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The Front Range Forecast: Some rain or much rain everyday

In Brief:

Ample moisture and troughs/cut off lows to the west bring daily showers, numerous some days.

The Forecast Discussion:

The rain/showers/thunderstorms roll on. In just the last 48 hours, Longmont and Broomfield received about 1 to 1.5 inches of rain. Right now, no severe weather is expected, but the dotted green boxes (Figure 1) are days with afternoon thunderstorms and solid green boxes are periods of enhanced upflow that will keep showers going for much of the day(s).

We still have a blocking high over the center of the nation and a low, that sometimes cuts off from the jet stream flow, to our west (Figure 2). This pattern is keeping Canada very hot and dry - the fires keep burning, but the smoke is headed out east (Figure 4).

Over the next 5 days, alone, The I -25 folks should see 0.25 to 0.5 inch more water and many inches will fall in the mountains. Wow, are things green out there.

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Figure 1: the 10 day graphical forecast for Longmont from weatherunderground.com
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Figure 2: the morning upper air forecast (500mb) from tropicaltidbits and the GFS.
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Figure 3: the 5 day precipitation forecast from the GFS and weather5280.com
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Figure 5: the Friday RAP model smoke forecast from NOAA.

The Longer Range Forecast:

Over the next 10 days, the GFS is painting much of Colorado with 1-4 inches of total rainfall (Figure 5). Amazing.

Looking even further out, there is, as covered as a possibility about 4 months ago here, a strong El Nino setting up (Figure 6). In this pattern, the west coast eastward will expect to receive normal to above normal precipitation (flooding will remain a concern from California through Arizona and eastward (Figure 7).  Colorado keeps normal precipitation going even if we may see somewhat warmer temperatures.

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Figure 5: the 10 day precipitation forecast from the GFS and weather5280.com
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Figure 6: the year to come El Nino forecast from NOAA.
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Figure 7: the climatology of an El Nino map from NOAA.

 


About the Author: John Ensworth

John Ensworth used to work from Longmont as the PI for the NASA through the IGES (The Institute for Global Environmental Strategies). He now teaches technology, algebra, astronomy, meteorology, film school, and Lego robotics to middle/high school.
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Current Weather

Cloudy

Cloudy

69°F

UV Index
0 Low
Pressure
29.97 Steady
Visibility
8 miles
Dewpoint
43 °F
Humidity
39%
Wind
SSW 3.2 mph
Gust
7.6 mph
Wind Chill
69 °F

Hourly Forecast

Today
9 PM
65°F
Mostly cloudy w/ showers
Today
10 PM
61°F
Partly cloudy
Today
11 PM
59°F
Partly cloudy
Tomorrow
12 AM
58°F
Partly cloudy
Tomorrow
1 AM
57°F
Partly cloudy
Tomorrow
2 AM
55°F
Partly cloudy
Tomorrow
3 AM
54°F
Partly cloudy
Tomorrow
4 AM
52°F
Partly cloudy
Tomorrow
5 AM
51°F
Partly cloudy
Tomorrow
6 AM
50°F
Partly sunny
Tomorrow
7 AM
53°F
Partly sunny
Tomorrow
8 AM
58°F
Mostly sunny

7 Day Forecast

Mostly cloudy w/ t-storms

Saturday

77 °F

Not as warm with increasing cloudiness; a thunderstorm in the area late this afternoon


Partly cloudy w/ showers

Saturday Night

50 °F

A couple of showers early this evening; partly cloudy


Mostly sunny

Sunday

81 °F

Sunshine and patchy clouds; breezy in the afternoon


Mostly clear

Sunday Night

49 °F

Mainly clear


Partly sunny w/ t-storms

Monday

70 °F

Not as warm with times of sun and clouds; a thunderstorm in spots in the afternoon


Thunderstorms

Monday Night

46 °F

Cloudy with a couple of thundershowers


Thunderstorms

Tuesday

60 °F

Mostly cloudy and cooler; a couple of afternoon showers and a thunderstorm


Intermittent clouds

Tuesday Night

37 °F

Partly cloudy


Partly sunny

Wednesday

73 °F

Pleasant and warmer with partial sunshine


Mostly clear

Wednesday Night

40 °F

Mainly clear


Sunrise and Sunset

Sunrise
5:41 AM
Sunset
8:13 PM

Based on AccuWeather data