A winter storm blew into Colorado this weekend, dropping temps and blanketing the state with several inches of snow by Saturday morning. More snow is possible Sunday.
A polar vortex will plunge Colorado into bitter, sub-zero cold this weekend and could bring up to 10 inches of snow in some parts of the Denver metro, National Weather Service meteorologists say. We’ve rounded up all of our arctic cold coverage below,
The next winter storm will move into Colorado on Friday and bring snow back to the Denver area, according to NWS forecasters.
An early season forecast indicates Lake Powell will get only about 81% of its normal water flow because of dry conditions around much of the Upper Colorado River Basin.
Colorado started Wednesday very chilly, including a reading of -15 degrees in Greeley. Snow returns Thursday morning to the Front Range.
Colorado has sent nine “strike teams” made up of local firefighters to aid in fighting the fires in Southern California.
A arctic blast is sweeping through much of the U.S. and the Pikes Peak region this weekend, bringing snow, slick roads and bitterly cold temps that will linger through the
The following Colorado snow totals have been reported by the National Weather Service for Jan. 18, 2025 as of 7 a.m. Saturday: RELATED: Everything you need to know about the polar vortex bringing extreme cold to Colorado Black Forest,
Here is what is and isn't a polar vortex when Colorado receives cold like what is forecast for the holiday weekend.
High temperatures will be below 20 degrees in Colorado for several days. Wind chills could dip into the negatives for most of the Denver area.
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.