News

While most in the U.S. are enjoying spring warmth, heavy, wet snow has blanketed the high country of several western states. Here's why that's not as weird as it sounds by May standards.
This past weekend's storm system gave us some pretty high snow totals across Southern Colorado. Closer to the northwest part of Colorado Springs, we saw 5.8 inches. The airport didn't see as much ...
Colorado's statewide snowpack on Wednesday, May 14 was at 44% of median average for the date and at 4.1 inches of snow water equivalent, which is 5.2 inches below the median average. The current ...
Colorado's ski areas ... the state's snowpack was at 82% of median average. That number jumped 11 percentage points in four days to 93% of median average. The snow water equivalent is at 10.5 ...
"The Old Farmer's Almanac" released its official 2024-2025 winter weather map and forecast ... predicts that while Colorado will see average or above-average snow, temperatures won't be especially ...
The La Niña winter we've experienced in the winter season has led to below-average snowpack ... without enough snow. Finally, it increases strain on our water resources. Colorado Springs ...
April is the second snowiest month on average, so there is still hope for the snowpack to recover across Colorado. Several storms are expected this week, with multiple rounds of accumulating snow ...
Warmer-than-average weather across Colorado has delayed annual snowfalls and the Denver area might not see its first snow until mid-November, nearly a month later than normal, according to NWS ...
Snowpack woes continue across Colorado. Even with parts of the high country receiving over a foot of snow last weekend, we are still lagging significantly behind. The statewide average sits at 71%.