714  
NOUS45 KBOU 070859  
PNSBOU  
COZ030>051-072300-  
 
PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE DENVER/BOULDER CO  
259 AM MDT TUE JUL 7 2026  
   
..TODAY IN METRO DENVER WEATHER HISTORY  
 
29-15 IN 2000...THE 29TH MARKED THE BEGINNING OF A NEAR RECORD HOT  
STREAK FOR METRO DENVER. THE HIGH TEMPERATURES...AS RECORDED  
AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT...EXCEEDED THE 90 DEGREE MARK  
FOR 17 CONSECUTIVE DAYS FROM JUNE 29TH THROUGH JULY 15TH.  
THE RECORD OF 24 CONSECUTIVE 90 DEGREE OR ABOVE DAYS WAS  
SET FROM JULY 13TH THROUGH AUGUST 5TH...2008.  
1-18 IN 1874...A STREAK OF 18 CONSECUTIVE DAYS OF 90 DEGREES...FROM  
THE 1ST TO THE 18TH...TIED FOR SECOND WITH ANOTHER STREAK  
THAT WAS LATER SET IN THE SUMMER OF 1901. THE RECORD OF 24  
CONSECUTIVE DAYS WAS ESTABLISHED IN THE SUMMER OF 2008.  
4-8 IN 1989...ONE OF THE MOST INTENSE HEAT WAVES ON RECORD ROASTED  
METRO DENVER. THE TEMPERATURE REACHED 100 DEGREES OR MORE  
ON 5 CONSECUTIVE DAYS. THE CITY HAD PREVIOUSLY NEVER  
RECORDED MORE THAN 2 STRAIGHT 100-DEGREE DAYS SINCE RECORDS  
BEGAN IN 1872. WATER AND ELECTRICITY USAGE REACHED ALL TIME  
HIGHS. THE HEAT WAVE CREATED EXTREMELY DRY WEATHER  
CONDITIONS...WHICH CONTRIBUTED TO A MAJOR FOREST FIRE IN  
BOULDER CANYON ON JULY 9TH. THE TEMPERATURE REACHED 103  
DEGREES ON THE 8TH...AND THE MERCURY CLIMBED TO 101 DEGREES  
ON BOTH THE 4TH AND 5TH...AND TO 102 DEGREES ON BOTH THE  
6TH AND 7TH. THE LOW TEMPERATURE OF 68 DEGREES ON THE 8TH  
EQUALED THE RECORD HIGH MINIMUM FOR THE DATE.  
6-23 IN 1901...FROM THE 6TH TO THE 23RD...A STREAK OF 18 CONSECUTIVE  
DAYS OF 90 DEGREES TIED FOR SECOND WITH ANOTHER STREAK SET  
IN THE SUMMER OF 1874. THE RECORD OF 24 CONSECUTIVE DAYS WAS  
ESTABLISHED IN THE SUMMER OF 2008.  
7 IN 1905...A THUNDERSTORM PRODUCED SUSTAINED NORTHEAST WINDS  
TO 40 MPH...BUT ONLY A TRACE OF RAIN.  
IN 1933...HEAVY CLOUDBURSTS DURING THE AFTERNOON IN THE  
IDLEDALE AREA AND ON SAW MILL GULCH CAUSED FLASH FLOODING  
ON BEAR CREEK RESULTING IN 7 DEATHS. FLOODING IN MORRISON  
WAS COMPOUNDED WHEN A WALL OF WATER AS HIGH AS 15 FEET  
SWEPT DOWN MOUNT VERNON CREEK. THE FLOODING CAUSED  
EXTENSIVE DAMAGE TO THE BEAR CREEK CANYON HIGHWAY.  
IN 1959...WIND GUSTS TO 45 MPH AT STAPLETON AIRPORT...BUT HIGHER  
IN OTHER AREAS...DAMAGED POWER LINES AND BUILDINGS AND CAUSED  
WIDESPREAD MINOR DAMAGE FROM FALLING TREES AND BROKEN LIMBS.  
A FIELD HOUSE UNDER CONSTRUCTION AT ADAMS COUNTY HIGH SCHOOL  
IN COMMERCE CITY SUSTAINED SEVERE DAMAGE.  
IN 1963...FARM BUILDINGS EAST OF BOULDER WERE POSSIBLY DAMAGED  
BY A SMALL TORNADO AS THERE WERE UNCONFIRMED REPORTS OF A  
FUNNEL CLOUD IN THE AREA.  
IN 1967...A STORM OF CLOUDBURST PROPORTION CAUSED DAMAGE FROM  
FLOODING IN SOUTHWEST AND SOUTH DENVER. UNOFFICIAL REPORTS  
INDICATED RAINFALL OF 2.00 INCHES IN 30 MINUTES AND MORE  
THAN 3.00 INCHES TOTAL FROM THE STORM. STREETS AND  
BUILDINGS WERE FLOODED BY THE HEAVY RUN-OFF. HAIL IN SOME  
AREAS CONTRIBUTED TO FLOODING BY BLOCKING STORM DRAINS.  
WATER ACCUMULATED 12 TO 14 FEET DEEP IN SEVERAL UNDERPASSES  
AND SOME STREET INTERSECTIONS. A YOUNG WOMAN DROWNED WHEN  
SHE TRIED TO CROSS A FLOODED STREET AND WAS SWEPT OFF HER  
FEET AND TRAPPED UNDER A PARKED CAR. WATER REACHED A DEPTH  
OF 5 FEET IN THE STREET. POLICE RESCUED NUMEROUS STRANDED  
MOTORISTS. THE ROOF AND WALL OF A FLAT ROOFED STORE  
BUILDING COLLAPSED UNDER THE WEIGHT OF DEEP WATER ON THE  
ROOF. CARS WERE WASHED OVER CURBS IN MANY AREAS. IN  
SOUTHWEST METRO DENVER...100 TO 150 HOMES WERE FLOODED.  
HAIL CAUSED DAMAGE IN OTHER AREAS OF DENVER AND IN AURORA.  
WIND TOPPLED TREES IN SEVERAL AREAS. SNOWPLOWS WERE CALLED  
OUT TO CLEAR HAIL FROM SOME HIGHWAYS AND RUNWAYS AT  
STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT. LIGHTNING DAMAGED TREES  
AND POWER LINES AND STARTED A FIRE...WHICH EXTENSIVELY  
DAMAGED AN AUTOMOBILE DEALERSHIP. THUNDERSTORM RAINFALL  
TOTALED 0.83 INCH AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
IN 1981...SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS PRODUCED 3/4 INCH HAIL OVER  
EAST DENVER. ABOUT 1 1/2 INCHES OF RAIN FELL IN  
LITTLETON. THUNDERSTORM WINDS GUSTED TO 45 MPH AT  
STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
IN 1983...TENNIS BALL SIZE HAIL FELL ABOUT 5 MILES NORTH OF  
BOULDER; IT WAS SOFT AND CAUSED NO DAMAGE.  
IN 1987...A WEAK TORNADO TOUCHED DOWN IN CASTLE ROCK. SEVERAL  
WEAK TORNADOES WERE OBSERVED IN THE AREA. NO DAMAGE WAS  
REPORTED.  
IN 1988...LIGHTNING STRUCK A SIGN AT A BANK NEAR LOUISVILLE...  
DAMAGING IT AND CAUSING A SMOLDERING FIRE THAT RESULTED IN  
SMOKE DAMAGE TO THE BANK AND AN ADJACENT BUILDING. HEAVY  
THUNDERSTORM RAIN...ACCOMPANIED BY 1/2 INCH DIAMETER HAIL AT  
STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT...BRIEFLY REDUCED THE  
VISIBILITY TO 1/4 MILE. RAINFALL TOTALED 1.41 INCHES...  
BUT 1.12 INCHES FELL IN 32 MINUTES.  
IN 2001...SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS DUMPED LARGE HAIL ACROSS NORTH  
METRO DENVER. HAIL TO 1 3/4 INCHES IN DIAMETER FELL NEAR  
ERIE WITH 7/8 INCH HAIL MEASURED IN THORNTON.  
IN 2004...A 9-YEAR-OLD BOY WAS STRUCK BY LIGHTNING WHILE AT  
A PLAYGROUND IN ARVADA. THE UMPIRE AT A NEARBY BASEBALL  
GAME...ALONG WITH 2 PASSERS-BY...ADMINISTRATED CPR AND  
RESUSCITATED THE BOY WHO HAD QUIT BREATHING. THE BOY  
SUFFERED FIRST AND SECOND DEGREE BURNS...BUT WAS RELEASED  
FROM THE HOSPITAL IN LESS THAN 24 HOURS. A DRY MICROBURST  
OVER DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT PRODUCED A PEAK WIND GUST  
TO 61 MPH.  
IN 2006...UP TO 3 INCHES OF HEAVY THUNDERSTORM RAINFALL IN  
THE HAYMAN WILDFIRE BURN AREA PRODUCED DESTRUCTIVE FLASH  
FLOODING ALONG WEST CREEK BETWEEN THE TOWNS OF DECKERS AND  
WESTCREEK IN SOUTHWEST DOUGLAS COUNTY. HORSE CREEK...WHICH  
DRAINS INTO WEST CREEK...SWELLED FROM A NORMALLY SMALL CREEK  
INTO A RAGING TORRENT...25 TO 30 FEET DEEP AND 300 FEET WIDE.  
THE WALL OF WATER DAMAGED OR DESTROYED ABOUT 30 SECTIONS OF  
A 5 MILE STRETCH OF STATE HIGHWAY 67...WHICH PARALLELS WEST  
CREEK. SEVERAL HOMES WERE EXTENSIVELY DAMAGED OR DESTROYED.  
NO INJURIES WERE REPORTED...BUT SEVERAL PEOPLE HAD TO BE  
RESCUED...DUE TO EXTENSIVE DAMAGE TO ACCESS ROADS AND BRIDGES  
IN THE AREA. RECONSTRUCTION WAS ESTIMATED AT 13.3 MILLION  
DOLLARS.  
IN 2011...HEAVY RAIN ASSOCIATED WITH A WET MICROBURSTS PRODUCED  
OVER 3 INCHES OF RAIN IN 90 MINUTES ACROSS SOUTHEAST DENVER.  
IN DENVER...SOME UNDERPASSES WERE FLOODED WITH SEVERAL FEET  
OF WATER WHICH STRANDED MOTORISTS. AS A RESULT...THE FIRE  
DEPARTMENT CONDUCTED AT LEAST 10 WATER RESCUES. SOME  
BASEMENTS WERE INUNDATED WITH UP TO 4 FEET OF WATER WHICH  
CAUSED EXTENSIVE FLOOD DAMAGE. THE PLATTE VALLEY AND  
WESTERN MODEL RAILROAD CLUB'S MODEL TRAIN DISPLAY IN UNION  
STATION WAS ALSO DAMAGED WHEN 3 TO 4 INCHES OF MUD AND WATER  
SPILLED OVER SOME OF THE COMMAND AND CONTROL SYSTEMS. SEVERAL  
DISPLAY MODULES AND SCENERY PIECES IN A STORAGE ROOM WERE  
ALSO DAMAGED. THE ENTIRE DISPLAY SPANNED MORE THAN ONE  
THOUSAND FEET OF TRACK IN A ROOM THAT WAS ONCE USED AS THE  
JAIL AT UNION STATION IN THE 1900S. URBAN AND SMALL STREAM  
FLOODING WAS REPORTED ACROSS THE SURROUNDING DENVER SUBURBS.  
THE STORM LEFT ABOUT 28000 XCEL CUSTOMERS WITHOUT POWER WHEN  
THE STORM SNAPPED TREES AND POWER LINES. IN ADDITION...HEAVY  
RAIN PRODUCED FLASH FLOODING IN THE FOUR MILE CANYON BURN  
SCAR. FOUR DEBRIS SLIDES OCCURRED ALONG FOUR MILE CANYON  
DRIVE...INCLUDING ONE THAT WAS 100 YARDS WIDE AND 4 FEET DEEP.  
SEVERAL ROCKSLIDES WERE REPORTED IN LEFTHAND AND BOULDER  
CANYONS. AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT...1.04 INCHES OF  
RAIN WAS OBSERVED. A PEAK WIND GUST OF 46 MPH FROM THE  
SOUTHEAST WAS ALSO OBSERVED.  
IN 2012...HEAVY RAIN PRODUCED FLASH FLOODING IN BOULDER COUNTY  
NEAR JAMESTOWN. JAMES CANYON DRIVE WAS CLOSED AFTER HEAVY  
RAIN WASHED OUT A SECTION OF THE ROADWAY. HEAVY RAIN WASHED  
OUT A SECTION OF MAGNOLIA ROAD...EAST-SOUTHEAST OF NEDERLAND.  
NEARBY...A TRAINED SPOTTER 4 MILES EAST-NORTHEAST OF NEDERLAND...  
MEASURED 2.20 INCHES OF RAINFALL. FLASH FLOODING WAS ALSO  
REPORTED IN THE FOURMILE BURN AREA ALONG SUMMERVILLE ROAD.  
IN DACONO...IN SOUTHERN WELD COUNTY...THE COLORADO DEPARTMENT  
OF TRANSPORTATION USED SNOWPLOWS TO CLEAR STANDING WATER...UP  
TO 6 INCHES DEEP...FROM A SECTION OF INTERSTATE 25. THE  
INTERSTATE WAS CLOSED IN BOTH DIRECTIONS FOR NEARLY TWO HOURS.  
SOUTH OF THE DENVER...IN CENTRAL DOUGLAS COUNTY...FLASH  
FLOODING WAS REPORTED NEAR PERRY PARK...WHERE 2.5 INCHES OF  
RAIN FELL IN ONE HOUR.  
IN 2014...AN ARVADA RESIDENT WAS INJURED BY A NEARBY LIGHTNING  
STRIKE WHILE HE RECORDED A VIDEO OF A THUNDERSTORM WITH HIS  
CELL PHONE. HE WAS STANDING IN HIS GARAGE...WHEN A NEARBY  
LIGHTNING BOLT KNOCKED HIM OUT. HE SUFFERED OVERALL BODY ACHES  
AND HAD A RINGING SENSATION IN ONE OF HIS EARS. IN DENVER...  
LIGHTNING CAUSED A POWER OUTAGE THAT AFFECTED THE RTD LIGHT  
RAIL LINES FOR A SHORT TIME. IN CASTLE PINES...LIGHTNING  
SPARKED A SMALL ATTIC FIRE. SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS PRODUCED  
LARGE HAIL FROM 1 TO 1 3/4 INCHES IN DIAMETER...ALONG WITH  
DAMAGING WINDS ACROSS ARAPAHOE...BOULDER AND JEFFERSON  
COUNTIES INCLUDING: NORTHWEST ARVADA...LITTLETON AND  
LOUISVILLE. FLASH FLOODING WAS REPORTED NEAR EVERGREEN IN  
CENTRAL JEFFERSON COUNTY. HEAVY RAIN...UP TO 2 INCHES IN ONE  
HOUR...FLOODED SEVERAL RESIDENCES AND WASHED OUT SEVERAL  
BRIDGES ALONG FOREST ESTATE ROAD. HEAVY RAINFALL ALSO  
PRODUCED STREET FLOODING IN DENVER ALONG WITH SOME BASEMENT  
FLOODING. THE STRONG WINDS...ESTIMATED TO 60 MPH...DOWNED  
TREES AND POWER LINES IN SOUTHWEST LITTLETON. AT DENVER  
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT...0.15 INCHES OF RAINFALL WAS OBSERVED  
ALONG WITH A PEAK WIND GUST TO 42 MPH FROM THE SOUTHEAST.  
IN 2020...A THUNDERSTORM PRODUCED A PEAK WIND GUST TO 63 MPH  
NEAR BENNETT.  
7-25 IN 1934...A STREAK OF 15 CONSECUTIVE DAYS OF 90 DEGREES...FROM THE  
7TH TO THE 25TH...RANKED 5TH ON THE LIST OF HOT STREAKS. THE  
RECORD OF 24 CONSECUTIVE DAYS WAS ESTABLISHED IN THE SUMMER OF  
2008.  
 
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab CO Page
Main Text Page