Contact Us

Use the form on the right to contact us.

You can edit the text in this area, and change where the contact form on the right submits to, by entering edit mode using the modes on the bottom right. 

         

123 Street Avenue, City Town, 99999

(123) 555-6789

email@address.com

 

You can set your address, phone number, email and site description in the settings tab.
Link to read me page with more information.

backlit-stratus-clouds-2013-04-05.jpg

Blog

Weather forecasting and analysis, space and historic events, climate information

Filtering by Category: DEN

7:00 AM | *A relatively quiet next few days across the Rocky Mountain States*

Paul Dorian

A relatively quiet pattern across the Rocky Mountain States for the next few days with generally above-normal temperatures after today. Temperatures this afternoon should peak in the upper 40’s and then climb to the upper 50’s later tomorrow. After a bit of a pull back on Wednesday, temperatures should reach the 50’s again on Thursday and Friday with partial sun likely on all days this week.

Read More

7:00 AM | ***Significant snow continues today across the higher elevations to our west...even some accumulating snow today in the Denver metro region***

Paul Dorian

Significant snow is likely to continue today in the mountains to the west of here and as much as 1-3 inches can fall in the Denver metro region. It looks quite chilly on Thursday, Thanksgiving Day, but dry with some sunshine in the area. Chilly and mainly dry to follow for Friday, Saturday, and Sunday and the overnights will be quite cold.

Read More

***One of the coldest starts to December in many years with a “Siberian” connection…western US snows…interior Northeast snows…Great Lakes snow machine turns on full throttle***

Paul Dorian

One of the biggest weather stories going forward is the cold wave that is coming to much of the nation beginning late this week and likely continuing for much of the first couple weeks of December. In fact, this will likely be one of the coldest starts to the month of December in many years and it will have a “Siberian” connection.

Before we get to the cold wave, there will be a lot of weather to go through across much of the nation with significant snowfall in some areas. Low pressure is currently pushing eastward across the higher elevations of the western US resulting in substantial snow accumulations from the Sierra Nevada Mountains of eastern California to the Colorado Rockies. Some of these locations will end up with snow totals on the order of 1-2 feet before this low spills out into the middle of the nation at mid-week.

From there, this low pressure system will move rather quickly across the Tennessee Valley on Wednesday night and to the southern New England coastline by mid-day Thursday. As a result, rain is likely to reach the DC-to-Philly-to-NYC corridor by late Wednesday night and continue into Thursday (Thanksgiving Day). Farther to the north, accumulating snow is likely to fall from early Thursday into early Friday across interior, higher elevation locations of northern PA, upstate NY and interior New England with several inches on the table.

Following the departure of the low pressure system to the western Atlantic, a northwesterly flow of air will develop across the northeastern quadrant of the nation bringing much colder-than-normal air from Canada into the Great Lakes, Mid-Atlantic, and Northeast US. The “Great Lakes snow machine” will get turned on with the much colder-than-normal air flowing over the still relatively warm waters of the Great Lakes from later Friday into Saturday and there is likely to be much more in the way of “lake-effect” snow activity during this upcoming cold wave.

Read More

7:00 AM | **Significant mountain snows on tap during the next couple of days...dry, cold on Turkey Day**

Paul Dorian

An unsettled and chilly weather pattern here this week with the chance of snow around here from later today into Wednesday. Significant snow accumulations are likely in the mountains to the west from today into later Wednesday with as much as 1-2 feet in many spots. It looks chilly and dry for Thanksgiving Day in the Denver metro and stays chill to follow into the upcoming weekend.

Read More