322  
NOUS45 KBOU 170859  
PNSBOU  
COZ030>051-172300-  
 
PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE DENVER/BOULDER CO  
259 AM MDT SUN MAY 17 2026  
   
..TODAY IN METRO DENVER WEATHER HISTORY
 
 
14-18 IN 1996...FROM THE 14TH TO THE 18TH...A PERIOD OF UNUSUALLY  
WARM WEATHER RESULTED IN 4 RECORD MAXIMUM TEMPERATURES IN  
5 DAYS. THE RECORD HIGH TEMPERATURES WERE 87 DEGREES ON  
THE 14TH...89 DEGREES ON THE 15TH...AND 93 DEGREES ON BOTH  
THE 16TH AND 18TH. THE TEMPERATURE CLIMBED TO ONLY 81  
DEGREES ON THE 17TH WHICH WAS NOT A RECORD.  
16-17 IN 1981...FROM THE 16TH TO THE 17TH...A HEAVY RAIN STORM DUMPED  
1 TO 2 1/2 INCHES OF RAIN ACROSS METRO DENVER. RAINFALL  
TOTALED 1.27 INCHES AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT WHERE  
NORTH WINDS GUSTED TO 38 MPH ON 17TH.  
IN 1983...FROM THE 16TH TO THE 17TH...A VERY STRONG LATE SPRING  
STORM DUMPED HEAVY SNOW OVER THE FRONT RANGE. STRONG WINDS  
WITH THE STORM PRODUCED BLIZZARD CONDITIONS AT TIMES.  
SUSTAINED WINDS WERE 20 TO 40 MPH WITH A PEAK GUST TO 55 MPH  
AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT. THE FOOTHILLS RECEIVED  
1 TO 2 FEET OF SNOW WITH 4 TO 12 INCHES ALONG THE FOOTHILLS.  
HOWLING WINDS WHIPPED THE SNOW INTO DRIFTS SEVERAL FEET  
DEEP...CLOSING SCHOOLS AND HIGHWAYS. STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL  
AIRPORT WAS FORCED TO REDUCE FLIGHT OPERATIONS...CLOSING 2 OF  
4 RUNWAYS AND STRANDING HUNDREDS OF TRAVELERS. MOST OF THE  
DAMAGE AND INCONVENIENCE CAUSED BY THE STORM WAS IN POWER  
OUTAGES...WHICH OCCURRED WHEN WIND AND HEAVY WET SNOW CAUSED  
HUNDREDS OF POWER POLES TO SNAP AND TOPPLE. ABOUT 20 SQUARE  
MILES OF DENVER WERE BLACKED OUT. PRECIPITATION FROM THE  
STORM TOTALED 1 TO 3 INCHES. AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL  
AIRPORT...SNOWFALL TOTALED 7.1 INCHES WITH A MAXIMUM SNOW  
DEPTH ON THE GROUND OF ONLY 2 INCHES DUE TO MELTING. THE  
HIGH TEMPERATURE OF 40 DEGREES ON THE 17TH WAS A RECORD LOW  
MAXIMUM FOR THE DATE. DUE TO THE HEAVY MOISTURE CONTENT  
OF THE STORM...WIDESPREAD STREET FLOODING OCCURRED ON THE  
18TH WHEN MUCH OF THE SNOW MELTED UNDER THE WARM MAY SUN  
AND TEMPERATURES CLIMBED TO A HIGH OF 57 DEGREES.  
IN 1995...FROM THE 16TH TO THE 17TH...SIGNIFICANT MOISTURE AND  
UPSLOPE FLOW CAUSED FLOODING ACROSS METRO DENVER. MODERATE  
TO HEAVY RAINS...WHICH BEGAN ON THE EVENING OF THE 16TH...  
DEVELOPED IN THE FOOTHILLS AND SPREAD EASTWARD OVER METRO  
DENVER THROUGHOUT THE NIGHT. THE HEAVY RAINS BROUGHT MANY  
CREEKS AND SMALL STREAMS TO BANKFULL OR SLIGHTLY OVER.  
LOCATIONS ALONG THE FOOTHILLS RECEIVED BETWEEN 3 AND 4  
INCHES OF RAINFALL FROM THE STORM. BOULDER RECEIVED 3.60  
INCHES OF RAINFALL FOR THE 24-HOUR PERIOD...CAUSING MINOR  
STREET FLOODING NEAR SMALL STREAMS. TO THE NORTHWEST OF  
BOULDER...A BRIDGE WHICH CROSSED FOURMILE CREEK WAS WASHED  
OUT. NUMEROUS ROCK AND MUDSLIDES OCCURRED IN FOOTHILLS  
CANYONS...CLOSING PORTIONS OF U.S. HIGHWAYS 6 AND 40 AND  
STATE HIGHWAY 119 FOR A FEW HOURS AT A TIME. ROCKS WERE  
PILED 6 FEET DEEP ON A STRETCH OF STATE HIGHWAY 119 ALONG  
WITH BOULDERS AS LARGE AS CARS ON U.S. HIGHWAY 6. A  
PARKING LOT NEAR A CREEK IN GOLDEN CAVED IN LEAVING A  
HOLE THE SIZE OF AN 18-WHEELER. RUSHING WATER WASHED OUT  
A 50-FOOT STRETCH OF A ROAD IN WESTMINSTER. RAINFALL  
TOTALED 1.75 INCHES AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT...BUT  
ONLY 1.42 INCHES AT THE SITE OF THE FORMER STAPLETON  
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
17 IN 1903...SOUTHWEST WINDS WERE SUSTAINED TO 42 MPH WITH GUSTS  
TO 45 MPH FROM AN APPARENT MICROBURST WHICH PRODUCED ONLY  
A TRACE OF RAIN.  
IN 1960...HAIL TO 3/4 INCH DIAMETER WAS MEASURED IN THORNTON.  
GOLF BALL SIZE HAIL FELL IN ARVADA.  
IN 1972...MICROBURST WINDS GUSTED TO 51 MPH AT STAPLETON  
INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT.  
IN 1975...HAIL 1/2 TO 3/4 INCH IN DIAMETER FELL OVER WESTERN  
METRO DENVER.  
IN 1978...A SMALL TORNADO TOUCHED DOWN IN SOUTH AURORA  
DAMAGING 40 HOMES...6 TO A CONSIDERABLE EXTENT. ONE GARAGE  
WAS DEMOLISHED AND BLOWN ACROSS THE STREET. PARTS OF ROOFS  
WERE COMPLETELY BLOWN AWAY. SEVERAL 2X4-INCH BOARDS WERE  
BLOWN INTO THE SIDES OF HOUSES. ANOTHER SMALL TORNADO IN  
PARKER DAMAGED TWO AIRPLANES. OTHER FUNNEL CLOUDS WERE  
SIGHTED OVER NORTHGLENN AND NEAR GOLDEN.  
IN 1985...A THUNDERSTORM PRODUCED A TOTAL OF 1.50 INCHES OF  
RAIN IN BRIGHTON WHERE 0.72 INCHES FELL IN 40 MINUTES.  
SMALL HAIL COVERED THE GROUND...AND THERE WAS SOME STREET  
AND BASEMENT FLOODING.  
IN 1987...SMALL HAIL PILED UP 4 INCHES DEEP IN SOUTHWEST  
AURORA. THERE WAS ALSO WIDESPREAD STREET FLOODING AND A  
FEW POWER OUTAGES. HAIL AS LARGE AS 3/4 INCH IN DIAMETER  
FELL AT CASTLE ROCK.  
IN 2000...HIGH WINDS OCCURRED ALONG AND EAST OF THE FRONT RANGE  
FOOTHILLS...AS A DEEP SURFACE LOW PRESSURE CENTER FORMED OVER  
THE NORTHEAST PLAINS OF COLORADO. AN AMUSEMENT PARK IN  
NORTH BOULDER RECEIVED ABOUT 25 THOUSAND DOLLARS IN PROPERTY  
DAMAGE. PEAK WIND REPORTS INCLUDED: 88 MPH AT THE NATIONAL  
WIND TECHNOLOGY CENTER...84 MPH IN BOULDER...AND 80 MPH AT THE  
NATIONAL CENTER FOR ATMOSPHERIC RESEARCH MESA LABORATORY.  
A POWDER KEG OF SEVERE WEATHER...INCLUDING TORNADOES AND  
THUNDERSTORMS PRODUCING LARGE HAIL...DAMAGING WINDS AND  
HEAVY RAIN...OCCURRED OVER THE PLAINS TO THE NORTHEAST OF  
DENVER. THE ONLY SEVERE WEATHER REPORTED ACROSS METRO  
DENVER WAS 1 INCH DIAMETER HAIL IN LITTLETON.  
17-19 IN 2017...A STRONG SPRING STORM DROPPED ACROSS THE GREAT BASIN...  
AND THEN MOVED EASTWARD ACROSS COLORADO. ISOLATED BUT STRONG  
THUNDERSTORMS PRECEDED THE SYSTEM ON THE 17TH WITH HAIL UP  
TO NICKEL SIZE NEAR BOULDER AIRPORT AND BRIGHTON. SIGNIFICANT  
SNOW FELL ACROSS THE FRONT RANGE MOUNTAINS AND FOOTHILLS OVER  
THE NEXT COUPLE OF DAYS. ALONG THE INTERSTATE 25 CORRIDOR...  
RAIN TURNED TO SNOW ON THE MORNING OF THE 18TH...HEAVIEST FROM  
AROUND BROOMFIELD NORTHWARD. THE HEAVY WET SNOW SNAPPED THE  
LIMBS OF FULLY LEAVED TREES AND CAUSED SCATTERED POWER  
OUTAGES. A BARNS COLLAPSED IN NORTHEAST LOVELAND. FIFTY-FIVE  
HEAD OF CATTLE WERE INSIDE THE COLLAPSED BARN; THREE WERE  
INJURED AND LATER EUTHANIZED. NUMEROUS BRANCHES AND TREES  
SNAPPED IN THE FOOTHILLS. ELSEWHERE...SEVERAL SCATTERED  
SMALLER POWER OUTAGES WERE REPORTED. THREE TO NEARLY FIVE  
INCHES OF LIQUID PRECIPITATION OCCURRED...AS RAIN OR A MIX OF  
RAIN AND SNOW...FELL AROUND GREELEY. STORM TOTALS IN THE FRONT  
RANGE MOUNTAINS AND FOOTHILLS INCLUDED: 42.0 INCHES NEAR  
ALLENSPARK...41.5 INCHES NEAR WARD...36 INCHES AT ESTES PARK...  
32 INCHES NEAR PINECLIFFE...30.5 INCHES NORTHWEST OF GOLDEN...  
30 INCHES NEAR NEDERLAND...26 INCHES NEAR BRECKENRIDGE...25  
INCHES NEAR ASPEN SPRINGS AND BEAR LAKE STATE PARK...14  
INCHES AT ASPEN SPRINGS...WITH 9.5 INCHES NEAR EVERGREEN.  
ON THE WEST SIDE OF THE INTERSTATE 25 CORRIDOR...STORM  
TOTALS INCLUDED: 10 INCHES NEAR SUPERIOR AND LOUISVILLE...6  
TO 8 INCHES IN AND AROUND FORT COLLINS...6 INCHES IN LAFAYETTE...  
5 INCHES IN BROOMFIELD AND LOVELAND...AND 4 INCHES NEAR NIWOT.  
 

 
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab CO Page Main Text Page