Log In


Reset Password
News Education Local News Nation & World New Mexico

Light snow expected late Sunday, early Monday

Bigger system could come Thursday
Durango could see up to an inch of new snow from a snowstorm expected to move through Southwest Colorado late Sunday and early Monday. The San Juan Mountains are expected to receive 3 to 6 inches, with favored peaks seeing as much as 1 foot.

A small snow-producing system is expected to move through Southwest Colorado Sunday night and Monday morning with a stronger system likely to come through Thursday and lingering into Friday.

“We have a weak upper-level disturbance moving through tonight. It will be out of here by midday Monday. It will increase the chance of snow certainly over the mountains, and Durango has a chance to see a dusting,” said Ben Moyer, meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Grand Junction.

Durango could see up to an inch from the system by Monday morning, but Cortez is likely to see no snow or only a dusting, Moyer said. Pagosa Springs could see as much as 2 inches.

In the San Juan Mountains, Moyer expects between 3 and 6 inches of snow accumulation, with favored peaks seeing up to 1 foot.

In Silverton, the weather service’s five-day forecast calls for 2 inches Sunday night and another 3 inches Monday. In Telluride, the forecast calls for 1 inch Sunday night and up to 3 inches Monday. On Wolf Creek Pass, the forecast estimates 4 inches Sunday night and between 3 and 7 inches by Monday.

Lows on Monday night are expected to drop to the single digits in the mountain towns and in Durango and Cortez the low is expected to drop to 13. Monday night’s low in Pagosa Springs is expected to drop to 8 degrees.

According to a NWS hazardous weather outlook, travel conditions are likely to be compromised Sunday night and Monday morning.

The storm is coming from the Pacific Northwest, and the same pattern is expected to repeat itself on Thursday, when Moyer said the region will next see a chance of snow.

The system on Thursday is expected to be stronger than the system coming in Sunday night, and could liner into Friday, Moyer said.

On Jan. 12, according to the Natural Resources Conservation Service’s SNOTEL map for Colorado, the Animas, Dolores, San Juan and San Miguel river basins have 116% of the 30-year average snowpack.

parmijo@durangoherald.com

Travel information

The Colorado Department of Transportation reminds motorists to check for updated weather information:

Visit

www.cotrip.org

for real-time road conditions, highway closures, average speeds, photos, live cameras streaming traffic, trucking information and more.

Call 511 to listen to recorded information about road conditions, projected trip travel times and trucker information.

Receive free email/text alerts at

www.codot.gov/travel

; choose from a list of subscription options at the “get connected” tab.

Follow @coloradodot on Twitter for traveler information and other news.

Like CDOT at

www.facebook.com/coloradodot

to receive news and traveler information.

Visit

www.codot.gov/travel/winter-driving

to get information about road conditions, what to keep in a vehicle during the winter, how to safely pass a snowplow, commercial-vehicle requirements, seasonal closures, snow removal and avalanche control.

Herald Staff



Reader Comments