12/27/25 Saturday 3:30 am
I find myself in the familiar position of sitting in front of a blank screen, trying to conjure up the correct words to get this update started.
The most notable change I see is that NWS reduced the totals for its Winter Weather (sub)Advisory in its latest release to 4 to 8 inches.
Why is that notable? Because Sub Advisories are not a real thing, 1 month into meteorological winter. Winter Storm Warnings and Winter Weather Advisories apply only to the areas where they are issued.
A Winter Weather Advisory above 9,000 feet has specific criteria: 6 to 12 inches of snow. A Winter Storm Warning is the next level up. Above 9,000 feet, it means 12 inches or more of snow.
The criteria for lower elevations are different. In our case, 6,000 feet is considered low elevation. In the heart of winter, 3 to 6 inches for a Winter Weather Advisory, 6 to 12 inches for a Winter Storm Warning. Period. That is the standard, pretty much statewide. The exception would be SE Colorado (from Pueblo to Kansas and south to New Mexico).
I gotta stop this old man rant (an OMR moment) before it goes off the rails.
Overnight, the models became clearer about these storms’ intentions. Yesterday, I talked about being skeptical. What I saw early signs of was the tale of two storms. One with SW flow, the other with NW flow. I also saw most of the energy in the SW flow staying mostly south, and the NW storm mainly staying north. This sets up our lower elevations for “mostly a miss”.
The SW flow storm could shift its track but right now the target is SE San Juans with the bullseye just south of Wolf Creek. Most of the colder air does not arrive until Sunday morning and there will likely be a limited amount of moisture left to work with.
At best, we may see a WTI frontal passage (was that it?). I will be very generous and call for 2 to 5 inches of snow from Purgatory up to Coal Bank, Molas and Lizard Head.
Sometimes, when we get those North to South frontal passages it can enhance snow from Ouray to Red Mountain. I would look for potential anomalies there as the temps drop and the liquid-to-snow ratios (LSRs) quickly double. I am not going to go as far as calling it a Gorge Event because it won’t last long enough for that.
Telluride is still a wild card, so I am going to leave it in the 2 to 5 range, upside surprise? Possibly… Lower totals? Possibly…
Wolf Creek still appears to be the best bet for 4 to 8 inches of snow (as I said yesterday). Flurries are already flying across the high country and should increase today.
Overall, another low-impact event for most areas. Exceptions would be the southbound 550 out of Ouray tomorrow morning. And Wolf Creek Pass tonight and tomorrow. Either way, it falls under “normal winter driving conditions”.
OK, I give up. This is what it looks like when I don’t run it through AI, but if I did that, I would have to spend additional time editing AI.
I plan to take a couple of days off from the weather updates to focus on taking care of the household and Sus, catching up on emails, and hopefully a little couch time for me tomorrow. The next best chance of snow will be later in the week or next weekend; however, there is significant uncertainty at the moment.
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