That same big scale effect has been causing lines of t-storms to march down north to south along the Front Range on and off for a couple of weeks. They don't have much moisture, but they're traveling north to south which is very odd for around here.
Start up near Wyoming and continue on south by southeast for a long way.
Throwing the NWS office for a loop around here a bit. Predictions are way off and mix in the new radar toys and they're botching it pretty good.
The NWS alerts for "1" hail" are completely bogus right now. It's either all melting before hitting the surface or wasn't ever there to begin with. Only one storm with that warning has actually produced hail, and that was in Boulder a few days ago.
That or we have a newbie doing the radar warnings... Hahaha. Who knows...
In the unpopulated areas, NWS does a lot more estimates by radar than in the past and the continual theme is "Spotter activation is not needed" almost every day...
At least when spotters are out, they get accurate ground-level intel.
I'm geeking out lately on the alert system... And wondering why the SAME code and alerts for Elbert County aren't broadcast on the WNG550 Franktown transmitter on 162.450 MHz.
I receive it much better than the Denver KEC76 162.55 or Deer Trail WXJ45 162.500 (which is only 100 W and further out East). Denver is blocked by a ridgeline and weak, Deer Trail would be okay with a 300 W transmitter out there but is just a little over 12 dB SINAD here by ear... Good enough for the SAME decoder but the background white noise is annoying, when Franktown is nearly full-quieting.
I told you I was geeking out about it.
http://www.nws.noaa.gov/nwr/CntyCov/nwrCO.htm
http://www.nws.noaa.gov/nwr/Maps/PHP/site.php?State=CO&Site=WNG550
http://www.nws.noaa.gov/nwr/Maps/PHP/site.php?State=CO&Site=KEC76
http://www.nws.noaa.gov/nwr/Maps/PHP/site.php?State=CO&Site=WXJ45