Here are the lowest temperatures across Colorado on Tuesday morning, according to the National Weather Service.
Today’s forecast calls for cloudy skies with a high of 50 and an overnight low of 9, with a 40% chance of snow after 4 p.m. New snow accumulation of less than an inch is possible during the day. Between 4 and 8 inches of new snow accumulation is possible overnight. Snow may be heavy at times.
Ice and snow could impact Colorado Highway 14 west of Fort Collins and U.S. Highway 40 travel Friday night.Saturday: The morning is when the peak of the storm is expected, with moderate to heavy snow in some areas at times,
Boulder should see highs in the 30s today with cloudy skies, according to the National Weather Service. Today’s forecast calls for cloudy skies with a high of 39 and an overnight low of 19. Wednesday’s forecast calls for sunny skies with a high of 46 and an overnight low of 27.
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.
The following Colorado snow totals have been reported by the National Weather Service for Jan. 20, 2025 as of 2:45 p.m. Monday: Arvada, CO — 1.5 inches at 8:58 a.m. Aurora, CO — 1.5 inches at 7 a.m.
Highs will reach the upper 40s in Denver Friday before temperatures plunge back into the 20s as another round of snow arrives to the area and stays with us for much of the weekend.
With inches of snow on the ground across the state, more is expected to pile up this weekend with a Pinpoint Weather Alert Day on Saturday.
The City of Boulder, along with Boulder County and the Boulder Office of Disaster Management, will open a temporary 24-hour Extreme Weather Shelter on Saturday.
Highway 93 is closed in both directions between Golden and south of Boulder due to blowing snow that resulted in whiteout conditions.
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.
High winds are typically associated with winter storms, hurricanes or severe thunderstorms. But on the morning of Jan. 17, 1982, 43 years ago, a fierce windstorm hammered the Front Range of Colorado with gusts you might associate with a mountain top or within the eyewall of a hurricane.