140  
NOUS45 KBOU 060959  
PNSBOU  
COZ030>051-062300-  
 
PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE DENVER/BOULDER CO  
259 AM MST FRI MAR 6 2026  
   
..TODAY IN METRO DENVER WEATHER HISTORY
 
 
4-6 IN 1931...A COLD FRONT WITH NORTH WINDS GUSTING TO 35 MPH  
ON THE EVENING OF THE 4TH BROUGHT SNOWFALL ON THE 5TH  
INTO THE EARLY MORNING OF THE 6TH. HEAVY SNOWFALL  
TOTALED 6.2 INCHES. TEMPERATURES PLUNGED FROM A HIGH  
OF 58 DEGREES ON THE 4TH TO A LOW OF ONLY 22 DEGREES  
BY MIDNIGHT...WHICH WAS ALSO THE HIGH READING ON THE  
5TH.  
IN 1983...A SLOW MOVING MOISTURE LADEN STORM PRODUCED HEAVY  
SNOW AND RAIN. TWO TO THREE FEET OF SNOW FELL IN THE  
FOOTHILLS AT WONDERVU AND NEDERLAND. THE SOUTHERN PORTION  
OF METRO DENVER WAS BURIED WITH 26 INCHES OF SNOW IN  
SOUTHEAST AURORA...25 INCHES AT FRANKTOWN...AND 19 INCHES  
AT LITTLETON. SNOWFALL TOTALED 18.7 INCHES AT STAPLETON  
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT WITH MOST OF THE SNOW...18.0 INCHES...  
FALLING ON THE 5TH. BRIGHTON RECEIVED ONLY 11 INCHES  
OF NEW SNOW. BOULDER WAS DRENCHED BY RAIN AND RECEIVED  
NO SNOW. PRECIPITATION FROM THE STORM TOTALED 3.06  
INCHES AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT WHERE NORTH  
WINDS GUSTED TO 28 MPH. THE HEAVY WET SNOW SNAPPED MANY  
TREE LIMBS...WHICH FELL ON POWER AND PHONE LINES CAUSING  
MANY OUTAGES. NUMEROUS HIGHWAYS WERE CLOSED. TWO THOUSAND  
TRAVELERS WERE STRANDED AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL  
AIRPORT WHERE ONLY ONE RUNWAY WAS OPEN FOR A TIME. MANY  
FLIGHTS WERE CANCELED. ONE HOME IN DENVER WAS SEVERELY  
DAMAGED WHEN ITS ROOF COLLAPSED UNDER THE WEIGHT OF THE  
HEAVY SNOW. THE 2.68 INCHES OF PRECIPITATION ON THE 5TH  
WAS THE GREATEST CALENDAR DAY PRECIPITATION EVER RECORDED  
IN THE CITY DURING MARCH. THE 2.79 INCHES OF PRECIPITATION  
ON THE 4TH AND 5TH WAS THE GREATEST 24 HOUR PRECIPITATION  
EVER MEASURED DURING MARCH.  
5-6 IN 1935...3.0 INCHES OF SNOW FELL IN DOWNTOWN DENVER. THIS  
WAS THE ONLY MEASURABLE SNOW OF THE MONTH. NORTHWEST  
WINDS GUSTED TO 29 MPH ON THE 5TH.  
IN 1940...HEAVY SNOWFALL TOTALED 9.1 INCHES OVER DOWNTOWN  
DENVER. NORTH WINDS GUSTED TO 22 MPH.  
IN 2000...HIGH WINDS DEVELOPED IN AND NEAR THE FOOTHILLS  
JUST PRIOR TO THE PASSAGE OF AN UPPER LEVEL STORM SYSTEM  
MOVING IN FROM THE WEST. PEAK GUSTS FROM THE WINDSTORM  
INCLUDED: 88 MPH AT THE NATIONAL CENTER FOR ATMOSPHERIC  
RESEARCH NEAR BOULDER...82 MPH IN BOULDER...80 MPH AT THE  
NATIONAL WIND TECHNOLOGY CENTER SOUTH OF BOULDER...79 MPH  
ON ROCKY FLATS...AND 71 MPH IN GOLDEN GATE CANYON.  
SEVERAL POWER LINES WERE DOWNED CAUSING A FEW BRIEF  
OUTAGES. THUNDERSTORMS PRODUCED SOUTHEAST WIND GUSTS  
TO 51 MPH AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT ON THE 5TH.  
IN 2003...HIGH WINDS SPREAD FROM THE MOUNTAINS DOWN THE  
EASTERN SLOPES. THE HIGHEST WIND GUSTS WERE 85 MPH  
ATOP THE GAMOW TOWER ON THE UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO  
CAMPUS IN BOULDER AND 70 MPH AT THE NATIONAL WIND  
TECHNOLOGY CENTER ON ROCKY FLATS WEST OF BROOMFIELD.  
WEST WINDS GUSTED TO 44 MPH AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL  
AIRPORT ON THE 6TH.  
IN 2018...HIGH WINDS DEVELOPED IN AND NEAR DENVER. PEAK  
WIND GUSTS INCLUDED 79 MPH IN APPLEWOOD...60 MPH AT DENVER  
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT...AND 59 MPH NEAR BENNETT.  
6 IN 1900...WEST WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO 41 MPH WITH GUSTS  
TO 49 MPH.  
IN 1920...THE HIGH TEMPERATURE WARMED TO ONLY 6 DEGREES...  
THE ALL-TIME RECORD LOW MAXIMUM TEMPERATURE FOR THE  
MONTH OF MARCH. THE SAME READING ALSO OCCURRED ON  
MARCH 10...1948.  
IN 1972...A WIND GUST TO 100 MPH WAS RECORDED AT JEFFERSON  
COUNTY AIRPORT IN BROOMFIELD. WINDS GUSTED IN BOULDER  
AT SPEEDS OF 50 TO 65 MPH. A LIGHT PLANE WAS OVERTURNED...  
AND THERE WAS DAMAGE TO OTHER PLANES AT BOULDER AIRPORT.  
THE ROOF OF A GARAGE WAS BLOWN OFF...AND A MOBILE HOME WAS  
OVERTURNED IN BOULDER. A TRUCK WAS BLOWN OFF THE HIGHWAY  
15 MILES EAST OF BOULDER. WEST WINDS GUSTED TO 51 MPH AT  
STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT. THE WARM CHINOOK WINDS  
WERE RESPONSIBLE FOR SETTING A NEW RECORD HIGH TEMPERATURE  
FOR THE DATE OF 75 DEGREES...EXCEEDING THE OLD RECORD OF  
72 DEGREES SET IN 1925.  
IN 1990...A BLIZZARD PUMMELED METRO DENVER. SNOW FELL AT A  
RATE OF 2 TO 3 INCHES AN HOUR. GUSTY NORTH WINDS WHIPPED  
THE SNOW INTO 2- TO 3-FOOT DRIFTS BY NOON. DURING THE  
AFTERNOON MANY STORES AND SCHOOLS CLOSED. BY RUSH HOUR  
SUSTAINED WINDS OF 35 TO 46 MPH AND GUSTS TO 58 MPH REDUCED  
VISIBILITIES TO NEAR ZERO AND WHIPPED THE NEW SNOW INTO  
3- TO 4-FOOT DRIFTS. MANY RESIDENTIAL AS WELL AS  
SECONDARY AND PRIMARY ROADS BECAME IMPASSABLE. I-25  
AND I-70 WERE CLOSED IN AND OUT OF THE CITY. ROAD CREWS  
CLEARED DRIFTS AS HIGH AS 12 FEET IN SOUTHEAST BOULDER AND  
NORTHWEST ADAMS COUNTIES. SEVERAL HUNDRED RUSH HOUR  
COMMUTERS...INCLUDING THE STATE'S GOVERNOR...WERE CAUGHT IN  
THE BLIZZARD CONDITIONS ALONG A 15-MILE STRETCH OF THE  
DENVER-BOULDER TURNPIKE. MANY REMAINED SNOWBOUND IN THEIR  
VEHICLES UP TO 8 HOURS UNTIL RESCUED BY POLICE AND THE  
NATIONAL GUARD. THE HIGHWAY REMAINED CLOSED UNTIL MID-DAY  
ON THE 7TH. SHELTERS FOR STRANDED COMMUTERS AND TRAVELERS  
WERE OPENED IN BROOMFIELD AND CASTLE ROCK. MANY WORKERS  
DIDN'T EVEN TRY TO GO HOME...BUT FILLED DOWNTOWN HOTELS TO  
NEAR CAPACITY. BY EARLY EVENING...STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL  
AIRPORT WAS SHUT DOWN AFTER AN AIRLINER WITH 82 PASSENGERS  
ABOARD SKIDDED OFF A RUNWAY. SNOWFALL TOTALS FOR THE STORM  
VARIED FROM 18 TO 50 INCHES IN THE FOOTHILLS ABOVE 6  
THOUSAND FEET...9 TO 24 INCHES WEST OF I-25...AND 2 TO 12  
INCHES OVER EASTERN METRO DENVER. SNOWFALL FROM THE STORM  
TOTALED 11.8 INCHES AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT  
WHERE THE MAXIMUM SNOW DEPTH ON THE GROUND WAS 7 INCHES  
DUE TO MELTING.  
IN 2004...VERY STRONG DOWNSLOPE WINDS DEVELOPED IN AND  
NEAR THE EASTERN FOOTHILLS...CAUSING NUMEROUS TRAFFIC  
ACCIDENTS AND EXTENSIVE PROPERTY DAMAGE TO ROOFS AND  
ALUMINUM SHEDS. THREE SEMI-TRUCKS WERE TOPPLED BY THE  
STRONG WINDS NEAR THE I-70 AND C-470 INTERCHANGE. ONE OF  
THE TRUCKS WAS CARRYING A MODULAR HOME...WHILE ANOTHER WAS  
HAULING HAZARDOUS MATERIAL. I-70 HAD TO BE CLOSED IN  
BOTH DIRECTIONS UNTIL THE ACCIDENTS COULD BE CLEANED UP.  
STRONG WINDS FORCED THE CLOSURE OF STATE HIGHWAY 93  
BETWEEN GOLDEN AND BOULDER...WHEN THE ROAD BECAME ICY AND  
SNOWPACKED FROM LOCALIZED GROUND BLIZZARDS. ANOTHER SEMI-  
TRUCK WAS BLOWN OVER NEAR THE INTERSECTION OF STATE  
HIGHWAYS 72 AND 93 ATOP ROCKY FLATS. SCATTERED POWER  
OUTAGES WERE REPORTED ACROSS NORTHERN AND WESTERN SECTIONS  
OF METRO DENVER...AFFECTING AROUND 2000 RESIDENTS. IN  
BOULDER...SEVERAL PINE TREES WERE UPROOTED BY THE HIGH WINDS.  
IN 2017...STRONG WINDS COMBINED WITH VERY DRY CONDITIONS  
PRODUCED EXTREME FIRE DANGER ACROSS THE REGION. IN AURORA...  
FIRE CREWS RESPONDED TO A BRUSH FIRE NEAR GUN CLUB ROAD AND  
JEWELL AVENUE. IT BURNED APPROXIMATELY 290 ACRES BEFORE IT  
WAS CONTAINED. STRONG WINDS ALSO DOWNED A TREE WHICH CRUSHED  
A PARKED CAR IN A DRIVEWAY. PEAK WIND GUSTS INCLUDED: 83  
MPH...5 MILES SOUTH OF BERTHOUD; 63 MPH AT CENTENNIAL...  
58 MPH NEAR BENNETT AND AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
6-7 IN 1981...A STORM DUMPED 4 TO 8 INCHES OF SNOW OVER HIGHER  
ELEVATIONS BETWEEN DENVER AND COLORADO SPRINGS. AT  
STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT...NORTH WINDS GUSTED TO  
16 MPH AND SNOWFALL TOTALED ONLY 2.5 INCHES.  
IN 1998...HEAVY SNOW FELL OVER PORTIONS OF METRO DENVER  
AND THE ADJACENT FOOTHILLS. SNOWFALL TOTALS INCLUDED  
11 INCHES AT CHIEF HOSA...10 INCHES NEAR EVERGREEN...8.5  
INCHES IN BROOMFIELD...8 INCHES AT BAILEY...AND 7 INCHES  
AT BOTH STANDLEY LAKE AND THORNTON. ELSEWHERE...SNOWFALL  
ACROSS METRO DENVER RANGED FROM 3 TO 6 INCHES WITH  
4.9 INCHES MEASURED AT THE SITE OF THE FORMER STAPLETON  
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT. NORTH WINDS GUSTED TO 26 MPH  
AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT ON THE 7TH. SEVERAL  
ACCIDENTS OCCURRED ALONG AREA ROADS AND HIGHWAYS WHEN  
THEY BECAME ICY AND SNOWPACKED.  
6-8 IN 1932...SNOWFALL TOTALED 6.3 INCHES IN DOWNTOWN DENVER.  
MOST OF THE SNOW...5.2 INCHES...FELL ON THE 8TH. NORTHEAST  
WINDS GUSTED TO 20 MPH ON THE 6TH.  
 

 
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab CO Page Main Text Page