Pleasant spring weather to be interrupted by cool front Wednesday
Sunday, April 6, 2025
Temperatures are in the low thirties in Steamboat Springs and upper teens at the top of the Steamboat Ski Resort under sunny skies late this Sunday morning. Warming temperatures this week will be briefly interrupted by a grazing cool front on Wednesday that will bring some clouds starting Tuesday. The warmup resumes on Thursday with mostly sunny skies and temperatures approaching seventy degrees on Friday.
While what is left of last week’s storm moves well to our south and east, a ridge of high pressure ahead of a Gulf of Alaska storm moves over the Rocky Mountains today and Monday. Expect mostly sunny skies and temperatures warming from the upper forties today into the mid-fifties on Monday, just above our average of 52 F.
The Gulf of Alaska storm, currently bringing precipitation to the Pacific Northwest, is forecast to weaken as it rotates across the northern Rockies on Tuesday and Wednesday. Ahead of a grazing cool front on Wednesday, expect increasing clouds and westerly breezes on Tuesday, with high temperatures a degree or two warmer than Monday.
High temperatures on Wednesday will fall toward average along with a possible high-elevation flurry before rebounding toward sixty degrees on Thursday under mostly sunny skies. Even warmer temperatures approaching seventy degrees on Friday and heading into next weekend are possible.
So enjoy the very pleasant spring workweek ahead, and check back to my next regularly scheduled weather narrative on Thursday afternoon for a look at the weather during next weekend’s 43rd Annual Cardboard Classic and Splashdown Pond Skim.
Wintry weather to end this weekend
Thursday, April 3, 2025
Temperatures are approaching forty degrees in Steamboat Springs late this Thursday morning and twenty degrees at the top of the Steamboat Ski Resort as clouds form ahead of more snow starting this afternoon. The wintry storm that brought significant snowfall to our area starting last Tuesday is not done with us yet, bringing snow later today and again later Friday as cool temperatures persist into Saturday. A warming trend then begins on Sunday.
Snowfall started last Tuesday morning around ski report time, delaying the start of the storm by about six hours so that six inches of snow was recorded at the mid-mountain snow stake during the day and another six inches overnight. The upper-mountain cam showed eleven inches falling during the day, but wind made an observation impossible overnight. However, despite the Steamboat Ski Resort claiming only two inches overnight, the cleared cam at 9:30 am showed an additional nine inches overnight, which was supported by my ground measurements Wednesday morning. That’s a storm total of a foot at mid-mountain and twenty inches up top, highlighted by morning temperatures of seven degrees creating light and dry mid-winter powder, no fooling!
The storm is not finished with us yet as an expansive split trough of low pressure still extends over the West from Alberta southwards to Baja. Energy ejecting out of the center of the trough will move over our area this afternoon and evening, even as additional cold air elongates the trough further southward. Snow showers, sometimes moderate to even heavy, should leave 2-5” of new snow from this afternoon through this evening.
The northern part of the split is forecast to drag a cold front through our area Friday afternoon as the center of the southern part of the trough begins to move through Arizona. Another 1-4” of snow in the afternoon and evening could fall in the final phase of the storm before we see dry weather on a cool Saturday, with high temperatures in town only reaching around forty degrees despite the mostly sunny skies, over ten degrees below our average of 52 F.
The sun should stick around on Sunday as a ridge of high pressure briefly moves over the West ahead of a storm forming in the Gulf of Alaska. High temperatures should warm into the mid-forties under mostly sunny skies, with mid-fifties forecast on Monday.
There may be some energy and moisture from the Gulf of Alaska storm denting the ridge of high pressure on Tuesday as it moves inland, though the ridge of high pressure is forecast to rebuild over the West, bringing warming temperatures for the rest of the work week, perhaps approaching the vaunted seventy-degree mark by next Friday. So enjoy the continuation of the wintry weather heading into the weekend, and I’ll be back with my next regularly scheduled weather narrative on Sunday afternoon.
Strong wintry storm to start Monday night
Sunday, March 30, 2025
Temperatures are around forty degrees under cloudy skies this Sunday mid-afternoon in Steamboat Springs and twenty-five degrees at the top of the Steamboat Ski Resort. A final wave in this series that started Friday night will pass overhead tonight before a break on Monday. A much colder winter-like storm crossing the West Coast will bring a strong cold front through our area Monday night, accompanied by moderate to heavy snow showers expected to last through Tuesday. Lighter snow showers and cold temperatures look to stick around into next weekend.
The two waves on Friday and Saturday nights left six inches of snow at mid-mountain and ten inches up top by the Sunday morning report, with another inch at mid-mountain and two inches falling up top this morning.
A final wave in this series will pass through Colorado tonight, possibly leaving as much as an inch or two at mid-mountain, before a break on Monday. But as discussed in last Thursday’s weather narrative, a replacement storm is now affecting the West Coast, and after ingesting some cold western Canadian air, will intensify as it moves through the Great Basin starting Monday night. While the storm will split by Tuesday, with the eastern part traveling over Colorado and the western part diving south toward Baja, there is enough cold air and forcing to bring significant wintry weather to the West.
Our area can expect a strong cold front Monday night, with moderate to heavy snow showers along and behind the front continuing through Tuesday, accompanied by gusty westerly winds as high as 50 mph at pass level , making travel difficult. We could see 4-8” by the Tuesday morning mid-mountain report, with that again during the day, along with much colder temperatures. While mountain-top temperatures will start the day in the low-teens, high temperatures in town will be mired in the thirties, over fifteen degrees below our average of fifty, which will be a shock after the recent warm spring weather, especially since it will be accompanied by several inches of snow.
While the leading storm will be east of our area by Wednesday, the storm moving toward Baja will be reinforced by more western Canadian cold air so that the entire West remains in a cold and unsettled weather pattern. Intermittent snow showers will continue Tuesday night into Wednesday morning at all elevations, with temperatures similar to Tuesday. While the bulk of the snowfall will be over by Tuesday afternoon, some continued accumulations in town and 1-4” on the hill are possible for the Wednesday morning report.
More energy dropping into the backside of the Baja storm keeps unsettled but slightly warmer weather around on Thursday before the storm eventually forms an eddy on Friday, which may or may not affect our area heading into next weekend. So enjoy another blast of wintry weather, and check back for details on next weekend’s weather in my next regularly scheduled weather narrative on Thursday afternoon.
Precipitation and cooler temperatures to return this weekend
Thursday, March 27, 2025
After a sunny morning, skies have clouded over this Thursday mid-afternoon in Steamboat Springs with temperatures in the upper-fifties in town and mid-forties at the top of the Steamboat Ski Resort. Today will be the warmest day of the upcoming week as a series of Pacific disturbances bring cooler temperatures and precipitation back to our area starting Friday night.
An impressive storm off the Pacific Northwest coast will chaotically eject several waves of energy and moisture through the weekend. Initially, energy will be shunted to our north early on Friday as it encounters the ridge of high pressure over the West, which was responsible for our gorgeous spring weather this past week.
Two additional waves of ejecting energy will eventually break down the ridge, with the first cooling temperatures and starting precipitation around Friday night. While temperatures cool, they will still be warm, with mountain-top temperatures on Saturday reaching above freezing and high temperatures in town in the forties, below our average of fifty degrees. I would expect 1-4” at mid-mountain by the Saturday morning report.
The second wave moves across our area Saturday night, bringing another round of snow in cooler, but certainly not cold, temperatures. It may, however, be cold enough to freeze the upper-mountain snow surface, with another 1-4” possible at mid-mountain.
Meanwhile, as the Pacific Northwest storm disintegrates by the end of the weekend, cold air moving south from Alaska creates a replacement storm by Friday that will similarly approach the Pacific Northwest coast by Monday. Right now, a colder and possibly wetter storm is forecast for Tuesday.
Enjoy the changeable spring weather of the Rockies, and check back for more details on the possible Tuesday storm in my next regularly scheduled weather narrative on Sunday afternoon.
Some clouds Monday to be followed by warm and dry weather for most of the workweek
Sunday, March 23, 2025
Temperatures are in the upper thirties in Steamboat Springs and upper teens at the top of the Steamboat Ski Resort under some passing clouds at noon on this Sunday. After the chance of light high-elevation snow showers early Monday, passing clouds and temperatures in the fifties will yield to mostly sunny skies and mid-fifty-degree temperatures on Tuesday before sixties are forecast for Wednesday and Thursday. Unsettled weather then returns as soon as Friday and persists through the weekend.
After the disappointing weekend storm that severely underperformed relative to the model forecasts, a ridge of high pressure is building over the West ahead of a strong storm forecast to develop in the eastern Pacific. While the shorter-range models correctly forecast the storm last Tuesday and Wednesday, they regressed for this past weekend. One model blend I look at is run four times a day, and snowfall amounts from the Saturday forecasts for Sunday morning decreased from 10”, to 4.7”, to 2.5”, to 0.7 inches. Our storms often underperform in the presence of warming temperatures, and perhaps this is the culprit, though the lack of consistency makes the job for this forecaster difficult.
Though temperatures are warming, some light high-elevation snow showers are possible through early Monday as Pacific moisture rounds the top of the ridge in our favorable northwest flow. Winds will be breezy, especially at the higher elevations today and Monday thanks to the proximity of the jet stream, with gusts as high as 50 mph possible under mostly cloudy skies.
The ridge of high pressure is forecast to move east through the workweek, with temperatures in town warming from near fifty degrees on Monday despite the clouds, just above our average of 48 F, to the mid-fifties on Tuesday and mid-sixties on Wednesday under mostly sunny skies.
Some high-level moisture slingshot around the eastern Pacific storm will increase clouds on Thursday, but will not dent our mid-sixty-degree high temperatures in town. As the storm moves toward the West Coast, we may see some light showers on Friday with more energy and moisture ejecting from storm bringing good snow chances back to our area for the weekend.
So relish the warm spring midweek weather, and be sure to check back for more details about the possible weekend snow in my next regularly scheduled weather narrative on Thursday afternoon.