
A large high pressure system will usher in cold air for this first day of March across the northern Plains, Great Lakes, Northeast and mid-Atlantic. Some wintry precipitation may evolve across the mid-Mississippi Valley, Ohio Valley and mid-Atlantic through Monday. Meanwhile, record warmth will spread across the Southwest, southern Plains through early this week. Read More >
Christmas in Pueblo
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Normal High |
Normal Low | Record High | Record Low | Lowest Maximum (Coldest High) | Highest Minimum (Warmest Low) |
| 47 | 15 | 72 in 1971 | -10 in 1983 | 14 in 1983 | 37 in 1892 |
SNOWFALL
SNOW ON GROUND
The last "real" white Christmas occurred in 2000. The snow began falling shortly before midnight Christmas Eve, with only trace amounts reported through the morning hours. The snow began to pick up during the afternoon hours and ended shortly before midnight, with a total snowfall of 1.8 inches. The next previous white Christmas occurred in 1987. There was one inch of snow on the ground at 5 am that morning, with a record total of 5.1 inches falling for the day. The last time before that was in 1976. There was one inch of snow on the ground that Christmas morning, with an additional .6 inches falling that day.
While not a white Christmas, an extremely rare event occurred early Christmas morning in 2016, when thunderstorms producing heavy rain and small hail moved through the Pueblo area during the pre-dawn hours. This is the only time such an event has been record since 1939, when thunderstorm and hail stats began.
Snowfall records are in inches, from 1888 to the present.
Snow on the ground is at 5 am, from 1948 to the present.
Current through 2023.
***White Christmas defined as >0.5 inches of snow falling on Christmas day with a least 1 inch on the ground***