Contact Us

Use the form on the right to contact us.

You can edit the text in this area, and change where the contact form on the right submits to, by entering edit mode using the modes on the bottom right. 

         

123 Street Avenue, City Town, 99999

(123) 555-6789

email@address.com

 

You can set your address, phone number, email and site description in the settings tab.
Link to read me page with more information.

backlit-stratus-clouds-2013-04-05.jpg

Blog

Weather forecasting and analysis, space and historic events, climate information

Filtering by Category: DEN

7:00 AM | **Significant accumulating snow this weekend in nearby higher elevation locations...a battle between rain and snow in and around the immediate Denver metro region**

Paul Dorian

Significant snow accumulations are on the way for the higher elevation locations and foothills from late Friday into Sunday and this will be a heavy, wet snow. Mainly rain is expected in and around the Denver region through the first part of this upcoming storm systems, but accumulating snow is on the table from later Saturday night into Sunday.  It dries out and turns milder during the first half of next week.

Read More

7:00 AM | **Unseasonably mild next couple of days...snow higher elevations this weekend...a mix of rain and snow lower elevations**

Paul Dorian

There is the chance for a high impact type of storm by the weekend in Colorado with significant snow on the table for the higher elevations and a mix of rain and snow in the lower elevations. It’ll remain unseasonably mild through tomorrow – before the high impacting storm arrives – with high temperatures in the 60’s both Wednesday and Thursday.

Read More

7:00 AM | ***There is potential for a high impact storm system this weekend***

Paul Dorian

There is the chance for a high impact type of storm this weekend in Colorado with accumulating snow on the table, but it’ll remains unseasonably mild until mid-week. Temperatures could peak around 65 degrees both today and tomorrow and then will begin a downward trend late in the week. An El Nino enhanced southern branch of the jet stream will bring a powerful Pacific Ocean storm to California later in the week and this system will slide to the Rocky Mountain States by the upcoming weekend with a potential big impact in terms of accumulating snow in the higher elevations.

Read More

7:00 AM | *A mild next few days with daily highs near 60*

Paul Dorian

Much of this week will be quite mild across the region with daily highs near 60 degrees and little in the way of precipitation threats. The overall pattern is likely to change to much colder this weekend and there can be a high impact type of storm to deal with across the Rocky Mountain States.

Read More

7:00 AM | *A relatively quick cold shot arrives in the overnight hours and chills us down for the end of the work week...milder trend returns this weekend*

Paul Dorian

We’ll enjoy another relatively mild day in the region as temperatures again climb into the 50’s, but a cold shot arrives in the overnight hours with the possibility of some rain and/or snow shower activity. It stays quite chilly on Friday, but a milder trend begins on Saturday and the early art of next week look quite mild.

Read More

11:15 AM | **Milder pattern sets up across the Mid-Atlantic/NE US, but it doesn’t come without wintry threats…a very wet stretch in the Miss. Valley...a stormy couple of weeks for the west coast**

Paul Dorian

The 7-day period from 14 January to 20 January was very cold across most of the nation with the mean temperature anomaly of -11°F in the Lower 48. The next 7-days will be quite a different story as a milder weather pattern develops for much of the country. This warm-up, however, will not come without wintry threats in the Mid-Atlantic region and Northeast US. The change in the overall pattern will bring copious amounts of rainfall for the Lower Mississippi Valley region in the near-term and plenty of moisture-filled storm systems for the US west coast during the next couple of weeks.

In the near term, there is likely to be some freezing rain from later Tuesday night into early Wednesday across much of Pennsylvania and northern New Jersey and maybe all the way into the nearby N/W suburbs of Philly and NYC and the far N/W suburbs of DC. It does turn wet and milder in the Mid-Atlantic region during the second half of the week with the warmest day likely to be on Friday when temperatures will surge. Another storm system is then likely to impact the Mid-Atlantic/Northeast US late in the upcoming weekend with one surface low pressure system (primary) heading into the Ohio Valley and a secondary likely to form near the Mid-Atlantic coastline. While there will be little cold air around initially, strong high pressure will build into southeastern Canada and act as a cold air source…possibly resulting in a changeover from rain-to-snow across interior sections of the Mid-Atlantic/Northeast US. Looking ahead, there are signs that an overall colder weather pattern may re-develop in the central and eastern states as we progress through the early part of February and towards the middle of next month.

Read More