Colorado Daily Snow

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By Joel Gratz, Founding Meteorologist Posted 2 years ago April 22, 2021

Showers through Friday night, then two more storms coming up

Summary

Thursday will bring showers to the northern and central mountains, then Thursday night will bring showers to the southern mountains. Friday's showers will flip back to favor the northern mountains. Accumulations should be just a couple of inches. Saturday, Sunday, and Monday will be dry. Then we'll see a storm on April 27-28 with more snow possible from May 1-5.

Short Term Forecast

Before getting to the forecast, let's take a quick look at our current snowpack. The statewide peak snowpack was right around April 1st, and then we saw very warm weather which quickly melted a significant chunk of the snow. But the last week of cool and snowy weather helped our average snowpack to get a bit deeper and now we stand around 75% of the statewide average.

Comparing the blue line with the red line (average), our snowpack melt out is about 2-3 weeks ahead of schedule, but storms during the upcoming two weeks could keep our snowpack relatively steady or slow its melt, so we might be able to get closer to the red line in early May.

Now to the forecast.

On Wednesday, we saw showers with a coating to a few inches of accumulation across the northern mountains.

On Thursday, we'll see more showers with similar accumulations (a few inches) over the northern mountains.

Then on Thursday night, these showers will drift to the southern mountains and a few inches could fall there.

And on Friday, the showers will move back to the northern mountains with a few inches possible especially during the afternoon into the evening.

Total accumulations from Thursday morning through Friday evening look like the map below – just a couple of inches. If we're lucky, these few inches will keep some snow surfaces soft and fun.

Extended Forecast

Saturday and Sunday and Monday should be dry and warm.

Saturday's high temperatures will be in the upper 30s to mid-40s with some clouds.

Sunday's high temperatures will be in the 40s to low-50s with fewer clouds.

Monday's high temperatures will be in the 40s with more clouds.

Looking ahead, there should be two storms in the next two weeks.

The first storm should bring snow from Tuesday, April 27 to Wednesday, April 28. There's a chance that there could be 6+ inches of powder on Wednesday.

The second storm could arrive as early as Saturday, May 1 or Sunday, May 2, and the strongest part of the storm could move through from Monday, May 3 to Tuesday, May 4, with snow even lasting through May 5.

Most of the longer-range models agree about the storm on April 27-28 and there is more uncertainty around the potential snow on May 1-5.

It looks like winter is trying to hang on, and at least a few ski areas will be open through early May to take advantage of these potential flakes (Arapahoe Basin, Breckenridge, Loveland, Mary Jane).

Thanks for reading!

JOEL GRATZ

Announcements

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Geography Key

Northern Mountains
Steamboat, Bluebird Backcountry, Granby, Beaver Creek, Vail, Ski Cooper, Copper, Breckenridge, Keystone, Loveland, Arapahoe Basin, Winter Park, Berthoud Pass, Eldora, Rocky Mountain National Park, Cameron Pass

Along the Divide
Loveland, Arapahoe Basin, Winter Park, Berthoud Pass

East of the Divide
Eldora, Echo, Rocky Mountain National Park, Cameron Pass

Central Mountains
Aspen, Sunlight, Monarch, Crested Butte, Irwin, Powderhorn

Southern Mountains
Telluride, Silverton – north side of the southern mountains | Purgatory, Wolf Creek – south side of the southern mountains

About Our Forecaster

Joel Gratz

Founding Meteorologist

Joel Gratz is the Founding Meteorologist of OpenSnow and has lived in Boulder, Colorado since 2003. Before moving to Colorado, he spent his childhood as a (not very fast) ski racer in eastern Pennsylvania.

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