Colorado Daily Snow

Heads up, there may be fresher snow! Read the latest Colorado Daily Snow

By Sam Collentine, Meteorologist Posted 5 years ago November 20, 2018

Two storms over Thanksgiving weekend

Summary

Dry and mild conditions continue through Wednesday. Two storms target Colorado through Thanksgiving weekend. Storm #1 Thursday night and storm #2 on Saturday. Friday morning and especially Saturday afternoon and/or Sunday morning should be great times to catch fresh turns. Watching the final days of November and into early December for more action.

Short Term Forecast

Monday was another gorgeous day and we have two more on deck for Tuesday and Wednesday. Daytime highs will rise into mid-to-upper 30s on Tuesday and it will be even warmer on Wednesday. 

The real fun will begin on Thanksgiving day as the first of two storms moves into Colorado. Clouds will begin to increase through Thursday morning, ahead of increasing chances for snow showers into Thursday afternoon. 

I'll then be watching Thursday evening and into Thursday night for the best chance at accumulating snowfall across the Colorado high country from storm #1. This storm will lack the strength of storm #2 and it will be moving very fast so our time is limited. The southern mountains will likely be favored for the best accumulations thanks to mild, southwesterly flow ahead of cooler air and a wind from the west-northwest on Thursday night. 

Overall, look for 3-6 inches in the southern mountains (Telluride, Silverton, Purgatory, Wolf Creek) and 2-4 inches throughout the remaining central and northern mountains by Friday morning. 

We'll then catch a break through most of Friday as we await the arrival of storm #2 on Saturday night. My confidence and excitement continue to grow with this second system as it has all the right ingredients to deliver healthy accumulations beginning on Saturday and continuing into Saturday night. 

Below is a look at the latest ensemble snow forecast for McClure Pass, which is located west of Aspen and northwest of Crested Butte. Time goes from left to right on the bottom, with the two arrows on the right pointing to storm #1 and #2. 

If everything continues on its current course, we'll be looking at 6-12 inches throughout the central and northern mountains and 4-8 inches in the southern mountains from Saturday morning through Saturday night. 

Start planning for Saturday afternoon (if you enjoy storm skiing) and/or Sunday morning for a great time to work off the Thanksgiving feast with powder turns at your resort of choice.

Sunday will also likely be much chillier compared to the previous days, with highs in teens and overnight lows in the single-digits on Sunday night. 

Extended Forecast

Looking further ahead, it looks like we'll quiet down through the middle of next week but temperatures should remain on the cooler side. 

We'll then turn to the final days of November and into early December as there are signs for an active jet stream for the Western US. This would likely lead to "something" for Colorado but as always, stay tuned and we'll keep you up-to-date on the latest.

Thanks for reading and look for my next update on Wednesday, November 21st!

SAM COLLENTINE

Announcements

New Website

We've been working on a new website. Switch to the new version (you can switch back anytime) and let us know what you think by sending an email to [email protected]

Snow Tires

Please make sure your vehicle is prepared for winter driving conditions, specifically snow tires. This is not only for your own safety and peace of mind but for the safety of others. Visit CDOT to find all Passenger Vehicle Traction and Chain Law information.

Joel's Upcoming Presentations

November 28 in Vail at Walking Mountains Science Center. Free to attend. The talk starts at 630pm. Please RSVP here.

December 5 in Denver at the Denver Athletic Club. More details soon.

OpenSummit

We have an iPhone app that provides detailed weather forecasts for your hiking, biking, and climbing adventures. OpenSummit includes forecasts for 1,000 of the highest and/or notable summits and hiking areas across the United States.

Download OpenSummit (iPhone only)

About Our Forecaster

Sam Collentine

Meteorologist

Sam Collentine is the Chief Operating Officer of OpenSnow and lives in Basalt, Colorado. Before joining OpenSnow, he studied Atmospheric Science at the University of Colorado, spent time at Channel 7 News in Denver, and at the National Weather Service in Boulder.

Free OpenSnow App