923  
NOUS45 KBOU 070959  
PNSBOU  
COZ030>051-072300-  
 
PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE DENVER/BOULDER CO  
259 AM MST WED JAN 7 2026  
   
..TODAY IN METRO DENVER WEATHER HISTORY  
 
31-7 IN 1941...A PROTRACTED COLD SPELL THROUGH JANUARY 7...1942...  
PRODUCED BELOW ZERO LOW TEMPERATURES ON 7 OF THE 8 DAYS.  
A LOW TEMPERATURE OF 2 DEGREES ON THE 3RD PREVENTED A  
STRING OF 8 DAYS BELOW ZERO. THE COLDEST DAYS DURING THE  
PERIOD WERE THE 1ST WITH A HIGH OF 2 DEGREES AND  
A LOW OF 9 DEGREES BELOW ZERO...THE 4TH WITH A HIGH OF 2  
DEGREES AND A LOW OF 11 DEGREES BELOW ZERO...AND THE 5TH  
WITH A HIGH OF 26 DEGREES AND A LOW OF 12 DEGREES BELOW  
ZERO.  
6-7 IN 1908...FURIOUS HIGH WINDS WERE NOTED IN BOULDER BUT  
CAUSED ONLY MINOR DAMAGE AND INJURY.  
IN 1913...A VERY COLD ARCTIC AIR MASS CAUSED TEMPERATURES TO  
PLUNGE TO RECORD LEVELS. THE LOW TEMPERATURE FELL TO 21  
DEGREES BELOW ZERO ON THE 6TH AND TO 18 DEGREES BELOW  
ZERO ON THE 7TH...BOTH RECORDS. THE HIGH TEMPERATURE OF  
ONLY 8 DEGREES BELOW ZERO ON THE 6TH WAS A RECORD LOW  
MAXIMUM FOR THE DATE.  
IN 1920...POST-FRONTAL HEAVY SNOWFALL TOTALED 7.0 INCHES IN  
DOWNTOWN DENVER. NORTH WINDS WERE SUSTAINED AT 24 MPH  
WITH GUSTS TO 30 MPH ON THE 6TH.  
IN 1923...WARM CHINOOK WINDS RESULTED IN TWO TEMPERATURE  
RECORDS. LOW TEMPERATURES OF 37 DEGREES ON THE 6TH  
AND 42 DEGREES ON THE 7TH EQUALED THE RECORD HIGH  
MINIMUMS FOR THE DATES. WEST WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO  
30 MPH WITH GUSTS TO 33 MPH ON THE 6TH. SOUTHWEST  
WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO 47 MPH WITH GUSTS TO 52 MPH  
ON THE 7TH. HIGH TEMPERATURES WERE 53 DEGREES ON THE  
6TH AND 56 DEGREES ON THE 7TH.  
IN 1986...2 TO 4 INCHES OF SNOW FELL OVER METRO DENVER...  
WITH 5 TO 8 INCHES IN THE FOOTHILLS WEST OF THE CITY.  
THE 2.4 INCHES OF SNOWFALL RECORDED AT STAPLETON  
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT WAS THE ONLY SNOWFALL OF THE  
MONTH. NORTHWEST WINDS GUSTED TO 24 MPH AT THE  
AIRPORT.  
IN 2006...A BRIEF WARM SPELL RESULTED IN TWO TEMPERATURE  
RECORDS. HIGH TEMPERATURES OF 66 DEGREES ON THE 6TH  
AND 69 DEGREES ON THE 7TH EQUALED THE RECORD DAILY  
MAXIMUM TEMPERATURES FOR EACH OF THOSE DAYS. LOW  
TEMPERATURES REMAINED ABOVE FREEZING AND WERE WITHIN  
1 OR 2 DEGREES OF THE RECORD DAILY HIGH MINIMUMS.  
7 IN 1911...WEST CHINOOK WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO 51 MPH  
AND WARMED THE TEMPERATURE TO A HIGH OF 56 DEGREES.  
IN 1994...OCCASIONAL HIGH WINDS BUFFETED THE EASTERN  
FOOTHILLS. WIND GUSTS TO 99 MPH WERE RECORDED AT  
ROLLINSVILLE...SOUTHWEST OF BOULDER. WEST WINDS GUSTED  
TO 40 MPH AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
IN 1995...A BRIEF BLAST OF HIGH WINDS HIT THE EASTERN  
FOOTHILLS AND ADJACENT FRONT RANGE COMMUNITIES. A WIND  
GUST TO 112 MPH WAS RECORDED ATOP SQUAW MOUNTAIN...WEST OF  
DENVER. IN BOULDER...WINDS GUSTED TO 81 MPH. WEST WINDS  
GUSTED TO 31 MPH AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
IN 2009...DAMAGING DOWNSLOPE WINDS WERE REPONSIBLE FOR  
TRIGGERING TWO WILDFIRES THAT THREATENED THE CITY OF  
BOULDER. PEAK WIND GUSTS RANGED FROM 75 TO 107 MPH IN  
AND NEAR THE FOOTHILLS OF BOULDER...JEFFERSON AND PARK  
COUNTIES. ALTHOUGH THE FIRES NEVER MERGED...THEY WERE  
CLOSE ENOUGH FOR FIREFIGHTERS TO BUILD A PERIMETER AROUND  
BOTH OF THEM. THE FIRES QUICKELY TORCHED 3000 ACRES AND  
FORCED THE EVACUATION OF UP TO 1400 FAMILES. ONE HOME  
WAS DESTROYED ALONG WITH SEVERAL BARNS AND OUTBUILDINGS.  
THREE FIREMEN SUFFERED MINOR INJURIES. IN BAILEY...POWER  
LINES WERE DOWNED BY FALLING TREES. A TIN ROOF ON AN  
AUTO REPAIR SHOP IN TOWN WAS ALMOST COMPLETELY BLOWN OFF.  
PEAK WIND GUSTS INCLUDED: 107 MPH NEAR MT. AUDUBON...92  
MPH NEAR EVERGREEN...87 MPH...6 MILES NORTHWEST OF BOULDER;  
81 MPH NEAR BERGEN PARK AND AT THE NATIONAL WIND  
TECHNOLOGY CENTER; 79 MPH NEAR NEDERLAND...77 MPH NEAR  
SHERIDAN...AND 75 MPH AT GENESEE. A PEAK WIND GUST OF  
39 MPH WAS MEASURED AT DENVER INTERNATINAL AIRPORT FROM  
THE WEST.  
IN 2020...HIGH WINDS DEVELOPED IN AND NEAR THE FOOTHILLS OF  
BOULDER AND NORTHERN JEFFERSON COUNTIES. PEAK WIND GUSTS  
INCLUDED: 89 MPH IN WEST LONGMONT...83 MPH AT THE NCAR MESA  
LABORATORY...AND 80 MPH AT THE JUNCTION OF STATE HIGHWAYS  
93 AND 72. WEST WINDS GUSTED TO 38 MPH AT DENVER  
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
7-8 IN 1911...GALE FORCE WINDS OCCURRED IN BOULDER CAUSING MINOR  
INJURIES.  
IN 1937...COLD ARCTIC AIR PLUNGED TEMPERATURES BELOW ZERO  
FOR AN ESTIMATED 56 CONSECUTUVE HOURS. TWO TEMPERATURE  
RECORDS WERE SET. HIGH TEMPERATURES OF 8 DEGREES BELOW  
ZERO ON THE 7TH AND 3 DEGREES ON THE 8TH WERE RECORD LOW  
MAXIMUM READINGS FOR THOSE DATES. LOW TEMPERATURES  
PLUNGED TO 12 DEGREES BELOW ZERO ON THE 7TH AND 11 DEGREES  
BELOW ZERO ON THE 8TH. SNOWFALL WAS 1.4 INCHES IN DOWNTOWN  
DENVER.  
IN 1969...A VIOLENT EVENING WINDSTORM STRUCK BOULDER AND THE  
ADJACENT FOOTHILLS. A WIND GUST TO 130 MPH WAS RECORDED  
AT THE NATIONAL CENTER FOR ATMOSPHERIC RESEARCH. WINDS  
REACHED 96 MPH IN DOWNTOWN BOULDER. THE BOULDER AIRPORT  
WIND RECORDER WAS BLOWN AWAY AFTER MEASURING A WIND GUST  
TO 80 MPH. THE WINDSTORM CAUSED OVER ONE MILLION DOLLARS  
IN DAMAGE AND ONE FATALITY IN BOULDER. ABOUT 25 HOMES IN  
SOUTH BOULDER HAD ROOFS BLOWN OFF OR WERE SEVERELY  
DAMAGED. ROOFS WERE BLOWN OFF BUILDINGS HOUSING  
SCIENTIFIC LABORATORIES AND OFFICES OF THE ENVIRONMENTAL  
SCIENCE SERVICES ADMINISTRATION...NOW NOAA...IN BOULDER...AND  
INSTALLATIONS OF SEVERAL SCIENTIFIC MEASURING SITES NEAR  
BOULDER RECEIVED HEAVY DAMAGE. GRASS FIRES DRIVEN BY THE  
HIGH WINDS ENDANGERED MANY AREAS...BUT WERE CONTROLLED BY  
VOLUNTEER FIREMEN. ONE MAN DIED FROM INJURIES RECEIVED  
WHEN HE WAS BLOWN FROM A FIRE TRUCK. ONE MAN WAS KILLED  
AND ANOTHER INJURED WHEN THE TRUCK CAMPER IN WHICH THEY  
WERE RIDING WAS BLOWN OFF I-25 ABOUT 10 MILES NORTH OF  
DENVER. IN THE SAME AREA A MOBILE HOME AND A TRUCK  
TRAILER WERE BLOWN OFF THE HIGHWAY AND DEMOLISHED. AT  
LEAST 20 PEOPLE IN THE BOULDER AREA RECEIVED LIGHT TO  
SERIOUS INJURIES FROM FLYING DEBRIS OR FROM BEING BLOWN  
INTO OBSTRUCTIONS. POWER LINES AND TREES WERE DOWNED  
OVER A WIDE AREA. DAMAGE WAS RELATIVELY LIGHT IN THE  
CITY OF DENVER...WHERE NORTHWEST WINDS GUSTED TO 62 MPH  
AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT ON THE 8TH. MANY  
WINDOWS WERE BROKEN IN ARVADA...ENGLEWOOD...AND LITTLETON.  
A 27-YEAR-OLD FIRE LOOKOUT TOWER ON SQUAW MOUNTAIN...WEST  
OF DENVER...WAS BLOWN AWAY...AND SEVERAL RADIO RELAY TOWERS  
AT THAT LOCATION WERE TOPPLED. TRUCKS WERE OVERTURNED  
NEAR GEORGETOWN. MOBILE HOMES WERE OVERTURNED IN SEVERAL  
AREAS WITH OCCUPANTS RECEIVING INJURIES IN SOME CASES.  
THE STRONG CHINOOK WINDS ALSO BROUGHT WARM WEATHER. THE  
MAXIMUM TEMPERATURE OF 69 DEGREES ON THE 7TH BROKE THE  
OLD RECORD OF 65 DEGREES SET IN 1948. THE TEMPERATURE  
ALSO REACHED 65 DEGREES ON THE 8TH...BUT WAS NOT A RECORD.  
IN 1992...AN INTENSE BLIZZARD BURIED EASTERN PARTS OF METRO  
DENVER. AT TIMES SNOW FELL AT RATES OF 2 TO 3 INCHES AN  
HOUR. WINDS INCREASED FROM THE NORTH AT SPEEDS OF 25 TO  
45 MPH. DRIFTS OF 4 TO 8 FEET WERE COMMON. I-70 WAS  
CLOSED EAST OF DENVER...AND I-25 WAS CLOSED FROM DENVER  
SOUTH. SNOWFALL TOTALS RANGED FROM A COUPLE OF INCHES IN  
THE FOOTHILLS WEST OF DENVER TO AS MUCH AS 2 FEET ON THE  
EAST SIDE OF METRO DENVER. THE HEAVIEST SNOW FELL ON THE  
7TH IN A BAND FROM THE NORTHERN SUBURBS OF WESTMINSTER AND  
THORNTON THROUGH AURORA AND EAST DENVER TO SOUTHEAST OF  
PARKER. SNOWFALL TOTALS INCLUDED: 22 INCHES IN SOUTHEAST  
AURORA...14.8 INCHES AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT...13  
INCHES IN NORTHGLENN...10 INCHES IN PARKER...AND 9 INCHES IN  
WESTMINSTER. THE 14.5 INCHES OF SNOWFALL MEASURED ON THE  
7TH INTO THE 8TH IS THE GREATEST 24 HOUR SNOWFALL EVER  
RECORDED IN THE CITY DURING THE MONTH OF JANUARY. NORTH  
WINDS GUSTING TO 46 MPH CAUSED MUCH BLOWING SNOW AT  
STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
IN 2000...HIGH WINDS DEVELOPED IN AND NEAR THE FRONT RANGE  
FOOTHILLS. THE STRONGEST WINDS WERE GENERALLY CONFINED  
TO FOOTHILLS AREAS NORTH OF I-70. A WIND GUST TO 76 MPH  
WAS REPORTED IN GOLDEN GATE CANYON. WEST WINDS GUSTED TO  
37 MPH AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT ON THE 8TH.  
7-10 IN 1962...A MAJOR WINTER STORM DUMPED 13.5 INCHES OF SNOW ON  
METRO DENVER. A FOOT OF THE SNOW FELL ON THE 8TH WHEN  
NORTHEAST WINDS GUSTED TO 30 MPH. THE STORM WAS FOLLOWED  
BY AN INTENSE BLAST OF VERY COLD ARCTIC AIR. MINIMUM  
TEMPERATURE READINGS OF 24 DEGREES BELOW ZERO OCCURRED ON  
BOTH THE 9TH AND 10TH. THE TEMPERATURE NEVER REACHED ABOVE  
ZERO ON THE 9TH WHEN A MAXIMUM READING OF 1 DEGREE BELOW  
ZERO WAS RECORDED. TEMPERATURES WERE BELOW ZERO FOR 37  
CONSECUTIVE HOURS.  
 
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab CO Page
Main Text Page