Snowpack levels in most of Colorado are above average for the first time in three years – but that’s not the case across all parts of the state.
Although the northern and central mountains , far less snow has fallen in the .
Mage Hultstrand measures for the USDA’s . If spring snowstorms deliver, she says it’s still possible for the area to catch up with the rest of the state.
"The southwest portion of the state and then also the Upper Rio Grande basins both received well above normal accumulation during end of January, early part of February,” Hulstrand told Colorado ڱ Connection. "They just need another couple of storms like that and they'll be right back to normal conditions."
Late-spring snow is not uncommon for the state (remember that last year?) Hultstrand notes that about 20 percent of Colorado's annual snowpack typically comes during March.
According to the latest data, snowpack levels range from 142 percent of normal in the South Platte River basin, to 82 percent of normal in the Upper Rio Grande.