561  
NOUS45 KBOU 140145  
PNSBOU  
COZ030>051-142300-  
 
PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE DENVER/BOULDER CO  
645 PM MST SAT DEC 13 2025  
   
..THIS WEEK IN METRO DENVER WEATHER HISTORY
 
 
2-17 IN 1939...MORE THAN 2 WEEKS OF UNSEASONABLY WARM WEATHER  
MADE THE MONTH THE 3RD WARMEST ON RECORD. SEVEN DAILY  
TEMPERATURE RECORDS WERE SET...INCLUDING THE ALL TIME  
RECORD HIGH TEMPERATURE FOR THE MONTH OF 79 DEGREES ON  
THE 5TH. DAYTIME HIGHS WERE BALMY WITH 14 DAYS IN THE  
60'S AND 70'S. LOW TEMPERATURES DIPPED TO FREEZING OR  
BELOW ON ONLY 5 DAYS. THE PERIOD WAS DRY WITH ONLY A  
TRACE OF SNOW ON THE 12TH.  
3-15 IN 1972...A PROTRACTED COLD SPELL HELD AN ICY GRIP ON METRO  
DENVER WHEN MAXIMUM TEMPERATURES NEVER REACHED ABOVE  
FREEZING FOR 10 CONSECUTIVE DAYS FROM THE 3RD THROUGH  
THE 12TH AND MINIMUM TEMPERATURES DIPPED BELOW ZERO ON  
ELEVEN CONSECUTIVE DAYS FROM THE 5TH THROUGH THE 15TH.  
DAILY LOW TEMPERATURE RECORDS WERE SET WITH 15 DEGREES  
BELOW ZERO ON THE 5TH...17 DEGREES BELOW ZERO ON THE 6TH...  
AND 18 DEGREES BELOW ZERO ON THE 10TH. DAILY RECORD LOW  
MAXIMUM READINGS WERE SET WITH 3 DEGREES ON THE 6TH AND  
6 DEGREES ON THE 9TH. THE VERY COLD TEMPERATURES WERE  
CAUSED BY 3 TO 5 INCHES OF SNOW COVER AND A CANADIAN AIR  
MASS.  
12-15 IN 1921...DOWNSLOPE CHINOOK WINDS PRODUCED WARM TEMPERATURES  
IN THE CITY...WHICH RESULTED IN 4 TEMPERATURE RECORDS.  
HIGH TEMPERATURES OF 72 DEGREES ON THE 13TH AND 68 DEGREES  
ON THE 15TH WERE RECORD MAXIMUMS FOR THE DATES. LOW  
TEMPERATURES OF 47 DEGREES ON BOTH THE 12TH AND 13TH WERE  
RECORD HIGH MINIMUMS FOR THE DATES. WEST WINDS WERE  
SUSTAINED TO 38 MPH ON THE 12TH AND TO 25 MPH ON THE  
13TH.  
13-14 IN 1902...HEAVY SNOWFALL TOTALED 6.4 INCHES IN THE CITY  
OVERNIGHT. NORTH WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO 18 MPH WITH  
GUSTS TO 20 MPH ON THE 13TH.  
IN 1925...HEAVY APPARENT POST-FRONTAL SNOWFALL TOTALED  
7.8 INCHES ACROSS DOWNTOWN DENVER. NORTHWEST WINDS  
WERE SUSTAINED TO 34 MPH WITH GUSTS TO 42 ON THE 13TH...  
AND NORTH WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO 33 MPH WITH GUSTS TO  
38 MPH ON THE 14TH.  
IN 1951...HEAVY SNOWFALL TOTALED 5.9 INCHES AT STAPLETON  
AIRPORT.  
IN 1987...A SNOWSTORM DROPPED 2 TO 8 INCHES OF SNOW ALONG THE  
FRONT RANGE FOOTHILLS. EIGHT TO 12 INCHES FELL JUST SOUTH  
OF DENVER. ICY STREETS AND HIGHWAYS CONTRIBUTED TO MANY  
TRAFFIC ACCIDENTS ACROSS METRO DENVER AND FLIGHTS WERE  
DELAYED AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT WHERE 2.7  
INCHES OF SNOW FELL AND NORTHEAST WINDS GUSTED TO 17 MPH.  
IN 1991...HIGH WINDS PUMMELED METRO DENVER. WIND GUSTS TO 93  
MPH WERE RECORDED AT ROLLINSVILLE. WIND SPEEDS ACROSS METRO  
DENVER WERE GENERALLY 35 TO 50 MPH. NORTHWEST WINDS GUSTED  
TO 48 MPH AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT ON THE 13TH.  
14 IN 1926...AN INTRUSION OF COLD AIR RESULTED IN TEMPERATURES  
REMAINING BELOW ZERO. THE HIGH TEMPERATURE OF ONE DEGREE  
BELOW ZERO WAS A RECORD LOW MAXIMUM FOR THE DATE. THE LOW  
TEMPERATURE WAS 11 DEGREES BELOW ZERO. NORTH WINDS WERE  
SUSTAINED TO 17 MPH.  
IN 1985...A WIND GUST TO 61 MPH WAS RECORDED AT TABLE MESA IN  
BOULDER.  
IN 1996...HIGH WINDS GUSTING FROM 60 TO NEARLY 80 MPH MOVED  
OFF THE FRONT RANGE FOOTHILLS AND OVER THE NORTHEAST  
COLORADO PLAINS IN THE WAKE OF A FAST MOVING COLD FRONT.  
THE STRONGEST WIND GUSTS INCLUDED 79 MPH AT GOLDEN GATE  
CANYON AND 70 MPH NEAR TABLE MESA IN SOUTHWEST BOULDER.  
AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT...WEST-NORTHWEST WINDS  
GUSTED TO ONLY 39 MPH.  
14-15 IN 1988...A SNOW STORM AGAIN WHITENED METRO DENVER.  
SNOWFALL ALONG THE FRONT RANGE WAS IN THE 6 TO 12 INCH  
RANGE. SNOWFALL TOTALED 5.8 INCHES AT STAPLETON  
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT WHERE NORTH WINDS GUSTED TO 38 MPH.  
IN 1990...HIGH WINDS HOWLED ACROSS METRO DENVER BEHIND A  
STRONG PACIFIC COLD FRONT. BOULDER WAS HARDEST HIT BY THE  
HIGH WINDS. A WIND GUST TO 120 MPH WAS RECORDED IN SOUTH  
BOULDER WHERE WINDS STRIPPED THE ROOF OFF A GARAGE...A  
VACANT GAS STATION...AND A HOUSE UNDER CONSTRUCTION.  
ELSEWHERE IN BOULDER...SEVERAL TREES WERE BLOWN DOWN. IN  
BOULDER CANYON...THE WINDS TOPPLED TWO CINDER BLOCK WALLS ON  
A HOUSE UNDER CONSTRUCTION. FOUR BOULDER COUNTY WOMEN WERE  
TREATED FOR INJURIES CAUSED BY THE WIND. THE INJURIES WERE  
CONFINED TO A BROKEN WRIST...A MILD CONCUSSION...BRUISES...AND  
FACIAL CUTS. TWO SEMI-TRACTOR TRAILERS WERE BLOWN OVER BY  
THE FIERCE WINDS SOUTH OF BOULDER. ANOTHER TRUCK ROLLOVER  
OCCURRED SOUTHEAST OF GOLDEN. DRIVERS OF ALL THREE TRUCKS  
SUFFERED ONLY CUTS AND BRUISES. SEVERAL VEHICLES WERE  
TRAPPED IN A BLINDING DUST STORM ON THE DENVER-BOULDER  
TURNPIKE NEAR BROOMFIELD. DRIVERS WERE FORCED TO STOP  
ALONG THE HIGHWAY FOR SEVERAL MINUTES DURING THE STORM AND  
WITNESS THEIR VEHICLES BEING PELTED WITH SAND AND GRAVEL.  
A WIND GUST TO 97 MPH WAS RECORDED IN GOLDEN. HIGH WINDS  
WERE ALSO REPORTED IN ARVADA...BOULDER...AND LAKEWOOD. WINDS  
TOPPLED A NUMBER OF UTILITY POLES AND WOODEN FENCES...BLEW  
OUT WINDOWS...AND CAUSED STRUCTURAL DAMAGE TO A LARGE  
APARTMENT COMPLEX ON THE WEST SIDE OF GOLDEN. WIND GUSTS  
OF 70 TO 100 MPH CAUSED CONSIDERABLE DAMAGE TO SEVERAL  
LARGE BILLBOARDS NORTH OF GOLDEN...AS WELL AS DAMAGING THE  
PAINT...TRIM...AND GLASS ON NUMEROUS VEHICLES IN THE AREA.  
A WEST WIND GUST TO 51 MPH WAS RECORDED AT STAPLETON  
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
15 IN 1999...HIGH WINDS DEVELOPED IN AND NEAR THE FOOTHILLS AS  
A STRONG UPPER LEVEL JET MOVED INTO THE AREA. ALTHOUGH  
MOST WIND GUSTS WERE IN THE 70 TO 80 MPH RANGE...A WEATHER  
SPOTTER LOCATED 1 MILE SOUTH OF FRITZ PEAK NEAR  
ROLLINSVILLE MEASURED A PEAK WIND GUST TO 124 MPH. OTHER  
WIND REPORTS INCLUDED WIND GUSTS TO 77 MPH AT THE NATIONAL  
CENTER FOR ATMOSPHERIC RESEARCH IN BOULDER AND ATOP BLUE  
MOUNTAIN AND 70 MPH AT THE NATIONAL WIND TECHNOLOGY CENTER  
ON ROCKY FLATS SOUTH OF BOULDER. WEST WINDS GUSTED TO ONLY  
32 MPH AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
IN 2000...HIGH WINDS DEVELOPED IN THE FOOTHILLS OF BOULDER  
COUNTY...BUT WINDS WERE STRONG ACROSS ALL OF METRO DENVER.  
WINDS GUSTED AS HIGH AS 72 MPH AT THE NATIONAL CENTER FOR  
ATMOSPHERIC RESEARCH ON THE MESA JUST SOUTHWEST OF BOULDER.  
WEST WINDS GUSTED TO 44 MPH AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
IN 2021...A POWERFUL COLD FRONT MOVED ACROSS NORTHERN COLORADO  
IN THE MORNING. BANDS OF MODERATE TO HEAVY SNOW SHOWERS IN  
THE MOUNTAINS RESULTED IN EARLY MORNING SNOW SQUALLS.  
COLORADO DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION HAD BRIEF ROAD CLOSURES  
ALONG WITH PARTS OF I-70 DUE TO THE LIMITED VISIBILITY AND  
HAZARDOUS ROAD CONDITIONS THAT ACCOMPANIED THE SNOW SQUALLS.  
STORM TOTALS IN THE MOUNTAINS GENERALLY RANGED FROM 3.5 TO  
6.5 INCHES. AS THE COLD FRONT SWEPT ACROSS THE FRONT RANGE  
FOOTHILLS...URBAN CORRIDOR...AND ADJACENT PLAINS...VERY STRONG  
POST-FRONTAL OR BORA WINDS DEVELOPED. THE STRONGEST WIND  
GUSTS RANGED FROM 70 TO 95 MPH OCCURRED IN AND NEAR THE  
FOOTHILLS...AND ALONG AND NORTH OF THE I-76 CORRIDOR. AT  
DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT...A PEAK WIND GUST TO 60 MPH  
WAS OBSERVED FROM THE NORTHWEST. THERE WERE OVERTURNED  
SEMIS REPORTED ON I-25...AND CAR WINDOW WERE BLOWING OUT IN  
BOULDER AND BROOMFIELD. DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT REPORTED  
2219 FLIGHT CANCELLATIONS AND 12327 DELAYS. XCEL ENERGY  
POWER OUTAGES PEAKED AT ABOUT 63000 CUSTOMERS DURING THIS  
HIGH WIND EVENT. THE HIGH WINDS KNOCKED DOWN SEVERAL TREES...  
WITH BLOWING DUST AND REDUCED VISIBILITY NORTHEAST AND EAST  
OF DENVER. SOME TREES REPORTEDLY CRASHED INTO NEARBY HOMES  
AND ONTO PARKED VEHICLES.  
15-16 IN 1964...HIGH WINDS RAKED METRO DENVER...CAUSING CONSIDERABLE  
DAMAGE. WIND GUSTS TO 81 MPH WERE RECORDED AT ROCKY FLATS  
NORTHWEST OF DENVER...94 MPH AT JEFFERSON COUNTY AIRPORT  
NEAR BROOMFIELD...48 MPH IN DOWNTOWN BOULDER...AND 70 MPH  
IN LITTLETON. WEST WIND GUSTS TO 67 MPH WERE RECORDED  
AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT. A MAN WORKING ON  
CONSTRUCTION IN DOWNTOWN DENVER DIED FROM INJURIES AFTER  
BEING STRUCK BY A 5-FOOT BY 8-FOOT SECTION OF PLANK RUNWAY  
BLOWN BY THE STRONG WINDS. SEVERAL PEOPLE WERE BLOWN DOWN  
BY THE STRONG WINDS OR HIT BY FLYING OBJECTS. BUILDINGS...  
ROADS...TREES...AND POWER EQUIPMENT WERE DAMAGED. ROADS WERE  
CLOSED EAST OF DENVER DUE TO BLOWING DUST.  
IN 1981...WIND GUSTS TO 60 MPH WERE COMMON IN THE FOOTHILLS  
NORTHWEST OF DENVER. WEST WIND GUSTS TO 47 MPH WERE  
RECORDED AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT WHERE THE  
VISIBILITY WAS BRIEFLY REDUCED TO 3 MILES IN BLOWING DUST.  
IN 1996...STRONG PRE-FRONTAL WINDS DEVELOPED IN THE FOOTHILLS  
OF BOULDER COUNTY AHEAD OF AN ARCTIC COLD FRONT THAT MOVED  
INTO NORTHEASTERN COLORADO LATE ON THE MORNING OF THE 16TH.  
WIND GUSTS OF 70 TO 75 MPH WERE CLOCKED AT TABLE MESA IN  
SOUTHWEST BOULDER.  
16 IN 1912...NORTHWEST WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO 44 MPH WITH AN  
EXTREME VELOCITY OF 45 MPH.  
IN 1921...NORTH WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO 46 MPH WITH GUSTS TO  
50 MPH BEHIND A VIGOROUS COLD FRONT. ONLY A TRACE OF SNOW  
FELL.  
IN 1954...A VIGOROUS COLD FRONT PRODUCED SUSTAINED NORTH WINDS  
TO 45 MPH WITH GUSTS AS HIGH 54 MPH. VISIBILITY WAS  
REDUCED TO 1 MILE IN BLOWING DUST AT STAPLETON AIRPORT.  
IN 1955...SUSTAINED WEST WINDS TO 44 MPH WITH GUSTS AS HIGH AS  
58 MPH WERE RECORDED AT STAPLETON AIRPORT.  
IN 1994...A WIND GUST TO 108 MPH WAS RECORDED ATOP SQUAW  
MOUNTAIN WEST OF DENVER WITH A GUST TO 92 MPH IN  
ROLLINSVILLE SOUTHWEST OF BOULDER. WEST WINDS GUSTED  
TO 48 MPH AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
IN 1996...A VIGOROUS ARCTIC COLD FRONT MOVED ACROSS METRO  
DENVER. HEAVY SNOW AND STRONG WINDS ACCOMPANIED THE  
FRONT AS NEAR WHITEOUT CONDITIONS IN SNOW AND BLOWING  
SNOW DEVELOPED SUDDENLY. NORTHERLY WINDS GUSTED FROM  
40 TO 60 MPH BEHIND THE FRONT. DOZENS OF ACCIDENTS  
OCCURRED AS ROADS AND HIGHWAYS QUICKLY TURNED TO A GLAZE  
OF ICE. SNOWFALL AMOUNTS RANGED FROM 4 TO 6 INCHES ACROSS  
METRO DENVER AND IN THE FOOTHILLS. THE EXCEPTION WAS AT  
ELDORADO SPRINGS SOUTH OF BOULDER WHERE 8 INCHES OF NEW  
SNOW WERE MEASURED. SNOWFALL TOTALED ONLY 1.8 INCHES AT  
THE SITE OF THE FORMER STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
OFFICIALLY...THIS WAS THE ONLY MEASURABLE SNOW OF THE MONTH  
IN DENVER. AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT...NORTH WINDS  
GUSTED TO 34 MPH.  
IN 1999...ANOTHER BRIEF ROUND OF HIGH WINDS DEVELOPED IN AND  
NEAR THE FOOTHILLS OF BOULDER COUNTY. PEAK WIND GUSTS  
INCLUDED 83 MPH AT THE NATIONAL CENTER FOR ATMOSPHERIC  
RESEARCH NEAR BOULDER AND 74 MPH ATOP NIWOT RIDGE AND  
AT THE NATIONAL WIND TECHNOLOGY CENTER ON ROCKY FLATS  
SOUTH OF BOULDER. WEST WINDS GUSTED TO ONLY 33 MPH AT  
DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT WHERE THE TEMPERATURE WARMED  
TO A HIGH OF 54 DEGREES.  
IN 2000...HIGH WINDS IN THE MOUNTAINS SPREAD INTO THE  
FOOTHILLS WEST OF DENVER. WINDS GUSTED TO 87 MPH AT  
GEORGETOWN LAKE AND AT THE NATIONAL CENTER FOR  
ATMOSPHERIC RESEARCH IN BOULDER. WINDS GUSTED TO  
72 MPH AT THE NATIONAL WIND TECHNOLOGY CENTER SOUTH  
OF BOULDER.  
16-17 IN 1908...HEAVY SNOWFALL TOTALED 7.9 INCHES IN DOWNTOWN  
DENVER WHERE NORTH WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO 20 MPH ON  
THE 17TH. TEMPERATURES WERE IN THE TEENS AND 20'S.  
IN 1939...LOW TEMPERATURES OF 49 DEGREES ON THE 16TH AND  
43 DEGREES ON THE 17TH WERE RECORD HIGH MINIMUMS FOR  
THE DATES. HIGH TEMPERATURES OF 65 ON THE 16TH AND 72  
ON THE 17TH WERE NOT RECORDS.  
IN 1980...CHINOOK WINDS BLEW THROUGH THE NIGHT IN BOULDER WITH  
A PEAK REPORTED GUST TO 75 MPH. NORTHWEST WINDS GUSTED TO  
30 MPH AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT ON THE 17TH.  
THE STRONG CHINOOK WINDS WARMED TEMPERATURES TO RECORD  
DAILY HIGHS OF 70 DEGREES ON THE 16TH AND 73 DEGREES ON  
THE 17TH.  
IN 2016...THE PRESENCE OF A WARM AND MOIST SOUTHWESTERLY FLOW  
ALOFT...OVERRUNNING AN ARCTIC AIRMASS WITH SHALLOW POST  
FRONTAL UPSLOPE PRODUCED A BAND OF VERY HEAVY SNOWFALL  
ACROSS THE DENVER METRO AREA. THE ENHANCED BAND OF HEAVY  
SNOW EXTENDED WEST INTO THE FRONT RANGE MOUNTAINS AND  
FOOTHILLS WITH SNOWFALL RATES UP TO 2 INCHES PER HOUR.  
MULTIPLE ACCIDENTS OCCURRED DURING THE EVENING HOURS OF  
THE 16TH AS THE SNOW QUICKLY PILED UP. THREE HUNDRED  
FLIGHTS WERE CANCELED AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT  
AS THE WINTER STORM MOVED THROUGH THE DENVER METRO AREA  
EARLY MORNING HOURS OF THE 17TH. STORM TOTALS IN THE  
FRONT RANGE MOUNTAINS AND FOOTHILLS INCLUDED: 16 INCHES  
AT LOVELAND SKI AREA; 12 INCHES NEAR CONIFER...11 INCHES  
AT WINTER PARK SKI AREA...10.5 INCHES AT BERGEN PARK...  
10 INCHES AT ECHO LAKE...WITH 9.5 INCHES AT ASPEN SPRINGS  
AND EVERGREEN. IN AND AROUND METRO DENVER...STORM TOTALS  
INCLUDED: 11.5 INCHES IN WHEAT RIDGE...11 INCHES IN ARVADA...  
9 INCHES NEAR MORRISON...8 INCHES AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL  
AIRPORT...DENVER/STAPLETON...MARSTON RESERVOIR AND RALSTON  
RESERVOIR; 7.5 INCHES IN WESTMINSTER; 6.5 INCHES...5 MILES  
NORTHEAST OF WESTMINSTER; 6 INCHES IN AURORA...5 MILES  
WEST-NORTHWEST OF BRIGHTON...ENGLEWOOD AND NEAR LOUISVILLE.  
17 IN 2000...HIGH WINDS GUSTING FROM 60 TO 74 MPH HOWLED ACROSS  
THE NORTHEAST PLAINS OF COLORADO. IN PARKER WHERE WINDS  
GUSTED TO 60 MPH...A 20-FOOT BY 40-FOOT PIECE OF ROOF WAS  
RIPPED FROM A BUILDING. WEST WINDS GUSTED TO 53 MPH AT  
DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT. THIS WAS THE HIGHEST WIND  
GUST OF THE MONTH AT THE AIRPORT. AN INTENSE...BUT VERY  
LOCALIZED WIND GUST TO 112 MPH WAS MEASURED NEAR  
GEORGETOWN LAKE IN THE FOOTHILLS WEST OF DENVER.  
17-24 IN 1924...A PROLONGED COLD SPELL OCCURRED AFTER MILD  
TEMPERATURES DURING THE FIRST HALF OF THE MONTH. MOST  
LOW TEMPERATURES DIPPED BELOW ZERO WITH THE COLDEST  
READING OF 15 DEGREES BELOW ZERO OCCURRING ON THE 24TH.  
THE HIGH TEMPERATURE OF ONLY 5 DEGREES ON THE 18TH WAS  
A RECORD LOW MAXIMUM FOR THE DATE.  
18 IN 1901...NORTH WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO 52 MPH WITH GUSTS TO  
58 MPH BEHIND AN APPARENT COLD FRONT.  
IN 1973...A BRIEF BLIZZARD DUMPED HEAVY SNOW ACROSS METRO  
DENVER. SNOWFALL TOTALED 9.2 INCHES AT STAPLETON  
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT WHERE NORTH WINDS GUSTING TO  
53 MPH PRODUCED MUCH BLOWING SNOW. THE STORM FORCED  
MANY SCHOOLS AND BUSINESSES TO CLOSE.  
IN 1996...A HOMELESS MAN IN DENVER WAS FOUND UNCONSCIOUS IN  
HIS CAR SUFFERING FROM EXPOSURE. THE MAN'S BODY TEMPERATURE  
WAS ONLY 85 DEGREES WHEN HE WAS DISCOVERED. HE DIED SEVERAL  
HOURS LATER. EARLY MORNING TEMPERATURES HAD DIPPED TO  
9 DEGREES BELOW ZERO.  
IN 1999...HIGH WINDS WERE REPORTED FOR A BRIEF TIME IN THE  
FOOTHILLS. WINDS GUSTED TO 72 MPH IN GOLDEN GATE CANYON  
AND TO 71 MPH AT THE NATIONAL CENTER FOR ATMOSPHERIC  
RESEARCH IN THE FOOTHILLS SOUTHWEST OF BOULDER. WEST WINDS  
GUSTED TO ONLY 39 MPH AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT WHERE  
THE TEMPERATURE WARMED TO A HIGH OF 53 DEGREES.  
IN 2002...ONLY A TRACE OF SNOW FELL AT THE SITE OF THE FORMER  
STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT. THIS...ALONG WITH THE TRACE  
OF SNOW ON THE 5TH...WAS THE ONLY SNOW OF THE MONTH...RANKING  
THE MONTH THE 2ND LEAST SNOWIEST ON RECORD.  
18-19 IN 2012...A STORM SYSTEM BROUGHT MODERATE TO HEAVY SNOW TO THE  
MOUNTAINS AND FOOTHILLS WEST OF METROPOLITAN DENVER AND  
BLIZZARD CONDITIONS TO PLAINS EAST OF DENVER METRO AREA. THE  
COMBINATION OF SNOW AND WIND REPORTEDLY REDUCED VISIBILITY  
TO JUST A FEW HUNDRED FEET AT TIMES...AND RESULTED IN SEVERAL  
ROAD CLOSURES INCLUDING INTERSTATE 70 EAST OF AURORA. EAST  
OF DENVER GUSTY NORTHERLY WINDS RANGED FROM 35 TO 55 MPH  
PRODUCED EXTENSIVE BLOWING AND DRIFTING SNOW...RANGING FROM 1  
TO 4 FEET IN DEPTH. STORM TOTALS RANGED FROM 3 TO 5 INCHES.  
IN THE MOUNTAIN AND FOOTHILLS...THE HEAVIEST SNOWFALL  
OCCURRED ALONG AND NORTH OF I-70 AND INCLUDED: 12 INCHES AT  
GENESEE...9 INCHES NEAR ELDORADO SPRINGS; 8.5 INCHES AT COAL  
CREEK CANYON...8 INCHES NEAR EVERGREEN...WITH 6 INCHES AT  
ELDORA SKI AREA...IDAHO SPRINGS...GROSS RESERVOIR AND  
NEDERLAND. AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT...1.7 INCHES OF  
SNOWFALL WAS OBSERVED. IN ADDITION...A PEAK WIND GUST TO 35  
MPH WAS OBSERVED FROM THE NORTH ON THE 19TH.  
18-21 IN 2010...A WINTER STORM PRODUCED A 4-DAY PERIOD OF MODERATE TO  
HEAVY SNOW IN THE MOUNTAINS. THE COMBINATION OF STRONG WIND  
AND HEAVY SNOW FORCED THE CLOSURE OF SEVERAL MOUNTAIN PASSES  
DUE TO THE THREAT OF AVALANCHES. THE AMTRACK TRAIN ROUTE...  
WHICH RUNS FROM DENVER TO CALIFORNIA...WAS REROUTED THROUGH  
WYOMING WHEN UNION PACIFIC CLOSED ITS TRACKS ALONG  
INTERSTATE 70. NUMEROUS ACCIDENTS FORCED THE CLOSURE OF  
I-70 AT TIMES. THE WIND GUSTED TO 60 MPH OVER THE HIGHER  
MOUNTAIN PASSES. STORM TOTALS IN THE SKI AREAS WEST OF  
DENVER RANGED FROM 16 TO 32 INCHES.  
18-24 IN 1998...A VIGOROUS COLD FRONT WITH NORTH WINDS GUSTING AS  
HIGH AS 38 MPH AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT ON THE 18TH  
DROPPED TEMPERATURES FROM A HIGH OF 51 DEGREES TO A LOW OF  
JUST 6 DEGREES BEFORE MIDNIGHT. THE ARCTIC AIR MASS THAT  
SETTLED OVER METRO DENVER PRODUCED INTERMITTENT LIGHT SNOW  
AND A WEEK-LONG PROTRACTED COLD SPELL THAT CAUSED LOW  
TEMPERATURES TO PLUNGE WELL BELOW ZERO FOR 6 CONSECUTIVE  
NIGHTS. THE COLDEST TEMPERATURE WAS 19 DEGREES BELOW ZERO  
ON THE MORNING OF THE 22ND. HIGH TEMPERATURES CLIMBED ONLY  
INTO THE SINGLE DIGITS ON 4 CONSECUTIVE DAYS...FROM THE 19TH  
THROUGH THE 22ND. AT LEAST 15 PEOPLE...MOSTLY HOMELESS...  
WERE TREATED FOR HYPOTHERMIA AT AREA HOSPITALS. THE BITTER  
COLD WEATHER WAS RESPONSIBLE...EITHER DIRECTLY OR INDIRECTLY...  
FOR AT LEAST 5 FATALITIES. THREE OF THE VICTIMS DIED  
DIRECTLY FROM EXPOSURE. THE COLD WEATHER ALSO CAUSED  
INTERMITTENT POWER OUTAGES. FOLLOWING THE COLD SNAP...  
THAWING WATER PIPES CRACKED AND BURST IN SEVERAL HOMES AND  
BUSINESSES...CAUSING EXTENSIVE DAMAGE. ONLY ONE TEMPERATURE  
RECORD WAS SET. THE HIGH TEMPERATURE OF ONLY 7 DEGREES ON  
THE 19TH SET A RECORD LOW MAXIMUM FOR THE DATE.  
19 IN 1913...POST-FRONTAL HEAVY SNOWFALL TOTALED 8.5 INCHES OVER  
DOWNTOWN DENVER. NORTH WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO ONLY 16 MPH.  
IN 1994...AN INTENSE PACIFIC STORM SYSTEM AND ASSOCIATED COLD  
FRONT MOVED ACROSS COLORADO EARLY IN THE DAY. STRONG  
DOWNSLOPE WINDS BUFFETED THE FRONT RANGE EASTERN FOOTHILLS.  
THE HIGHEST WIND GUST RECORDED WAS 92 MPH AT ROCKY FLATS IN  
NORTHERN JEFFERSON COUNTY. MOST OF THE WIND GUSTS DURING  
THE DAY RANGED FROM 63 TO 86 MPH WITH LIGHTER GUSTS OF 40  
TO 58 MPH ON THE NORTHEAST PLAINS. THE STRONG WINDS DOWNED  
POWER LINES AND POLES IN SOUTH LAKEWOOD...CAUSING POWER  
OUTAGES TO 2400 HOMES. OTHER SMALL POWER OUTAGES AND  
SURGES OCCURRED ACROSS METRO DENVER. NORTHWEST WINDS  
GUSTED TO 43 MPH AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
19-20 IN 1982...HIGH WINDS BUFFETED THE EASTERN FOOTHILLS. AT  
MIDDAY ON THE 19TH...GUSTS OF 75 TO 80 MPH WERE RECORDED IN  
THE TABLE MESA AREA OF BOULDER. A GUST TO 62 MPH WAS  
CLOCKED IN BOULDER ON THE EVENING OF THE 20TH.  
IN 1989...STRONG WINDS HOWLED AT MOUNTAIN TOP LEVEL IN CLEAR  
CREEK AND GILPIN COUNTIES. SPEEDS REACHED 97 MPH ON THE  
SUMMIT OF SQUAW MOUNTAIN AND 84 MPH ONE MILE SOUTH OF  
ROLLINSVILLE. NORTHWEST WINDS GUSTED 35 MPH AT STAPLETON  
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT ON THE 20TH.  
19-23 IN 1990...A SURGE OF VERY COLD ARCTIC AIR INVADED METRO  
DENVER. MANY TEMPERATURE RECORDS WERE BROKEN AS THE  
MERCURY REMAINED AT OR BELOW ZERO FOR 85.5 HOURS AT  
STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT...MAKING IT THE THIRD  
LONGEST PERIOD OF SUBZERO READINGS IN 118 YEARS OF RECORD  
KEEPING. ON THE MORNING OF THE 22ND...THE MERCURY PLUNGED  
TO 25 DEGREES BELOW ZERO...WHICH EQUALED THE ALL TIME RECORD  
LOW TEMPERATURE FOR THE MONTH SET ON DECEMBER 24...1876.  
IN THE FOOTHILLS SOUTHWEST OF DENVER AT TINY TOWN...THE  
MERCURY PLUNGED TO 33 DEGREES BELOW ZERO ON THE MORNING  
OF THE 21ST. ON THE SAME MORNING AT CASTLE ROCK THE  
TEMPERATURE DIPPED TO 26 DEGREES BELOW ZERO. DURING  
THE PERIOD...OTHER DAILY TEMPERATURE RECORDS WERE SET AT  
DENVER...INCLUDING: RECORD LOW MAXIMUM OF 3 DEGREES BELOW  
ZERO ON THE 20TH AND A RECORD LOW OF 17 DEGREES BELOW ZERO  
ON THE 23RD. THE RECORD LOW WAS EQUALED WITH 16 DEGREES  
BELOW ZERO ON THE 20TH AND 21 DEGREES BELOW ZERO ON THE  
21ST. SNOWFALL TOTALED 2.7 INCHES AT STAPLETON  
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT FROM THE 19TH THROUGH THE 21ST.  
20 IN 1894...SOUTHWEST WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO 40 MPH WITH  
GUSTS TO 48 MPH. THE CHINOOK WINDS WARMED THE  
TEMPERATURE TO A MAXIMUM OF 69 DEGREES...WHICH WAS A  
RECORD HIGH TEMPERATURE FOR THE DATE. THE MINIMUM  
TEMPERATURE DIPPED TO ONLY 33 DEGREES.  
IN 1903...NORTHWEST CHINOOK WINDS SUSTAINED TO 54 MPH WITH  
GUSTS TO 60 MPH WARMED THE TEMPERATURE TO A HIGH OF 58  
DEGREES.  
IN 1948...STRONG WINDS OCCURRED ALONG THE EASTERN FOOTHILLS  
FROM BOULDER NORTH. WIND GUSTS TO 45 MPH WERE RECORDED AT  
VALMONT WITH A GUST TO 30 MPH AT BOULDER AIRPORT. SOME  
DAMAGE OCCURRED. WIND GUSTS TO 50 MPH CAUSED SOME BLOWING  
DUST AT STAPLETON AIRPORT.  
IN 1957...STRONG CHINOOK WINDS...GUSTING TO 51 MPH FROM THE  
NORTHWEST...WARMED THE AFTERNOON TEMPERATURE TO A HIGH OF  
54 DEGREES.  
IN 1981 HIGH WINDS WERE REPORTED IN THE FOOTHILLS WITH A  
PEAK GUST OF 87 MPH RECORDED AT WONDERVU.  
IN 1992...STRONG CHINOOK WINDS RAKED THE EASTERN FOOTHILLS  
WITH 69 MPH RECORDED AT TABLE MESA IN SOUTH BOULDER.  
SOUTHWEST WINDS GUSTED TO ONLY 21 MPH AT STAPLETON  
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
IN 1996...FIVE CONSTRUCTION WORKERS WERE INJURED...TWO  
SERIOUSLY...WHEN A SUDDEN WIND GUST BLEW OVER A 30-FOOT-  
HIGH RETAINING WALL THEY WERE WORKING ON IN WESTERN  
LAKEWOOD. THE SCAFFOLDING THEY WERE STANDING ON  
COLLAPSED...AND SOME WERE PINNED UNDER THE RUBBLE FOR  
15 MINUTES. WIND GUSTS OF 60 TO 75 MPH WERE REPORTED  
IN THE AREA. SOUTHWEST WINDS GUSTED TO ONLY 24 MPH  
AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
IN 2004...STRONG DOWNSLOPE WINDS DEVELOPED OVER THE EASTERN  
MOUNTAIN SLOPES AND SPREAD OVER METRO DENVER. PEAK WIND  
GUSTS APPROACHED 100 MPH ALONG THE FOOTHILLS OF BOULDER  
COUNTY. IN SUPERIOR...A 1200-SQUARE-FOOT SECTION OF ROOF  
WAS PEELED OFF THE GYMNASIUM AT MONARCH HIGH SCHOOL.  
TWO SEMI-TRAILERS WERE TOPPLED ON COLORADO HIGHWAY 58  
AT MCINTYRE STREET AND ANOTHER AT C-470 AND WEST BOWLES  
AVENUE. TWO AIRPLANES WERE DAMAGED BY WIND-BLOWN DEBRIS  
AT JEFFERSON COUNTY AIRPORT. THE HIGH WINDS FORCED THE  
CLOSURE OF STATE HIGHWAY 93 BETWEEN GOLDEN AND BOULDER  
FOR APPROXIMATELY TWO HOURS. INSURANCE AGENTS ESTIMATED  
650 TO 850 HOMES SUFFERED WIND DAMAGE IN THE BOULDER AND  
LOUISVILLE AREAS. IN ADDITION...DOWNED TREES AND POWER  
LINES LEFT ABOUT 1000 RESIDENTS...MAINLY IN THE BOULDER  
AREA...WITHOUT ELECTRICITY. AT LEAST THREE PEOPLE  
SUFFERED MINOR INJURIES IN THE STORM. PEAK WIND REPORTS  
INCLUDED: 95 MPH IN SUPERIOR...92 MPH AT JEFFERSON COUNTY  
AIRPORT...85 MPH IN GOLDEN...81 MPH IN BOULDER...80 MPH IN  
BROOMFIELD AND EVERGREEN...AND 79 MPH IN LOUISVILLE. WEST  
NORTHWEST WINDS GUSTED TO 59 MPH AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL  
AIRPORT.  
20-21 IN 1969...HIGH WINDS CAUSED WIDESPREAD...BUT MOSTLY MINOR  
DAMAGE TO ROOFS...WINDOWS...AND POWER LINES AND OVERTURNED  
SOME HOUSE TRAILERS IN AREAS ALONG AND JUST EAST OF THE  
FOOTHILLS. WIND GUSTS OF 60 TO 70 MPH WERE REPORTED IN  
BOULDER AND SOUTH OF BOULDER AT ROCKY FLATS. A WIND GUST  
TO 115 MPH WAS MEASURED IN BOULDER AT THE NATIONAL CENTER  
FOR ATMOSPHERIC RESEARCH. AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL  
AIRPORT...WEST WINDS GUSTED TO 44 MPH ON THE 20TH AND  
TO 45 MPH ON THE 21ST. THE WARM CHINOOK WINDS WARMED  
THE HIGH TEMPERATURE TO 56 DEGREES ON THE 20TH AND  
TO 65 DEGREES ON THE 21ST.  
IN 2006...A MAJOR BLIZZARD BURIED GREATER METRO DENVER AND  
THE ADJACENT FOOTHILLS IN DEEP SNOW. A SLOW MOVING UPPER  
LEVEL LOW PRESSURE CENTER PRODUCED DEEP MOIST UPSLOPE FLOW  
OVER THE HIGH PLAINS AND AGAINST THE EASTERN SLOPES OF  
THE MOUNTAINS...ALLOWING HEAVY SNOWFALL TO PERSIST FOR  
34 HOURS ACROSS METRO DENVER. TOTAL SNOW ACCUMULATIONS  
RANGED FROM 1 TO 2 1/2 FEET ACROSS THE CITY AND FROM 2 TO  
NEARLY 4 FEET IN THE FOOTHILLS. ADDING TO THE MISERY...  
STRONG NORTH WINDS SUSTAINED AT 20 TO 35 MPH WITH GUSTS  
FROM 45 TO NEARLY 60 MPH PRODUCED MUCH BLOWING SNOW AND  
PILED THE SNOW INTO DRIFTS FROM 6 TO 12 FEET HIGH...CLOSING  
BUSINESSES AND BRINGING ALL TRANSPORTATION TO A HALT. THE  
STORM FORCED THE CLOSURE OF DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT  
FOR A TOTAL OF 45 HOURS WHICH SNARLED THE NATION'S AIR  
TRAFFIC SYSTEM. THIS WAS THE LONGEST CLOSURE IN THE  
AIRPORT'S 12 YEAR HISTORY. THE CLOSURE STRANDED NEARLY  
5000 TRAVELERS WHEN 2000 FLIGHTS WERE CANCELED. MANY  
INBOUND FLIGHTS WERE DIVERTED TO OTHER AIRPORTS...STRANDING  
EVEN MORE PASSENGERS. MANY OF THE STRANDED TRAVELERS  
FAILED TO REACH THEIR FINAL DESTINATIONS UNTIL DAYS AFTER  
THE AIRPORT RE-OPENED DUE TO FULLY BOOKED FLIGHTS DURING  
THE HOLIDAY SEASON. POLICE AND NATIONAL GUARDSMEN RESCUED  
HUNDREDS OF COMMUTERS STUCK IN THEIR CARS...AND SENT THEM TO  
TEMPORARY SHELTERS SET UP BY THE RED CROSS. ALL INTERSTATES  
AND OTHER MAJOR HIGHWAYS IN AND OUT OF DENVER WERE CLOSED.  
GREYHOUND WAS FORCED TO CANCEL ALL BUS TRIPS FROM DENVER.  
MAIL DELIVERY WAS SUSPENDED. THE REGIONAL TRANSPORTATION  
DISTRICT SUSPENDED ALL METRO DENVER BUS SERVICE FOR THE  
FIRST TIME SINCE THE MARCH 2003 BLIZZARD. THE ROOF OF A  
DISCOUNT STORE IN AURORA COLLAPSED UNDER THE WEIGHT OF THE  
HEAVY SNOW. IN LAKEWOOD...A POWER OUTAGE LEFT 5600 RESIDENTS  
WITHOUT ELECTRICITY FOR A BRIEF TIME. METRO DENVER SNOWFALL  
AMOUNTS INCLUDED: 34 INCHES 10 MILES SOUTHEAST OF BUCKLEY  
AFB...32 INCHES IN LITTLETON...30 INCHES IN THORNTON AND NEAR  
CASTLE ROCK...29.5 INCHES NEAR PARKER...28 INCHES IN WHEAT  
RIDGE...25.5 INCHES AT CENTENNIAL AIRPORT...25 INCHES AT  
NIWOT...24 INCHES IN AURORA...22.5 INCHES AT GREENWOOD VILLAGE...  
22 INCHES IN ARVADA...21.5 INCHES IN LAKEWOOD...20 INCHES IN  
LONGMONT...AND 15.5 INCHES IN BOULDER. SNOWFALL MEASURED 20.7  
INCHES OFFICIALLY IN THE DENVER STAPLETON AREA. THIS RANKED  
THE SNOWFALL AS THE 7TH GREATEST IN THE CITY SINCE 1946.  
NORTH WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO 37 MPH WITH GUSTS TO 55 MPH AT  
DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT. IN THE FOOTHILLS SNOWFALL  
TOTALED: 42 INCHES AT CONIFER AND 11 MILES SOUTHWEST OF  
BOULDER...40 INCHES AT EVERGREEN...39 INCHES AT ASPEN SPRINGS...  
37.5 INCHES 8 MILES NORTH OF BLACKHAWK...33 INCHES NEAR  
NEDERLAND...31 INCHES AT INTERCANYON AND NEAR TINY TOWN...30.5  
INCHES ATOP BUCKHORN MOUNTAIN...30 INCHES NEAR INDIAN HILLS...  
29 INCHES AT ROLLINSVILLE...24 INCHES NEAR GROSS RESERVOIR  
AND RALSTON RESERVOIR...22.4 INCHES ATOP CROW HILL...AND 20  
INCHES NEAR GEORGETOWN. SNOWPACKED AND RUTTED STREETS  
AND PARKING LOTS PERSISTED FOR A MONTH OR MORE AFTER THE  
STORM AND SUBSEQUENT STORMS. THE HEAVY SNOWFALL CREATED A  
SNOW REMOVAL CONTROVERSY WHEN MANY CITIZENS COMPLAINED THAT  
RESIDENTIAL STREETS WERE NOT CLEARED IN A TIMELY MANNER IN  
THE CITY AND IN SOME SUBURBAN AREAS. THIS WAS IN SPITE OF  
THE FACT THAT TENS OF MILLIONS OF DOLLARS WERE SPENT ON SNOW  
REMOVAL. IN THE CITY OF DENVER...SNOW COVER OF AN INCH OR  
MORE FROM THIS STORM AND SUBSEQUENT STORMS PERSISTED FOR 61  
CONSECUTIVE DAYS...THROUGH FEBRUARY 19...2007. THIS IS THE  
SECOND LONGEST PERIOD OF SNOW COVER ON RECORD IN THE CITY.  
MANY HOMEOWNERS WHO HAD EXTENSIVE CHRISTMAS LIGHTS AND  
DECORATIONS IN THEIR YARDS WERE NOT ABLE TO REMOVE THE  
LIGHTS BECAUSE THE WIRES WERE BURIED IN DEEP SNOW AND ICE  
UNTIL THE END OF FEBRUARY OR LATER.  
IN 2020...VERY STRONG DOWNSLOPE WINDS DEVELOPED ALONG THE  
FRONT RANGE. PEAK WIND GUSTS REACHED 95 MPH NEAR CARIBOU...  
WITH A GUST OF 93 MPH NEAR BERTHOUD PASS. PEAK GUSTS  
ELSEWHERE INCLUDED: 87 MPH NEAR TOLLAND...83 MPH NEAR WHITE  
RANCH OPEN SPACE...82 MPH NEAR ROCKY FLATS...81 MPH NEAR  
NEDERLAND...80 MPH NEAR GEORGETOWN...78 MPH NEAR WARD...AND  
77 MPH NEAR CRISMAN.  
20-22 IN 1933...STRONG DOWNSLOPE WINDS PRODUCED A WARM SPELL.  
LOW TEMPERATURES OF 43 DEGREES ON BOTH THE 20TH AND 21ST  
AND 41 DEGREES ON THE 22ND WERE RECORD HIGH MINIMUMS FOR  
THOSE DATES. HIGH TEMPERATURE OF 67 DEGREES ON THE 21ST  
WAS A RECORD MAXIMUM FOR THE DATE. HIGH TEMPERATURES OF  
56 DEGREES ON THE 20TH AND 69 DEGREES ON THE 22ND WERE  
NOT RECORDS; HOWEVER...THE 69 DEGREES WAS THE WARMEST OF  
THE MONTH. WEST TO NORTHWEST WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO  
20 AND 24 MPH ON THE 21ST AND 22ND RESPECTIVELY.  
20-23 IN 1918...LIGHT SNOWFALL ON EACH DAY TOTALED 12.0 INCHES  
OVER DOWNTOWN DENVER. NORTHEAST WINDS WERE SUSTAINED  
TO 16 MPH ON THE 21ST.  
20-25 IN 1983...AN EXTREMELY BITTER COLD SPELL OCCURRED. THE  
TEMPERATURE REMAINED BELOW ZERO FOR 115 HOURS IN DENVER...  
THE LONGEST SUB-ZERO PERIOD ON RECORD. THE MERCURY DIPPED  
TO 21 DEGREES BELOW ZERO ON THE 21ST...THE COLDEST RECORDED  
TEMPERATURE IN OVER 20 YEARS. THE COLD WAS ACCOMPANIED  
BY WINDS THAT PLUNGED CHILL FACTORS TO 50 TO 70 DEGREES  
BELOW ZERO. TWO PEOPLE FROZE TO DEATH IN DENVER; BOTH  
WERE FOUND OUTSIDE DEAD OF EXPOSURE. NUMEROUS CASES OF  
FROSTBITE WERE REPORTED. HUNDREDS OF WATER PIPES BROKE  
FROM THE INTENSE COLD...WATER MAINS AND NATURAL GAS LINES  
ALSO FRACTURED...AND ELECTRICITY CONSUMPTION REACHED RECORD  
LEVELS. LIGHT SNOW TOTALING 5.8 INCHES FELL AT TIMES...AND  
HOLIDAY TRAFFIC WAS DELAYED AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL  
AIRPORT FOR SEVERAL HOURS. EIGHT DAILY TEMPERATURE RECORDS  
WERE SET AT THE TIME. THE ALL-TIME RECORD LOW MAXIMUM  
TEMPERATURE FOR THE MONTH OF 8 DEGREES BELOW ZERO ON THE  
21ST STILL STANDS TODAY. OTHER TEMPERATURE RECORDS STILL  
STANDING INCLUDE RECORD LOW MAXIMUM TEMPERATURES OF 5  
DEGREES BELOW ZERO ON BOTH THE 22ND AND 23RD AND 4 DEGREES  
BELOW ZERO ON THE 24TH.  
 

 
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab CO Page Main Text Page