437  
NOUS45 KBOU 300959  
PNSBOU  
COZ030>051-302300-  
 
PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE DENVER/BOULDER CO  
259 AM MST TUE DEC 30 2025  
   
..TODAY IN METRO DENVER WEATHER HISTORY  
 
25-31 IN 1980...TEMPERATURES WERE UNUSUALLY WARM DURING THE WEEK  
BETWEEN CHRISTMAS AND NEW YEAR'S. HIGH TEMPERATURES FOR  
THE WEEK RANGED FROM THE MID-50'S TO THE MID-70'S. FOUR  
TEMPERATURE RECORDS WERE SET. RECORD HIGHS OCCURRED ON  
THE 26TH WITH 68 DEGREES...THE 27TH WITH 75 DEGREES...AND  
THE 30TH WITH 71 DEGREES. A RECORD HIGH MINIMUM  
TEMPERATURE OF 41 DEGREES OCCURRED ON THE 27TH.  
29-30 IN 1898...HEAVY SNOWFALL TOTALED 6.2 INCHES IN DOWNTOWN  
DENVER. NORTHEAST WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO 35 MPH WITH  
GUSTS TO 40 MPH ON THE 29TH.  
IN 1912...STRONG WINDS BUFFETED BOULDER...CAUSING HUNDREDS OF  
DOLLARS DAMAGE. THE WINDS WERE DESCRIBED AS ONE OF THE  
MOST TERRIFIC IN THE HISTORY OF THE CITY.  
IN 1923...A COLD WAVE CAUSED TEMPERATURES TO PLUNGE 58  
DEGREES IN 24 HOURS. THE TEMPERATURE WAS 54 DEGREES AT  
2:00 PM ON THE 29TH AND ONLY 4 DEGREES BELOW ZERO AT THE  
SAME TIME ON THE 30TH. THE LOW TEMPERATURE OF 14 DEGREES  
ON THE 29TH WAS THE HIGH TEMPERATURE ON THE 30TH. THE LOW  
TEMPERATURE ON THE 30TH DIPPED TO 10 DEGREES BELOW ZERO.  
LIGHT SNOWFALL TOTALED ONLY 0.7 INCH. NORTHEAST WINDS  
WERE SUSTAINED TO 23 MPH ON THE 29TH.  
IN 2008...VERY STRONG CHINOOK WINDS BLASTED AREAS IN AND NEAR  
THE FOOTHILLS OF BOULDER AND JEFFERSON COUNTIES. THE WIND  
BLEW DOWN TREES AND POWER POLES...DOWNED ELECTRICAL LINES  
AND FENCES...AND DAMAGED HOMES AND VEHICLES. SCATTERED  
POWER OUTAGES WERE REPORTED ALONG THE FRONT RANGE. IN  
METROPOLITAN DENVER ALONE...24000 XCEL CUSTOMERS WERE  
AFFECTED BY THE OUTAGES. FOUR PLANED WERE DAMAGED AT THE  
VANCE BRAND MUNICIPAL AIRPORT IN LONGMONT...ONE WAS HEAVILY  
DAMAGED. INSURANCE COMPANIES ESTIMATED UP TO 7 MILLION  
DOLLARS IN DAMAGE. PEAK WIND GUSTS INCLUDED 87 MPH AT THE  
NATIONAL WIND TECHNOLOGY CENTER...86 MPH...2 MILES NORTH OF  
LONGMONT; 77 MPH AT ERIE...AND 75 MPH AT LAFAYETTE. ON THE  
30TH...A PEAK WIND GUST TO 47 MPH WAS RECORDED AT DENVER  
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
IN 2021...THE COMBINATION OF VERY HIGH WINDS AND EXTREMELY  
DRY CONDITIONS PRODUCED THE MOST DESTRUCTIVE WILDFIRE IN  
COLORADO HISTORY (APPROXIMATELY 2 BILLION DOLLARS). IT  
WAS ALSO ONE OF THE COSTLIEST IN U.S. HISTORY. THE  
MARSHALL FIRE WAS DRIVEN BY WIND GUSTS FROM 75 MPH TO 100  
MPH AS IT RACED ACROSS SOUTHEAST BOULDER COUNTY AND QUICKLY  
CONSUMED 6200 ACRES. GOVERNOR POLIS ISSUED A STATE OF  
EMERGENCY. U.S. PRESIDENT JOE BIDEN RESPONDED TO THE  
FIRES BY EXPEDITING A MAJOR DISASTER DECLARATION...WHICH  
UNLOCKED FEDERAL AID FOR INDIVIDUALS AND PUBLIC  
INFRASTRUCTURE. THE MARSHALL FIRE DESTROYED OR DAMAGED OVER  
ONE THOUSAND HOMES AND BUSINESSES...ALONG WITH HUNDREDS OF  
TREES. THE FIRE PERIMETER INCLUDED THE CITIES OF MARSHALL...  
SUPERIOR...LOUISVILLE AS WELL AS UNINCORPORATED SECTIONS OF  
BOULDER COUNTY. A TOTAL OF 45000 PEOPLE WERE EVACUATED FROM  
SUPERIOR...LOUISVILLE...AND PORTIONS OF BROOMFIELD; 26000  
RESIDENTS WERE WITHOUT POWER. IN ALL...1084 HOMES WITHIN THE  
FIRE PERIMETER WERE DESTROYED AND 149 WERE DAMAGED. SEVEN  
COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES WERE DESTROYED AND 30 OTHER BUSINESSES  
DAMAGED. THERE WAS ONE CONFIRMED FATALITY IN MARSHALL. AN  
ELDERLY RESIDENT IN SUPERIOR WAS MISSING AND PRESUMED DEAD.  
SIX PEOPLE SUFFERED MINOR BURNS. IN ARVADA...A DISCOUNT TIRE  
STORE COLLAPSED. ONE EMPLOYEE WAS TREATED FOR MINOR INJURIES.  
SEMI-TRUCKS WERE BLOWN OVER ALONG CO93 AND C470 WHICH FORCED  
ROAD CLOSURES. THE HIGH WIND SMASHED CAR WINDOWS. JUST PRIOR  
TO THE MARSHALL FIRE...THE MIDDLE FORK FIRE WAS REPORTED IN  
NORTHERN BOULDER COUNTY. IT WAS CONTAINED THAT DAY AND NO  
STRUCTURES WERE BURNED. PEAK WIND GUSTS INCLUDED: 115 MPH IN  
NORTHWEST ARVADA NEAR CO93...110 MPH AT THE JUNCTION OF  
CO93/CO72...108 MPH...3 MILES SOUTHWEST OF BOULDER; 103 MPH  
NEAR WHITE RANCH OPEN SPACE...102 MPH NEAR CRISMAN...98 MPH AT  
THE NATIONAL WIND TECHNOLOGY CENTER; 90 MPH NEAR MARSHALL...81  
MPH AT C470 AND SOUTH WADSWORTH...AND 75 MPH IN BOULDER. AT  
DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT...A PEAK GUST OF 40 MPH WAS  
OBSERVED FROM THE WEST.  
30 IN 1875...SNOW FELL FROM THE EARLY MORNING INTO THE EARLY  
EVENING. WHILE THE AMOUNT OF SNOWFALL WAS NOT RECORDED...  
PRECIPITATION FROM MELTED SNOW TOTALED 0.53 INCH.  
GOOD SLEIGHING WAS REPORTED...SO SNOWFALL MUST HAVE BEEN  
5 INCHES OR MORE.  
IN 1895...NORTHWEST WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO 60 MPH IN THE  
CITY.  
IN 1897...WEST WINDS SUSTAINED TO 52 MPH WITH GUSTS TO 60  
MPH WARMED THE TEMPERATURE TO A HIGH OF 55 DEGREES.  
IN 1912...WEST WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO 48 MPH WITH GUSTS TO  
52 MPH. THE CHINOOK WINDS WARMED THE TEMPERATURE TO A  
HIGH OF 50 DEGREES.  
IN 1928...SNOWFALL WAS 0.1 INCH IN DOWNTOWN DENVER. THIS  
WAS THE ONLY MEASURABLE SNOW OF THE MONTH...RANKING THE  
MONTH THE THIRD LEAST SNOWIEST ON RECORD IN THE CITY.  
IN 1990...STRONG DOWNSLOPE WINDS BUFFETED THE EASTERN  
FOOTHILLS. WIND GUSTS TO 91 MPH WERE RECORDED ATOP TABLE  
MESA IN SOUTHWEST BOULDER...WHILE A GUST TO 94 MPH WAS  
CLOCKED AT ROLLINSVILLE. THE HIGH WINDS CAUSED WHITEOUT  
CONDITIONS DUE TO BLOWING SNOW ALONG SOME HIGHWAYS SOUTH  
AND NORTH OF BOULDER. THE HIGH WINDS DOWNED POWER LINES  
NEAR THE ROCKY FLATS PLANT SOUTH OF BOULDER.  
IN 1998...HIGH WINDS CONTINUED TO BUFFET AREAS IN AND NEAR  
THE FOOTHILLS. NEAR EVERGREEN...A 100-FOOT-HIGH BLUE  
SPRUCE CRASHED DOWN ON THE ROOF OF A HOME...SPLITTING THE  
CORRUGATED METAL ROOF IN HALF. FORTUNATELY...THE TREE...  
WHICH MEASURED 10 FEET IN CIRCUMFERENCE...ONLY PENETRATED  
THE HOME'S INTERIOR IN A FEW PLACES. PEAK WIND REPORTS  
INCLUDED: 90 MPH AT WONDERVU...88 MPH AT THE ROCKY FLATS  
TEST FACILITY...83 MPH NEAR CONIFER...AND 82 MPH ATOP BLUE  
MOUNTAIN NEAR COAL CREEK CANYON. WEST WINDS GUSTED TO  
39 MPH AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
30-31 IN 1887...HEAVY SNOW TOTALED 6.5 INCHES IN DOWNTOWN DENVER.  
MOST OF THE SNOW...4.5 INCHES...FELL ON THE 31ST. NORTH  
WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO 18 MPH.  
IN 1928...SNOWFALL OF 0.6 INCH WAS THE ONLY MEASURABLE SNOW  
OF THE MONTH IN THE CITY.  
IN 1947...POST-FRONTAL HEAVY SNOW TOTALED 6.3 INCHES OVER  
DOWNTOWN DENVER. MOST OF THE SNOW FELL ON THE 30TH.  
NORTH WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO 17 MPH ON THE 30TH.  
IN 1995...THE FOOTHILLS WEST OF DENVER RECEIVED 5 TO 9 INCHES  
OF NEW SNOW...EXCEPT FOR BAILEY WHERE 11 INCHES OF SNOW WERE  
MEASURED. NO SNOW FELL AT THE SITE OF THE FORMER STAPLETON  
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
IN 2021...THE FIRST SIGNIFICANT SNOWFALL OF THE SEASON FINALLY  
MADE ITS MARK...IMPACTING THE MOUNTAINS...FOOTHILLS...AND NEARBY  
PLAINS WITH MUCH NEEDED MOISTURE. IN THE MOUNTAINS AND  
FOOTHILLS...STORM TOTALS RANGED FROM 6 TO 15 INCHES.  
ELSEWHERE 5 TO 10 INCHES OF SNOW FELL WEST OF I-25...WITH  
3 TO 7 INCHES EAST OF THE INTERSTATE. AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL  
AIRPORT...4.5 INCHES OF SNOW WAS OBSERVED.  
 
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab CO Page
Main Text Page