Limon, Colorado Weather Conditions
Severe Weather Alerts
Next 12 Hours
5 Day Forecast
- Wednesday
-
- High: 82 °
- Low: 41 °
- T-Storms
- Thursday
-
- High: 79 °
- Low: 45 °
- Chance of T-Storms
- Friday
-
- High: 84 °
- Low: 45 °
- Chance of T-Storms
- Saturday
-
- High: 73 °
- Low: 41 °
- Chance of T-Storms
- Sunday
-
- High: 72 °
- Low: 41 °
- Partly Cloudy
Forecast for Limon, Colorado
Updated: 9:00 AM MDT on May 16, 2012

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Wednesday
Partly cloudy in the morning, then mostly cloudy with thunderstorms and rain showers. High of 82F. Breezy. Winds from the WNW at 15 to 25 mph with gusts to 30 mph shifting to the North in the afternoon. Chance of rain 20%.

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Wednesday Night
Mostly cloudy with thunderstorms and rain showers in the evening, then partly cloudy. Low of 41F. Winds from the NE at 5 to 20 mph shifting to the WSW after midnight. Chance of rain 20%.

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Thursday
Partly cloudy with a chance of rain in the morning, then mostly cloudy with a chance of a thunderstorm and a chance of rain. High of 79F. Winds from the NW at 5 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 20%.

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Thursday Night
Overcast in the evening, then clear. Low of 45F. Winds from the SSE at 5 to 10 mph.

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Friday
Clear in the morning, then overcast. High of 84F. Winds from the SSW at 5 to 20 mph with gusts to 30 mph. Chance of rain 20%.

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Friday Night
Mostly cloudy with a chance of a thunderstorm and a chance of rain in the evening, then partly cloudy. Low of 45F. Breezy. Winds from the WSW at 15 to 20 mph.

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Saturday
Partly cloudy with a chance of a thunderstorm and rain. High of 73F. Breezy. Winds from the North at 15 to 25 mph. Chance of rain 20%.

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Saturday Night
Overcast with a chance of rain. Low of 41F. Winds from the NNE at 5 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 40%.

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Sunday
Partly cloudy. High of 72F. Winds from the ENE at 5 to 15 mph shifting to the SSE in the afternoon.

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Sunday Night
Partly cloudy. Low of 41F. Breezy. Winds from the SSE at 15 to 20 mph.

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Monday
Clear. High of 79F. Breezy. Winds from the South at 10 to 20 mph.

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Monday Night
Partly cloudy. Low of 43F. Breezy. Winds from the SSE at 10 to 20 mph.

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Tuesday
Clear. High of 81F. Winds less than 5 mph.

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Tuesday Night
Partly cloudy. Low of 46F. Winds from the SSE at 10 to 15 mph.

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Wednesday
Clear. High of 90F. Winds from the West at 5 to 10 mph.

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Wednesday Night
Clear. Low of 43F. Winds from the SSW at 5 to 15 mph shifting to the NNW after midnight.

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Thursday
Clear. High of 73F. Winds less than 5 mph.

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Thursday Night
Clear with a chance of a thunderstorm. Low of 39F. Winds less than 5 mph. Chance of rain 20%.

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Friday
Partly cloudy. High of 73F. Winds less than 5 mph.

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Friday Night
Partly cloudy with a chance of a thunderstorm. Low of 39F. Winds from the South at 5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain 20%.

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Saturday
Mostly cloudy with a chance of a thunderstorm. High of 73F. Winds less than 5 mph. Chance of rain 20%.

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Saturday Night
Clear. Low of 39F. Winds from the South at 5 to 10 mph.
Severe Weather Alert Descriptions
Fire Weather Warning
Statement as of 1:12 am MDT on May 16, 2012
... Red flag warning remains in effect from 10 am this morning to
7 PM MDT this evening for wind and low relative humidity for the
eastern Colorado plains...
* affected area... fire weather zones 246... 247... 248... 249...
250 and 251.
* Timing... winds will increase late Wednesday morning.
* Winds... south 15 to 25 mph with gusts up to 35 mph.
* Relative humidity... as low as 14 percent.
* Thunderstorms... isolated thunderstorms will develop. Must of these
storms will produce gusty outflow winds and only light rainfall.
* Impacts... the strong winds and low humidity will allow rapid
spread of any grassland wildfire.
Precautionary/preparedness actions...
A red flag warning means that critical fire weather conditions
are either occurring or imminent. Please advise the appropriate
officials and fire crews in the field of this red flag warning.
Public Information Statement
Statement as of 2:59 am MDT on May 16, 2012
... Today in Metro Denver weather history...
14-18 in 1996... a period of unusually warm weather resulted in
4 record maximum temperatures in 5 days. The record high
temperatures were 87 degrees on the 14th... 89 degrees on
the 15th... and 93 degrees on both the 16th and 18th. The
temperature climbed to only 81 degrees on the 17th which
was not a record.
15-16 in 1957... heavy snowfall totaled 8.8 inches at Stapleton
Airport. The greatest amount on the ground was 3 inches.
In 1986... a Spring storm dumped 1 to 2 inches of rain over
Metro Denver... but 2.71 inches fell at Buckley field in
Aurora. Rainfall only totaled 0.84 inch at Stapleton
International Airport. Snow fell in the foothills with
7 inches recorded in Coal Creek Canyon southwest of
Boulder.
16 in 1875... a heavy hail storm turned into heavy rain during
the afternoon. Rainfall totaled 0.86 inch in just 37
minutes... while the temperature dropped 22 degrees in
22 minutes. Precipitation totaled 0.90 inch.
In 1894... west winds were sustained to 48 mph with gusts
to 56 mph.
In 1949... a tornado was observed for 16 minutes... 20 miles to
the southeast of Stapleton Airport. The tornado moved 5
miles to the northeast before dissipating. No damage was
reported.
In 1963... intense lightning started several Forest fires in
the foothills southwest of Denver near Deckers and
cheeseman Lake. Little precipitation fell from the storms
to alleviate the unusual dry conditions so early in the
season.
In 1978... thunderstorm winds caused damage in southeast
Aurora. Winds of 60 to 80 mph blew down numerous fences and
damaged several homes under construction. High winds tore
docks loose at Cherry Creek Reservoir... sinking 3 or 4 boats
and damaging about 15 others. At Stapleton International
Airport where winds gusted to 60 mph... a 727 jet suffered
15 hundred dollars damage when wind toppled a runway light
onto it. The public reported an unconfirmed tornado 7 miles
south-southwest of Stapleton International Airport.
In 1990... a line of thunderstorms moving across Metro Denver
uprooted a large ash tree... which fell and blocked the
outside doors to a Denver Elementary School... briefly
trapping the students inside. Thunderstorm wind gusts to
69 mph were reported at Jefferson County Airport.
Northwest winds gusted to 44 mph at Stapleton International
Airport.
In 1991... two tornadoes touched down briefly in Castle Rock...
but no injuries or damage were recorded. Heavy
thunderstorm rains of 0.50 to 1.10 inches in a couple of
hours caused Lena Gulch near Golden to flood. No damage
was reported.
In 1996... dry microburst winds of unknown strength overturned
a trailer and damaged storage sheds in Strasburg east of
Denver.
16-17 in 1981... a heavy rain storm dumped 1 to 2 1/2 inches of rain
across Metro Denver. Rainfall totaled 1.27 inches at
Stapleton International Airport where north winds gusted
to 38 mph on 17th.
In 1983... a very strong late Spring storm dumped heavy snow
over the Front Range. Strong winds with the storm produced
blizzard conditions at times. Sustained winds were 20 to
40 mph with a peak gust to 55 mph at Stapleton International
Airport. The foothills received 1 to 2 feet of snow
with 4 to 12 inches along the foothills. Howling winds
whipped the snow into drifts several feet deep... closing
schools and highways. Stapleton International Airport was
forced to reduce flight operations... closing 2 of 4 runways
and stranding hundreds of travelers. Most of the damage
and inconvenience caused by the storm was in power outages...
which occurred when wind and heavy wet snow caused hundreds
of power poles to snap and topple. About 20 square miles
of Denver were blacked out. Precipitation from the storm
totaled 1 to 3 inches. At Stapleton International Airport...
snowfall totaled 7.1 inches with a maximum snow depth on
the ground of only 2 inches due to melting. The high
temperature of 40 degrees on the 17th was a record low
maximum for the date. Due to the heavy moisture content
of the storm... widespread street flooding occurred on the
18th when much of the snow melted under the warm may sun
and temperatures climbed to a high of 57 degrees.
In 1995... significant moisture and upslope flow caused
flooding across Metro Denver. Moderate to heavy rains...
which began on the evening of the 16th... developed in the
foothills and spread eastward over Metro Denver throughout
the night. The heavy rains brought many creeks and small
streams to bankfull or slightly over. Locations along the
foothills received between 3 and 4 inches of rainfall from
the storm. Boulder received 3.60 inches of rainfall for
the 24-hour period... causing minor street flooding near
small streams. To the northwest of Boulder... a bridge which
crossed Fourmile creek was washed out. Numerous rock and
mudslides occurred in foothills canyons... closing portions
of U.S. Highways 6 and 40 and State Highway 119 for a few
hours at a time. Rocks were piled 6 feet deep on a stretch
of State Highway 119 along with boulders as large as cars on
U.S. Highway 6. A parking lot near a creek in Golden caved
in leaving a hole the size of an 18-Wheeler. Rushing water
washed out a 50-foot stretch of a Road in Westminster.
Rainfall totaled 1.75 inches at Denver International
Airport... but only 1.42 inches at the site of the former
Stapleton International Airport.
Personal Weather Stations
Personal Weather Stations [Add your weather station!]
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Location: CODOT I-70 @ Cedar Point (46), Agate, CO Updated: 8:25 AM MDT |
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| Temperature: 65 °F | Dew Point: 23 °F | Humidity: 19% | Wind: NE at 16 mph | Pressure: - | Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in | Graphs | |
NWS Forecaster Discussion
Area forecast discussion National Weather Service Denver Colorado 254 am MDT Wednesday may 16 2012 Short term...upper level trough will slowly move across Utah today. Southwest flow aloft will increase the moisture at the middle and upper level of the atmosphere. This will result in more middle and high clouds this morning. The lower level of the airmass will remain on the dry side with surface dew points in the 20s and 30s. Airmass will be slightly unstable with surface based convective available potential energy up to 500 j/kg. The increased moisture...instability and lift from the approaching trough will trigger scattered to isolated thunderstorms this afternoon and early evening. Because of the dry lower levels...measurable rainfall will be spotty and light. Biggest concern will be gusty outflow winds from the thunderstorms. The strongest wind gusts may approach 50 miles per hour. Surface trough will form along the Front Range today. This will produce gusty southerly winds across the eastern plains. By afternoon...winds will be sustained at 15 to 25 miles per hour and gust to 35 miles per hour. The gusty winds combined with relative humidities bottoming out in the lower teens will cause red flag conditions. Temperatures will again be warm with highs close to yesterday's readings. Long term...for Thursday...the upper level trough axis will shift to the east of Colorado by midday with weak downward middle level qg descent in the afternoon. The models however still indicate enough cape in the afternoon for a slight chance of some high based thunderstorms. Forecast soundings continue to advertise in inverted v type profile. Temperatures on Thursday will remain well above normal with highs in the lower 80s for Denver. Thursday night and Friday...the flow aloft will transition to southwesterly ahead of the next upper level trough. The models develop weak middle level qg ascent in the afternoon. A developing Lee trough at the surface will enhance the southerly winds in the afternoon. Increasing middle and upper level moisture with very warm afternoon temperatures in the middle 80s should again produce more high based thunderstorms. Cloud cover in the afternoon may be enough to take the edge of the temperatures after 21z. The middle level trough axis in prognosticated to be over central Utah at 00z Saturday and is then forecast to move into eastern Colorado Saturday morning 12z-18z. Weak middle level qg ascent as well as some middle level instability should allow for showers Friday night...especially in the mountains. A cold front associated with the trough will push through the County warning forecast area Saturday morning around 12z with anticyclonic upslope developing through the day. Spatial cross- sections from the GFS indicate the northeasterly winds deepening to around 700 mb. Temperatures on Saturday will be near normal...10-15 degrees cooler than Friday. Should see elevated thunderstorms developing along the foothills and Palmer Divide Saturday afternoon...then gradually shift into the northeast plains late in the day. Air mass may be too stable across the northeast plains...so thunderstorms should be short lived. It will remain cooler through Sunday... with at least a slight chance of thunderstorms developing in and near the foothills and Palmer Divide in the afternoon...then shifting into the northeast plains. The upper level ridge axis will be parked over western Colorado by 00z Monday. The ridge axis will shift over eastern Colorado for Monday with temperatures climbing back toward 80 in the afternoon. The flow aloft will be drier and more west/southwesterly by Tuesday...so will go with the trend of warmer and drier grids for that time frame...with highs well into the 80s. && Aviation...southerly winds will become light after sunrise and may shift easterly between 15-21z. Airmass will become slightly unstable this afternoon. Isolated high based thunderstorms will form. Main threat with these storms will be gusty outflow winds where gusts may reach 45 knots. Best chance for the storms will be from 21z-01z. Expect at least one outflow boundary to affect the Denver airports today. && Hydrology...scattered to isolated thunderstorms are expected across the area today. Moisture will be limited. A few of the storms may briefly produce moderate rain...but most of the storms will just produce light rain and gusty outflow winds. Do not expect any flooding issues today and even for the rest of the week. && Bou watches/warnings/advisories... red flag warning from 10 am this morning to 7 PM MDT this evening for coz246>251. && $$ Short term...meier long term....Cooper aviation...meier


