Denver: A cold front moved into Colorado and adjacent Wyoming this week, bringing cooler air, gusty north–northwest winds and precipitation from Tuesday into Friday. National Weather Service offices issued winter-weather advisories for high country starting Tuesday evening and reported gusts potentially reaching about 45–50 mph with mountain snow developing Tuesday night. The systems produced valley rain and mountain snow with advisories in effect above 9,000–10,000 feet and forecasts of 6–12 inches in parts of western Colorado and several inches to over a foot in higher ranges later this week; agencies warned of hazardous travel Wednesday and a stronger storm Thursday into Friday.
Prepared by Olivia Bennett and reviewed by editorial team.
This cold front affects your safety and time. Expect hazardous travel conditions, especially during morning and evening commutes. Check your local weather forecast before heading out. Prepare for potential power outages due to gusty winds.
This week's weather is a mix of rain, snow, and strong winds. It's a good reminder to always be prepared for sudden weather changes. Worth forwarding if you know someone traveling in Colorado or Wyoming this week.
Local emergency services, road maintenance crews and meteorologists benefited from advance warnings, enabling preparations, pre-treatment of roads, and targeted public advisories to reduce travel risk.
Travelers, outdoor workers and rural residents faced disrupted commutes, hazardous road conditions and localized infrastructure strain from gusty winds and heavy mountain snow.
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Cold front brings mountain snow, rain to plains this week
County 17 https://www.kkco11news.com Denver 7 Colorado News (KMGH) KTVQ Oil City NewsNo right-leaning sources found for this story.
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