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Mountain West Discussion


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16 hours ago, mayjawintastawm said:

Interesting. The caption is several different places all around Colorado. Wonder where it really is. Looks pretty low elevation, given all the leaves on the trees still.

the Crestone Baca looking north (apparently), the west side of the Sangre De Cristos.  According to that, then it's near "the Crestones," two peaks that I never got to but I sort of imagined myself climbing

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7 hours ago, Chinook said:

the Crestone Baca looking north (apparently), the west side of the Sangre De Cristos.  According to that, then it's near "the Crestones," two peaks that I never got to but I sort of imagined myself climbing

The thing that made me wonder is it also says "San Juan Mountains" and "Collegiate Peaks", both of which it's nowhere near.

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5 hours ago, ValpoVike said:

Crazy amounts for sure, but the trend does seem to be pretty strong directionally for good moisture over the next 10-14 days.

Even a quarter of that would be far better than we've done for a while. It's been 40 days since we had >0.1" in a day.

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a few days ago this web cam had much more yellows on the trees, much like my yard here in Ohio. You wouldn't tend to think that the peak colors at 7000 ft would be at the same time as some of the Midwest... but it must have been warm.. you know like 8 deg above normal.

Buena-Vista-Colorado-Main-Street-Mount-Princeton-Mount-Antero.jpg

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multiple models have a 500mb low at the Four Corners. Here is the new GEFS individual models showing significant total snow accumulations for the mountains (and maybe more) from generally 48hr-120hr (2days-5days)

ensembles.jpg

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19 hours ago, Chinook said:

a few days ago this web cam had much more yellows on the trees, much like my yard here in Ohio. You wouldn't tend to think that the peak colors at 7000 ft would be at the same time as some of the Midwest... but it must have been warm.. you know like 8 deg above normal.

Buena-Vista-Colorado-Main-Street-Mount-Princeton-Mount-Antero.jpg

We were in Buena Vista last weekend and it indeed seemed much more like early-mid October than almost Halloween. Lots of groves of yellow cottonwoods still leafed out.

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I kind of hope, selfishly, that the storm doesn't happen too much or is rain, since my sprinkler blowout is scheduled for Saturday.

In any case, I love how the NWS BOU forecasters are describing the ambiguity of the Wed-Sun timeframe:

The last long term
discussion used song lyrics to frame the discussion, so why not do
that again but this time with a hit song a year earlier than Bonnie
Raitt`s hit: "Things That Make You Go Hmmm" by C+C Music Factory.
We think we lost count with how many things are making us go hmmm
in the forecast from Wednesday through Saturday. We wish we could
say confidence is increasing with time, but that is simply not
the case. There are some broad brush aspects of how the cut off
trough could evolve, but the problem is that small changes in the
position and movement of the trough make massive differences in
the snow amounts and travel impacts across our area.
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with all apologies to Phil Collins of Genesis... here's the next DenverBoulder forecast dicussion.  Note NWS-WPC has 1"-3" total QPF in the next week from Denver to the southeastern portion of Colorado

Quote

.LONG TERM /Tuesday through Sunday/...

Issued at 303 AM MST Mon Nov 4 2024

Another day and another shift in guidance, but are we coming into agreement or a more stable trend, like your magic 8 ball, `ask again later.` That being said there are some details we can talk about, at least for Wednesday. Stronger cold front barrels through early Wednesday setting us up for some snowfall, moderate at times given elevated fronto-Genesis which you can feel it coming `in the air Tues-night` (yes, this was not a Genesis song but close enough). The northerly flow behind the surface front likely dries the northern areas off the Cheyenne Ridge, unfortunately giving them very little QPF and therefore snow after the initial frontal surge moves through. Farther south, the favored Palmer Ridge area and points west into the foothills, better orographics/upslope as the 700 mb low begins to develop over the Four Corners area, produces a better snow accumulation potential. Depending on the location of the jet streak, we could even see a few inches/impacts across the I-70 plains corridor, combined with the upslope component. All-in-all, this could cause some Wednesday AM commute issues across portions of south Metro Denver and points west-southwest into the foothills that may extend into the evening commute along the Palmer. We wanted to allow the current winter weather headline expire before hoisting anything for Wednesday.

 

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I wish WPC predictions would verify IMBY sometimes. It seems like "cold, cloudy, windy and pretty dry except in favored foothills locations" is the safest mantra for last storm, this storm, and probably the next several. We've had <0.25" water in the last 6 weeks and it's so frustrating.

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