zero until Wednesday afternoon. PWATs remain below normal, but increase a bit Wednesday onwards as the high pressure center moves eastward, allowing for some moisture to be drawn into the region. This should support terrain based afternoon convection towards the end of the long term. However, considering how dry it will be leading up to Wednesday, and how little moisture will be present, dry thunderstorms seem possible given the current atmospheric moisture outlook. Localized to widespread critical fire weather conditions will remain a concern through the long term period. The jet will be overhead through at least midweek, allowing for mixing down of strong winds. This, coupled with below threshold relative humidity values (single digits for many areas), creates the expected critical fire weather conditions. In addition to being dry and windy, it also looks to be hot as high temperatures will run 5 to 10 degrees above normal. && .AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z SUNDAY/... Issued at 1124 AM MDT Sat Aug 2 2025 Gusty winds of 20 to 25 kts (and localized stronger winds near thunderstorms) are expected to pick up over the next couple hours and persist through the afternoon. While most of the region should remain dry, brief showers and thunderstorms are possible over KASE, KEGE, KRIL, KGUC, and KHDN today. VFR conditions will persist nonetheless. && .FIRE WEATHER... Issued at 317 AM MDT Sat Aug 2 2025 Critical fire weather conditions will occur for the next several days amid a drying pattern. Critical fire weather conditions become more widespread today as humidities drop and gusts increase to over 30 mph in some locations. Thus, the Red Flag Warnings along the CO/UT border remain in effect. Scattered showers expected again this afternoon and evening which could bring wetting rain to some ongoing fires, though frequent lightning will pose a threat of new ignitions. && .GJT WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... CO...Red Flag Warning until 7 PM MDT this evening for COZ200-202- 203-207-290. UT...Red Flag Warning until 7 PM MDT this evening for UTZ487-490- 491. && $$ SHORT TERM...TGR LONG TERM...GF AVIATION...TGJT FIRE WEATHER...TGJT