Boulder should see highs in the 50s today with cloudy skies, according to the National Weather Service. Today’s forecast calls for cloudy skies with a high of 58 and an overnight low of 34. Saturday’s forecast calls for partly sunny skies with a high of 56 and an overnight low of 36.
Boulder should see highs in the 40s today with mostly cloudy skies, according to the National Weather Service.
Here are the lowest temperatures across Colorado on Tuesday morning, according to the National Weather Service.
Traffic cameras showed blowing snow covering stretches of Colorado 93 between Golden and Boulder, and there are wind gusts up to 75 mph, state officials said.
An incoming snowstorm could make for a difficult Thursday morning commute across metro Denver, according to the National Weather Service. Updated forecasts show up to 1 inch of snow per hour falling along the Palmer Divide,
People in parts of the Denver metro should plan on slippery road conditions for the Thursday morning commute, despite uncertainty about where our next storm will hit hardest.
Portions of southwestern Colorado will see nearly a foot of snow this week with some potential for snow south and east of Denver by Wednesday night into Thursday, according to NWS forecasters.
Another weekend, another storm with this latest one zeroing in on the northern I-25 corridor, foothills and mountains, which could see a foot of snow.
DENVER (KDVR) — More cold temperatures are in Denver’s weather forecast ahead of the chance for weekend snow. Tuesday night will stay breezy with wind gusts reaching 20-30 mph in the metro, and over 50 mph at times in the foothills. Temperatures will be cold as clouds continue to clear, dropping to the teens.
A winter storm expected to hit southern Colorado on Wednesday could drop more than a foot of snow in the mountains and up to six inches in the southern metro area.
A decade ago, startups raising money to launch commercial weather satellites were convinced they had a goldmine on their hands because they could improve forecasting models. The problem? NOAA