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<br />Temperature Forecasts (CPC) <br />I .r . . .~ <br />_so <br /> <br /> <br />I( <br />TE"PERATURE OUTLOOt~ <br />0.5 MO LL NONTHLY <br />VRLIOI MAR 1006 <br />MADEl 28 fES 2006 <br />.do -----d.,o_' -,00 <br /> <br />.., <br /> <br />. ~!f..:1!I"!i~~"'~ <br />AIOtA.'...Il'([ , <br />I "[IIII!lHOlr#lL <br />I "(f'l15KLOtl <br />--=-$o--r-- .80 <br /> <br /> <br />TEMPERATURE OUTLOO'~ <br />1.5 MO LL SEASONAL <br />vALlO' AMJ 100S <br />MADE: 16 rES laOS <br />-120 ----,Lo_' AlOC <br /> <br />. .., <br />'......... <br />~-.....<..;... <br />J <br />~~~rr,KI~~ .. .... <br />. NUl., 1Illl0'([ . <br />. "[1'1-' NO.~1. <br />1"[l'ldIllLOM <br />---=,.o---r--- .80 <br /> <br />According to CPC's official forecasts, March 2006 (left) is expected to be warm over <br />Texas and cold along the Pacific coast, with Colorado mostly "EC" (equal chances of <br />warm/near-normal/cold). After a warm start and a COLD second week, we are actually <br />running close to normal right now. April through June '06 (right) has a much bigger tilt <br />towards wannth in SW CO than in the Front Range. This is mostly based on recent <br />temperature trends. This week's update is not expected to look much different for us. <br />