1/25/26 Sunday 3:30 am
I am going to call this a win for the lower elevations. If you received 4 to 6 inches of snow in the lower and mid-elevation areas, you are in the majority.
I have not received the top-secret report from the passes, but we already have a pretty good idea that 8 to 11 inches fell.
The biggest “disappointment” by far was Wolf Creek. I have been doing this for a while, and I can only remember saying that a couple of times when recapping a winter storm.
Wow, the ” ‘Unofficial’ Purgatory Snow Stake Conspiracy Theorists” were all emailing me about Purgatory’s 12-inch report. Remember, they say they don’t use the snow stake for measurement. My favorite was the people claiming the snowstake is AI-generated.
I am staying out of it. Although I was streaming their snow stake (as well as the others) most of the day on Friday, it appeared the snow was falling harder there than in the other areas I was monitoring. That being said, it was an anomaly; regardless, this “controversy” has been going on for years, and I don’t want to be in the middle of it.
So now what? The colder air filters in, perhaps a few flurries across the higher elevations later today and tonight. By mid-to-late week, the ridge pops back up over the west and the warmer air returns.
The near-record cold stays in the east for 7 to 10 days, maybe longer. Then we go back to the pattern in which storm tracks ride the ridge and direct the clipper systems into the Midwest, Great Lakes, and Northeast.
The eastern two-thirds of the country gets everything; we get nothing (again). Eventually, the pattern will flip as La Niña warms and Neutral conditions prevail. Will it happen before the end of winter? I have no idea. But here is what the CPC said in their most recent monthly update.
“La Niña persists, followed by a 75% chance of a transition to ENSO-neutral during January-March 2026. ENSO-neutral is likely through at least the Northern Hemisphere late spring 2026.”
A wet spring would be a great ending to a dry winter. Or if it starts earlier, a few late-winter storms would be great, too!
Long-time followers have been emailing me asking if I will get a birthday storm. My birthday is early February, and historically, we seem to get a storm around that time. The GFS is currently considering it. The European is back stuck in its dry (feedback) loop for the next two weeks as the MJO retreats quickly back inside the “Circle of Weather Death.”
So we will see, as always, I will be watching and let you know as soon as I see a change coming our way.


















