Hamilton Journal News

Rockies winter starts with whimper, sets records

- By Thomas Peipert and Brittany Peterson

DENVER — Denver’s winter has started with a whimper, and the parched mountains to the west aren’t faring much better.

The Mile High City has already shattered its 87-yearold record for the latest measurable snowfall set on Nov. 21, 1934, and it’s a little more than a week away from breaking an 1887 record of 235 consecutiv­e days without snow.

The scenario is playing out across much of the Rocky Mountains, as far north as Montana and in the broader Western United States, which is experienci­ng a mega-drought that studies link to human-caused climate change. It’s only the second time since 1976 that Salt Lake City has gone snowless through November, and amid the unseasonab­ly warm weather in Montana, a late-season wildfire fueled by strong winds ripped through a tiny central Montana farming town this week.

The warm and dry weather has drawn crowds to restaurant and bar patios in Denver, and the city’s parks and trails have been bustling with people basking in the sunshine in shorts and short sleeves.

As enjoyable as the weather is, climate scientists and meteorolog­ists are warning that prolonged drought could threaten the region’s water supply and agricultur­e industry. It also could hurt tourism, which relies heavily on skiers, snowboarde­rs, rafters and anglers.

“Every day that goes by that we don’t see precipitat­ion show up and we see this year-to-year persistenc­e of drought conditions, it just adds to a deficit. And we continue to add to this deficit year after year, particular­ly in the Colorado River Basin,” said Keith Musselman, a hydrologis­t at the University of Colorado-Boulder.

Derek Greenough moved to Denver a few months ago and immediatel­y bought a snowboard with the hope of soon hitting the slopes. But on Wednesday, he was enjoying the warm weather in a city park.

“I’m from central New York so I expected it to be somewhat like there, which they have about 5 feet of snow right now,” said Greenough, 27, who was wearing a tank top and exercise shorts. “Today I figured that on the first day of December it would be snowing, at least something, but here we are. I don’t think I’ll be snowboardi­ng anytime soon.”

Denver’s high Wednesday hit 73F, tying the record set in 1973. The National Weather Service is predicting similar conditions over the weekend with only a slight chance of snow at the beginning of next week.

Frank Cooper, a meteorolog­ist for the National Weather Service in Boulder, Colo., said a La Nina weather pattern is pushing storm tracks farther north into the Pacific Northwest and Canada.

“Basically, we haven’t had any systems really able to get into the area to cool us off,” he said, noting that the average high in Denver this time of year is 45F.

Musselman likens mountain snowpack to a natural reservoir that holds moisture during the winter months and releases it in the spring and summer when demand from trees, plants, animals and humans is greater.

“That natural reservoir is being affected by climate change, and warming is reducing the amount of snow that’s occurring in the mountains,” he said.

 ?? THOMAS PEIPERT/AP ?? The Denver skyline, with not a flake in sight, Friday. The city has broken its 87-year-old record for the latest measurable snowfall, set in 1934.
THOMAS PEIPERT/AP The Denver skyline, with not a flake in sight, Friday. The city has broken its 87-year-old record for the latest measurable snowfall, set in 1934.

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