311  
NOUS45 KBOU 180959  
PNSBOU  
COZ030>051-182300-  
 
PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE DENVER/BOULDER CO  
259 AM MST THU DEC 18 2025  
   
..TODAY IN METRO DENVER WEATHER HISTORY
 
 
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.  
 

 
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab CO Page Main Text Page