309 FXUS65 KBOI 092011 AFDBOI Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Boise ID 212 PM MDT Mon Apr 9 2018 .SHORT TERM...Tonight through Wednesday...An upper level high pressure ridge will maintain dry weather tonight. On Tuesday a shallow upper level low pressure trough will bring scattered showers at lower elevations and more numerous showers over the mountains, mainly during the afternoon and evening. Models show only marginal instability. The cold front will be weak, and cooling aloft will be minor, so we will leave thunder out of the forecast at this time. Showers will continue over the central Idaho mountains but end elsewhere by late Tuesday night. Snow levels will range from 7000 to 9000 feet through Tuesday evening then lower to 5000 to 7000 feet by Wednesday morning. More precipitation will spread across our area during the day on Wednesday ahead of a much stronger Pacific weather system. Temperatures will be around 5 degrees above normal on Tuesday, then cool to near normal on Wednesday. .LONG TERM...Wednesday night through Saturday...Strong upper wave passes through the area Wednesday Night. An abrupt cold front looks like it will be near the ID/OR border early Thursday morning, and push east of the forecast area by mid morning on Thursday. Best chances for precip ahead of the front, but still plenty of showers behind the front, supporting high PoPs through the day on Thursday. Strong winds behind the front will likely make Thursday a very raw, cold, windy, showery day. Temperatures likely 15 degrees or more below normal. Upper trough then passes overhead on Friday, supporting more showers through much of the day. Then ridge builds in for much drier Saturday, with temperatures recovering to near normal. Saturday evening through Tuesday morning...The brief relatively drier and sunnier conditions will soon give way to cloudy, breezy, and moist conditions as a well developed and organized frontal system approaches from the west. Models are in agreement with the timing and tracking of this system so, expect it to begin entering the CWA early Sunday afternoon and continue its eastward track, sparking a chance for thunderstorms along the way. The stronger activity is expected to be in the eastern locations as daytime heating will build up to it's peak in combination additional mountain lift. Expect rain to initially cover most areas, with the exception of the higher mountains. This will change to higher probabilities for snow as lower snow levels move in behind the cold front. Winds will also be stronger near the frontal boundary. Ridging will once again begin to build in by Tuesday morning, improving the weather conditions as the local atmosphere begins drying out. Temperatures start out close to normals on Sunday but drop to around 5 degrees below normal by Monday. && .AVIATION...VFR increasing clouds aloft overnight. Weakening wave in southwest flow Tuesday morning supports some isolated MVFR showers west of KMYL-KREO line, then a break midday, with scattered showers developing again over Oregon Tuesday late afternoon. Surface winds mostly southeast 10-15 kts, but southwest 10-15 over southeast Oregon Tuesday afternoon. Winds aloft near 10k ft MSL: becoming southwest 25-35 kts. && .BOI WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... ID...None. OR...None. && $$ www.weather.gov/Boise www.facebook.com/NWSBoise www.twitter.com/NWSBoise SHORT TERM...JT LONG TERM....TB/WH AVIATION.....TB