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With the first sightings of the white stuff on Snowmass Mountain, itap clear: Winter is coming

Tiarn Collins of New Zealand in action during snowboard slopestyle final of Toyota U.S. Grand Prix at Aspen Snowmass on Jan. 12. (Hyoung Chang, The Denver Post)
Tiarn Collins of New Zealand in action during snowboard slopestyle final of Toyota U.S. Grand Prix at Aspen Snowmass on Jan. 12. (Hyoung Chang, The Denver Post)
DENVER, CO - AUGUST 1:  Danika Worthington - Staff portraits at the Denver Post studio.  (Photo by Eric Lutzens/The Denver Post)The Know is The Denver Post's new entertainment site.
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Enough with this warm weather, already. Itap time to move on to the cooler, snow-filled months so Coloradans can start hitting the slopes. Thankfully, the mountain gods have heard our calls.

Aspen Snowmass tweeted a photo of its mountain sprinkled with white flakes of snow Thursday morning. There’s still a long way to go for the ski area’s runs to be, well, skiable, but itap a start.

Colorado’s peaks above 11,000 feet can get snow during all four seasons, National Weather Service meteorologist Kyle Fredin said. None of the agency’s official sites recorded snowfall but Fredin said that doesn’t mean it didn’t hit some peaks.

The snow season on Colorado mountains can run from Sept. 15 until June 15, Fredin said. Meanwhile, down in Denver, the average first snow hits on Oct. 18. The earliest first snow in Denver was Sept. 3 in 1961; the latest was Nov. 21, in 1934.

Want to celebrate the new snow in style?

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