Cold start to the workweek gets even colder by midweek
Sunday, November 3, 2024
After a bit of snow this morning, temperatures are around forty degrees late this Sunday afternoon in Steamboat Springs under cloudy skies thanks to a large wintry storm system affecting the Rocky Mountains. Temperatures will only get colder through midweek with December-like temperatures advertised as a stronger storm follows the current storm, with snow tonight into Monday followed by more snow between Tuesday and Wednesday afternoons. There should be a break Thursday, though uncertainty looms large for the end of the workweek.
The weather has certainly changed quickly, with the upper-fifty-degree high temperatures yesterday representing mid-October rather than early November. And weather-whiplash is straight ahead as the high temperature on Wednesday is forecast to be only around thirty degrees, representing mid-December!
Two wintry storm systems are responsible; the first is a large and splitting trough of low pressure extending from the Yukon to Arizona and the second is a developing storm moving across the Aleutian Islands that is also forecast to split as it approaches the Rocky Mountains on Wednesday.
These splitting storms cause forecast headaches as small changes in the amount of energy proportioned between the northern and southern areas of the storm can cause large differences in the storm evolution. And if the southern portion of the storm forms an eddy cut off from the jet stream, as the current storm is doing and the next storm is forecast to do, the speed and track of the eddy are difficult to predict due to the lack of upper-level steering winds and upstream energy.
With that in mind, after the inch of snow at mid-mountain and two inches up top this morning, snows should pick up again this evening and last into Monday morning as cool air follows behind the northern part of the split storm. We could see some light winds from the east as the southern part of the storm is in the process of forming an eddy over New Mexico, but they should not be strong enough to squash precipitation, and we could see another 4-8” of snow near the top of the Steamboat Ski Resort and an inch or two in town by Monday morning. Be sure to check the latest movies of the Steamboat Powdercam and the Steamboat Mid-mountain Powdercam on the SnowAlarm home page for evidence.
Snow showers may stick around through the Monday in the favorable cool, moist and unstable northwest flow behind the storm, with high temperatures only in the upper-thirties, about ten degrees below our average of 49 F.
Earlier weather forecasts had a break on Tuesday, but that may be short-lived as the Aleutian Island storm moves quickly across the Gulf of Alaska and over Vancouver on Monday. It will mix with some arctic air from the Yukon as it moves over Idaho Monday night and northern Rockies on Tuesday. The storm will split Tuesday afternoon with the southern portion of the storm bringing a cold front through our area sometime around Tuesday evening accompanied by moderate to heavy snow showers.
Lighter snow showers should occur through the day Wednesday as the southern portion of the storm forms an eddy over the Four Corners by early Thursday. Between Tuesday and Wednesday afternoons, we could see another 5-10” of snow on the hill and 2-5” town. The cold day on Wednesday will be followed by a cold Thursday morning, with low temperatures forecast to be in the single digits, over ten degrees below our average of 19 F.
The eddy is forecast to travel eastward across the southern Colorado border on Friday before lifting to the northeast, and it is this northeastward movement that introduces forecast uncertainty for Friday and Saturday. We may see another round of likely light snows for Friday and Saturday if the storm is close enough, or cool but precipitation-free weather if it is further away.
So enjoy the wintry workweek ahead as a prelude to the opening of the Steamboat Ski Resort, which unbelievably is only three weeks away from yesterday, and I’ll have more details on the weather for next weekend in my next regularly scheduled weather narrative on Thursday afternoon.