
"Confidence is strongest from early Monday, May 4, through Wednesday night, May 6, when mountain snowfall should build from scattered showers into a colder, more organized event."
"Snow levels fall from roughly 9,000-10,500 feet early in the storm to around 6,000-7,000 feet by Tuesday night and Wednesday, so snow quality should improve after a denser start."
"By Thursday and Friday, the pattern turns warmer and mostly dry, with only isolated high-terrain flurries possible around the northern Continental Divide."
A midweek storm is expected to impact Colorado's ski weather, particularly favoring the northern Front Range and Winter Park. From May 4 to May 6, snowfall will transition from scattered showers to a more organized event. Most ski areas are closed, but Arapahoe Basin and Copper Mountain remain open. The storm will bring colder temperatures and a broader precipitation shield, with snow levels dropping significantly. By Thursday and Friday, conditions will become warmer and drier, with only isolated flurries possible in high terrain areas.
Read at SnowBrains
Unable to calculate read time
Collection
[
|
...
]