The Maui News

Winter storm system hits eastern New Mexico, headed next to Texas and Oklahoma

- By WALTER BERRY

The remnants of a slow-moving atmospheri­c river storm that pummeled California last week delivered the first notable snowfall of the season across eastern New Mexico, with the National Weather Service warning Sunday of snowpacked and icy roads as the system headed toward the Texas Panhandle and central Oklahoma.

A winter storm advisory was issued for eastern New Mexico, including the city of Roswell. The National Weather Service in Albuquerqu­e said temperatur­es were in the mid-30s, which is up to 25 degrees below normal.

“Hopefully it will diminish by sunset,” Jennifer Shoemake, a meteorolog­ist for the weather service in Albuquerqu­e, said Sunday.

She said the storm system appeared to be headed next to the Texas Panhandle and central Oklahoma, where warnings were already in effect.

The National Weather Service forecast up to 8 inches of snow Sunday in the west Texas city of Lubbock, with 1.3 inches already on the ground in Amarillo in the Texas Panhandle.

The storms stem from a slow-moving system that first hit California early Wednesday. It moved out after days of wind, record rain and heavy snowfall that caused power outages, street flooding and hundreds of destructiv­e mudslides around Los Angeles.

It also dumped 3 feet of snow over three days in northern Arizona before tracking east on Friday and making its way Saturday into New Mexico.

Shoemake said Albuquerqu­e got up to 4 inches of snow Saturday, with the adjacent mountains getting anywhere between 6 inches and 9 inches.

“Likely some decent skiing conditions,” Shoemake said.

She was right. In Albuquerqu­e, Sandia Peak Ski Area has opened up for the first time since 2022 with access to top-to-bottom skiing across 300 acres on all 35 trails.

“It’s like we are in the clouds up there,” snowboarde­r Jovanni Orozco told Albuquerqu­e TV station KOB. “Literally, it is like low you can’t even see nothing and then the snow just covers your goggles, but it’s fun!”

The Arizona Snowbowl ski resort north of Flagstaff got 55 inches from the recent storms, bringing its snowfall total to 140 inches this season. All lifts and trails at the ski area were open Sunday.

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