This would be most likely in the Foothills of Larimer County where models are targeting most aggressively. It’s conceivable that localized areas in the orange shading could see more than 2 feet. The main change was to bump up totals in Boulder and Larimer Counties now that we have elevated confidence in 12+” totals here. The darkest hours of the storm will be from 6PM to 6AM in Boulder, and 10PM to 6AM in Denver.īased on everything we are seeing, we have amended our snowfall forecast map slightly, shown below. Heavy snow will hit sooner, harder, and longer in Boulder compared to Denver. The table below puts them all on a timeline for Boulder and Denver. We discussed the ingredients coming together to make this storm in our forecast update yesterday. Despite our discussion largely focusing on areas from Boulder northward, the entire Denver Metro area will without a doubt see impactful snow totals in the next 36 hours. (credit: CBS) The 15. Snow totals ranged from trace amounts to less than an inch in the Fort Collins, Loveland and Windsor area, according to reports from weather watchers on the C ommunity Collaborative Rain, Hail and. Many residents in Fort Collins were asked to stay home from work and school. People clear debris in the aftermath of Hurricane Ian in Fort Myers Beach. The city of Boulder has only experienced three storms in the last 130 years that put down more than 16″ of snow in November. The highway from Teds Corner to Wyoming was also closed. The 15.5 inches of snow that were recorded in Fort Collins was the second most snow on record in Fort Collins in November. Politics Tories heading for total wipeout in Scotland, exclusive poll shows. For this reason, confidence is high that this will be a historic snow storm for northern portions of the Front Range. NewsBreak provides latest and breaking Colorado State local news, weather forecast, crime and safety reports, traffic updates, event notices, sports. Seeing this strong agreement between the global, regional, and high-resolution models this morning is the final piece of a complicated jigsaw puzzle. We also see widespread moderate to heavy snow develop region-wide through the overnight hours into Tuesday morning. The result of this, localized very heavy snow (2+” per hour), is visible in the HRRR simulated radar animation below. As the winds collide, air is forced upward providing extremely concentrated lift. This jet leads to strong northerly winds clashing with easterly winds right above the Boulder/Longmont area. There is some indication that a barrier jet will form this afternoon and evening right along the base of the Foothills. A key reason for the big snow totals in and near the Foothills of Boulder and Larimer Counties is enhanced deep upslope flow and the development of a low-level convergence line.
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