After heavy overnight snow in Colorado’s mountains, the bulk of the storm is moving into the Denver area Wednesday morning, according to the National Weather Service.
NWS meteorologists said 1 1/2 to 2 feet of snow fell in Colorado’s mountains above 10,000 feet overnight, shutting down roads and creating hazardous travel conditions.
Heavy mountain snow will decrease around noon Wednesday and end in the evening, but not before another two to six inches of snow stacks up, .
“A period of snow is expected during the morning rush hour for the Denver metro and urban corridor, leading to slick roads,” NWS forecasters said in a . “Accumulations will mostly be minor outside of the Palmer Divide.”
Like the mountains, metro snow showers will lighten throughout the day and end in the afternoon or early evening, according to forecasters.
According to Wednesday morning forecasts, expected snowfall totals between Wednesday and Thanksgiving morning across the Front Range include:
- Up to 3 inches in Denver, Aurora, Broomfield, Centennial, Colorado Springs, Northglenn and at Denver International Airport;
- Up to 4 inches in Arvada, Boulder, Highlands Ranch, Lakewood, Littleton and Parker;
- Up to 5 inches in Castle Rock and Golden;
In the mountains, include up to:
- 8 inches on Monarch Pass in Colorado’s Rocky Mountains, which already since the storm started Monday;
- 4 inches on Copper Mountain and its ski area, which has already seen 20 inches of fresh snow accumulate;
- 5 inches of snow on Breckenridge peaks, which already received 18 inches;
- 4 inches on Vail Pass, where two feet of snow already fell and shut down the road.
- 6 inches in Winter Park, Eldora and Keystone, which have each already seen between 14 and 17 inches of snow;
- 10 inches in Colorado’s Sangre de Cristo Mountains, including Cucharas Pass and La Veta Pass;
- 12 inches along Cordova Pass in the San Isabel National Forest.
Most mountain roads will be accessible and better for travel by this evening, . Highways leaving Denver, including Interstate 70 and U.S. 285, will improve through the morning and be “much better by later afternoon.”
A remains in effect for mountains above 9,000 feet until 5 p.m. Wednesday and multiple will expire in the Foothills and metro area around 2 p.m.
Thanksgiving will be cold but dry in the Denver area, . Denver can expect temperature highs near 37 degrees and before overnight temperatures drop to 17 degrees.
In the mountains, wind chill will make it feel like -13 degrees in some areas though real temperatures will hover in the mid-20s, forecasters said.



