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Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Grand Junction, CO
Issued by NWS Grand Junction, CO
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315 FXUS65 KGJT 010525 AFDGJT Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Grand Junction CO 1125 PM MDT Sun Jun 30 2024 .KEY MESSAGES... - A Flood Watch for southeast Utah and southwest Colorado remains in effect through Monday afternoon. Abundant monsoonal moisture will bring a heavy rainfall rate threat to these areas through tomorrow. - The stonger thunderstorms will be capable of producing gusty outflow winds, large hail, and plenty of cloud-to-ground lightning. - Monsoonal moisture gets forced east on Tuesday, and afternoon showers will be far more isolated in nature. && .SHORT TERM /THROUGH MONDAY/... Issued at 119 PM MDT Sun Jun 30 2024 Another day, another round of storms. It took awhile for convection to get going today thanks to a fairly strong cap. The morning sounding showed a strong midlevel inversion from 400 to 500mb so it took some time to break through. Once it did, convection started going which is exactly what happened. In 2 scans (approximately 8 minutes), radar returns of 20dBZ jumped to 58dBZ...not too shabby. PWATs remain high and there`s little change in that regard. Flow around a high situated over Texas continues to pump in moisture from the south. PWATs hitting 250 to 300% of normal is still in the forecast with models showing this being 2 to nearly 4 standard deviations above normal. The deepest moisture is still expected to remain over the southern half of the forecast area so the Flood Watch will remain in place. CAPE values as per SPC`s Mesoscale Analysis are forecast to reach between 1500 to 2000 J/kg from 4PM onwards. The highest CAPE values currently remain over the San Juans. The stronger storms will produce some gusty outflow winds, large hail, and torrential rains that will increase flooding concerns. The 18Z HRRR guidance is keeping convection in the forecast through this afternoon and evening and continuing for the overnight. Looks like a second wave will move through around 9PM and though convection will die down, some, lightning, gusty winds, and the continued threat of heavy rain will continue. Monday morning, some lingering, moderate to occasionally heavy, showers will be found across the higher terrain of the southern portion of the CWA. By noon, another round of showers and storms begins...rinse and repeat. One would think the residual clouds would inhibit convection but forecast CAPE for tomorrow varies from 500 to 1500 J/kg while midlevel lapse rates will reach 7 to 9C/km. Yep, there`s plenty of instability that will get worked on as an upper level trough moves through. Furthermore, a weak jet streak will also be moving overhead bringing some upper level divergence that will also aid in lift. All that being said, look for very similar conditions tomorrow as we`ll see today. && .LONG TERM /MONDAY NIGHT THROUGH SUNDAY/... Issued at 119 PM MDT Sun Jun 30 2024 The upper level trough exits the region on Tuesday with dry northwesterly flow in its wake. This will serve to shunt monsoonal moisture south and eastward, effectively turning down the tap we`ve been drinking from the last week. This will spell out dry conditions over the western half of the CWA, but remnant moisture hanging on along the terrain will likely get worked on another day Tuesday for some afternoon showers and thunderstorms. Temperatures will remain on the mild side behind this pseudo- frontal passage Tuesday, with only our desert valleys hitting 90`s. Temperatures quickly surge back upward Wednesday, as the passing wave flattens into a zonal regime thanks to a strong northwesterly jet digging into the PACNW. This will find us in a bit of an ambivalent flow pattern with a southwest lean to it. Desert valleys will again flirt with triple digits, both Wednesday and Thursday. The broad cyclonic flow to our north finally exits Thursday afternoon and northwest flow returns another downturn in temperatures as well as more dry air. The drying trend from Wednesday onward proposes some uncertainty into precipitation forecasts. While shower and storm coverage will be notably less, it remains risky to commit to a dry forecast. For now, we`ll stick with isolated showers on the terrain through the end of the week. The dry surface conditions in the northwesterly regime should allow for some gusty outflow winds under collapsing storms. This drying trend continues through the weekend thanks to an amplifying ridge over the West. The return of warm, dry conditions will once again turn our attention back to fire weather late week as well. Wednesday and Thursday look like the best bets for winds and relative humidities to coincide for critical fire weather. While RH values will be there, winds still look pretty marginal. The arrival of the Fourth of July holiday and return of a dry pattern after a very wet period will warrant some vigilance. && .AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z TUESDAY/... Issued at 1122 PM MDT Sun Jun 30 2024 Moist...unstable conditions will keep a threat of shower and thunderstorm activity in place over the next 24 hours. For the most part VFR will prevail but if a shower with heavier rainfall rates moves over an airfield MVFR conditions could occur mainly due to restrictions to VSBY. Gusty outflow winds will also remain a threat from passing storms or larger outflow boundaries from the storm clusters. Quickly changing conditions are possible and confidence is low on timing and exact conditions but will be amending as necessary. && .GJT WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... CO...Flood Watch through Monday afternoon for COZ009-011-012-014- 017>023. UT...Flood Watch through Monday afternoon for UTZ022-028-029. && $$ SHORT TERM...TGR LONG TERM...LTB AVIATION...GJT