289  
NOUS45 KBOU 150859  
PNSBOU  
COZ030>051-152300-  
 
PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE DENVER/BOULDER CO  
259 AM MDT SUN MAR 15 2026  
   
..TODAY IN METRO DENVER WEATHER HISTORY
 
 
9-19 IN 1906...AN EXTENDED COLD AND BLUSTERY PERIOD OCCURRED WITH  
LIGHT SNOW TOTALING 14.4 INCHES OVER 11 CONSECUTIVE DAYS.  
THE GREATEST AMOUNT OF SNOW ON A SINGLE DAY WAS 4.0 INCHES  
ON THE 15TH. ONLY A TRACE OF SNOW FELL ON THE 12TH AND 17TH.  
HIGH TEMPERATURES WERE BELOW FREEZING FOR THE ENTIRE PERIOD.  
THE COLDEST WERE 14 DEGREES ON THE 16TH AND 18 DEGREES ON THE  
17TH. BOTH READINGS WERE RECORD LOW MAXIMUMS FOR THE DATES.  
LOW TEMPERATURES WERE MOSTLY IN THE SINGLE DIGITS. THE  
COLDEST WERE 2 DEGREES BELOW ZERO ON THE 16TH AND 5 DEGREES  
BELOW ZERO ON THE 19TH. NORTHEAST WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO  
22 MPH ON THE 9TH. NORTH WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO 36 MPH ON  
THE 10TH...32 MPH ON THE 13TH...AND 22 MPH ON THE 15TH.  
12-16 IN 1880...A PROTRACTED COLD SPELL RESULTED IN 8 TEMPERATURE  
RECORDS BEING SET. RECORD LOW TEMPERATURES FOR THE DATE  
WERE SET WHEN THE TEMPERATURE DIPPED TO 10 DEGREES BELOW  
ZERO ON THE 13TH AND 14TH...8 DEGREES BELOW ZERO ON THE  
12TH AND 15TH...AND 4 DEGREES BELOW ZERO ON THE 16TH.  
DAILY RECORD LOW MAXIMUM TEMPERATURES WERE SET WITH 11  
DEGREES ON THE 12TH...12 DEGREES ON THE 13TH...AND 19 DEGREES  
ON THE 15TH.  
13-15 IN 1906...SNOWFALL TOTALED 8.0 INCHES OVER DOWNTOWN DENVER.  
IN 2021...BANDS OF SNOW DEVELOPED OVER NORTHEAST COLORADO INTO  
THE NORTHERN MOUNTAINS AND FOOTHILLS ON THE 13TH...WHICH THEN  
INTENSIFIED OVERNIGHT. THE HEAVY SNOW THEN GRADUALLY SHIFTED  
SOUTHWARD ON THE 14TH AND COVERED DENVER AND THE FRONT RANGE.  
THE SNOW SLOWLY DECREASED IN THE EVENING. NORTH WINDS  
INCREASED TO 25 TO 35 MPH...ON THE 14TH...WITH GUSTS UP TO 50  
MPH. THIS PRODUCED BLIZZARD CONDITIONS ALONG THE I-25 CORRIDOR  
FROM PALMER DIVIDE NORTH TO THE WYOMING BORDER. DENVER  
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT RUNWAYS WERE CLOSED...FROM NOON ON THE  
14TH UNTIL 2 PM ON THE 15TH...WITH OVER 2000 FLIGHTS CANCELED.  
ALL MAJOR INTERSTATES WERE CLOSED EXCEPT FOR THOSE AREAS AROUND  
DENVER. EXTENSIVE DRIFTING SNOW WAS OBSERVED...WITH DRIFTS FROM  
3 TO 7 FEET DEEP. THE HEAVY WET SNOW CAUSED EXTENSIVE TREE  
DAMAGE AND PRODUCED POWER OUTAGES. SNOWFALL AMOUNTS IN THE FRONT  
RANGE MOUNTAINS AND FOOTHILLS RANGED FROM 20 TO 40 INCHES...WITH  
18 TO 30 INCHES REPORTED ALONG THE I-25 CORRIDOR. THE OFFICIAL  
SNOW FOR DENVER WAS 27.1" WHICH WAS THE 4TH LARGEST STORM  
ON RECORD SINCE 1882. ON THE 14TH...NORTH WINDS GUSTS TO 48 MPH  
AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT ON THE 14TH. IN ADDITION...  
LIQUID PRECIPITATION FOR THIS STORM EVENT TOTALED 2.88 INCHES  
AT THE AIRPORT.  
IN 2024...STRONG UPSLOPE FLOW COMBINED WITH ABUNDANT MOISTURE  
PRODUCED SIGNIFICANT SNOWFALL ACROSS THE FRONT RANGE MOUNTAINS  
AND FOOTHILLS...PALMER DIVIDE AND DENVER METRO AREA. SNOWFALL  
AMOUNTS RANGED FROM 2 TO 4 FEET IN THE FRONT RANGE FOOTHILLS  
AND SOME MOUNTAIN AREAS WITH LOCALLY UP TO 5 FEET. THE TOP FIVE  
STORM TOTALS INCLUDED: 61.5 INCHES IN ASPEN SPRINGS...61 INCHES...  
5.4 MILES NORTHWEST OF EVERGREEN...57.0 INCHES...1 MILE WEST OF  
ASPEN SPRINGS...54.4 INCHES NEAR ROLLINSVILLE...AND 53.7 INCHES...  
4.7 MILES SOUTH-SOUTHEAST OF IDAHO SPRINGS. ACROSS THE DENVER  
METRO AREA...THE HEAVIEST SNOWFALL OCCURRED IN THE WESTERN AND  
SOUTHERN SUBURBS WHERE SNOWFALL AMOUNTS RANGED FROM 14 TO 22  
INCHES. OVER THE NORTHEASTERN PORTIONS OF DENVER...INCLUDING  
DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT...SNOWFALL AMOUNTS WERE IN THE 5  
TO 10 INCH RANGE AS RAIN DIDN'T CHANGE TO SNOW UNTIL THE MORNING  
OF THE 14TH. THE PREVIOUS DAY...0.80 OF RAINFALL WAS MEASURED AT  
THE AIRPORT...WHICH BROKE THE DAILY RECORD FOR MARCH 13TH. THE  
2-DAY TOTAL...FOR MARCH 13-14TH...WAS 1.46 INCHES. OFFICIALLY...  
5.7 INCHES OF SNOWFALL WAS MEASURED AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL  
AIRPORT...WITH 20.5 INCHES AT THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE  
OFFICE IN BOULDER. THE POWERFUL STORM BROUGHT INTERSTATE 70  
TO A STANDSTILL. THE 90-MILE CLOSURE ALONG I-70 REMAINED IN  
EFFECT THROUGH MUCH OF THE STORM. THE CLOSURE OCCURRED AS AT  
LEAST TWO HUNDRED VEHICLES...BECAME STRANDED ON I-70...INCLUDING  
A SKI BUS FULL OF 50 WOMEN WHO RAN OUT OF FOOD AND WATER AFTER  
BEING STUCK FOR 16 HOURS. NEARLY TWO DOZEN TRUCKS WERE ALSO  
STUCK ALONG US 285 SOUTHWEST OF DENVER WHICH RESULTED IN ITS  
CLOSURE AS WELL. AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT...THE STORM  
FORCED HUNDREDS OF CANCELLATIONS AND FLIGHT DELAYS. ON THE 13TH...  
823 FLIGHTS WERE CANCELED AND 375 DELAYED. MORE THAN 53000  
CUSTOMERS WERE IMPACTED BY POWER OUTAGES ACROSS COLORADO...  
PRIMARILY IN METRO DENVER AND ALONG THE FRONT RANGE. SOME  
RESIDENTS IN THE FOOTHILLS REMAINED STRANDED IN THEIR HOMES  
FOR SEVERAL DAYS FOLLOWING THE STORM. COLORADO ISSUED EMERGENCY  
DISASTER DECLARATIONS FOR CLEAR CREEK AND GILPIN COUNTIES...  
DUE TO THE HEAVY AMOUNTS OF SNOW AND STRANDED MOTORISTS.  
14-16 IN 1908...A WARM SPELL RESULTED IN DAILY RECORD HIGH MINIMUM  
TEMPERATURES ON 3 CONSECUTIVE DAYS: 54 DEGREES ON THE  
14TH...52 DEGREES ON THE 15TH...AND 56 DEGREES ON THE 16TH...  
ALSO THE ALL-TIME RECORD HIGH MINIMUM FOR THE MONTH OF  
MARCH. HIGH TEMPERATURES RANGED FROM 65 DEGREES ON THE  
14TH TO 72 DEGREES ON THE 16TH.  
IN 1983...A HEAVY WET SNOWSTORM BURIED METRO DENVER WITH THE  
FOOTHILLS RECEIVING THE MOST. CONIFER RECORDED 34 INCHES  
OF SNOW WITH 4 FEET MEASURED AT COAL CREEK CANYON IN THE  
FOOTHILLS NORTHWEST OF DENVER. THE STORM LEFT 6 TO 10  
INCHES OF SNOW ACROSS METRO DENVER. BOULDER RECEIVED 12 TO  
18 INCHES. FLIGHT OPERATIONS AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL  
AIRPORT WERE LIMITED TO ONE RUNWAY FOR A TIME. SOME ROADS  
AND SCHOOLS WERE CLOSED...AND POWER OUTAGES OCCURRED WHEN  
WET SNOW DOWNED LINES. SNOWFALL ON THE 15TH AND 16TH  
TOTALED 7.2 INCHES AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT  
WHERE NORTH WINDS GUSTED TO 30 MPH. MAXIMUM SNOW DEPTH  
ON THE GROUND WAS ONLY 6 INCHES DUE TO MELTING.  
15 IN 1902...NORTHWEST WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO 54 MPH WITH GUSTS  
AS HIGH AS 60 MPH.  
IN 1920...SOUTHWEST WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO 40 MPH WITH GUSTS  
TO 48 MPH. THE STRONG BUT COLD DOWNSLOPE WINDS WARMED THE  
HIGH TEMPERATURE TO ONLY 35 DEGREES.  
IN 1935...STRONG WINDS HOWLED ACROSS BOULDER. AT VALMONT A  
WIND GUST TO 60 MPH WAS RECORDED. NO DAMAGE WAS REPORTED.  
IN 2006...STRONG WINDS RANGING FROM 60 TO 75 MPH WERE REPORTED  
IN AND NEAR THE FOOTHILLS OF BOULDER COUNTY. IN LONGMONT...  
TWO TREES TOPPLED BY THE STRONG WINDS DAMAGED A CAR. WINDS  
GUSTED TO 75 MPH AT THE NATIONAL CENTER FOR ATMOSPHERIC  
RESEARCH MESA LABORATORY IN BOULDER. WEST WINDS GUSTED TO  
52 MPH AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
15-16 IN 2000...HEAVY UPSLOPE SNOWFALL OCCURRED IN AND NEAR THE  
FRONT RANGE FOOTHILLS AND OVER THE PALMER DIVIDE TO THE  
SOUTH OF METRO DENVER. SNOWFALL TOTALS FROM THE STORM  
INCLUDED: 17 INCHES AT IDAHO SPRINGS; 16 INCHES AT  
ASPEN SPRINGS; 12 INCHES IN BOULDER; 11 INCHES AT BAILEY...  
CHIEF HOSA...COAL CREEK CANYON...ELDORADO SPRINGS...EVERGREEN...  
AND NEAR MORRISON; 10 INCHES AT INTERCANYON...KEN CARYL  
RANCH...AND NEAR NEDERLAND; 9 INCHES NEAR SEDALIA AND IN  
WHEAT RIDGE; AND 8 INCHES IN ARVADA. SNOWFALL TOTALED 5.4  
INCHES AT THE SITE OF THE FORMER STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL  
AIRPORT. NORTHEAST WINDS GUSTED TO 28 MPH AT DENVER  
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT ON THE 15TH.  
 

 
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab CO Page Main Text Page