Denver, CO
Denver could see first snow Sunday night, plus more next week
Denver’s first dusting of snow will likely fall this weekend, with forecasters predicting less than half an inch of the stuff will stick around Sunday night.
Saturday is expected to be mild and sunny, bringing a high of 65 and a low of 38 overnight, according to the National Weather Service.
On Sunday, temperatures will drop from 58 degrees during the day to just below freezing overnight. Rain is forecast before midnight, giving way to snow that will continue into Monday morning.
After the weather clears up Monday afternoon, the snow could return Wednesday and later in the week, along with highs in the 30s and 40s, and lows in the 20s.
On average, Denver sees its first flakes around Oct. 18, with the earliest recorded snow date being Sept. 3 in 1961 and the latest being Dec. 10 in 2021. Last year, the first snowfall of the season was recorded Oct. 28.
Denver’s first freeze was also late this year, arriving Oct. 25, or about two and a half weeks later than the average first freeze date.
Denver, CO
Christ in the Heart of the City: Hundreds Join Corpus Christi Eucharistic Procession in Downtown Denver
Catholics from across Northern Colorado gathered to honor Jesus in the Eucharist with prayer, song and public witness through the streets of Denver.
Sirens, honking and… hymns? It might not be a typical trifecta for a Saturday evening in Downtown Denver, but on the vigil of Corpus Christi, the Solemnity of the Most Holy Body and Blood of Jesus, the heart of the city saw a change of pace.
A Eucharistic procession, led by Denver Archbishop James Golka and Auxiliary Bishop Jorge Rodríguez, brought hundreds to the city’s economic, legal and legislative center, many coming from multiple hours away. Organized by the Archdiocese of Denver, the prayerful procession made its way from Holy Ghost Parish in Denver to Lincoln Veterans Memorial Park, at the base of the Colorado State Capitol. As the hundreds of faithful in attendance wound through the streets of Denver, they joined in prayer, song and devoted witness to their love for Jesus, truly present in the Eucharist.
“I was really excited to come to this moment,” said Marina, a parishioner at Sacred Heart of Jesus Parish in Boulder. “My heart brought me here. I came to encounter the Lord, the King of life. And I encountered him here.”
“For us, this was something really special,” shared Pedro Gonzalez, a parishioner of St. Helena Parish in Fort Morgan. “When we started processing along the route, we ended up walking in front of Jesus in the Eucharist. I said to my wife, ‘Look! We get to walk right beside Jesus.’ It brought tears to my eyes because it was something very nice, a really beautiful experience for us.”
In a modern Pentecost dynamic, the procession brought together faithful from all cultures, nationalities, languages, ages and locales in a moving, beautiful testament to the catholicity (universality) of the Catholic Church (see Acts 2).
“I feel really happy,” said Veronica Gonzalez of St. Helena Parish. “We’re all one Church. We’re one, united. And Jesus, present in the Eucharist, unites us.”
“It’s a deeper expression of the Body of Christ,” explained Father Jonathon Hank, O.M.V., parochial vicar at Holy Ghost Parish in Denver. “We’re celebrating the Body of Christ in the Eucharist, but also the Body of Christ as a community.”
“You can see that there are lots of people who share the faith, and we all follow Jesus. That’s really beautiful,” added Yolanda Soto, whose daughter walked and prayed alongside her.
(Photos by André Escaleira, Jr./Denver Catholic)
Through the procession, the faithful had the opportunity to praise God publicly for all the many blessings he has bestowed, most especially for the Eucharist, the enduring and real presence of Jesus Christ among us. On the eve of the feast on which that presence is celebrated, the opportunity for prayer and witness was all the more powerful for attendees.
“Our love for Jesus brought us here today, to follow God, who is number one and who leads us to follow him in all of our needs,” said Maria Colin, a parishioner of St. Anthony of Padua Parish in Denver. “He is the only one who gives us strength to keep following him. How can we not praise him? How can we not bless him for all he’s given us?”
“It really was inspiring to continue to let me know that our faith is still strong. And looking at the crowd and the people that we have here, it’s a beautiful thing that we just keep on moving forward with our faith,” shared Heidi Casteel Ellis, a parishioner at Cure d’Ars Parish in Denver and a member of the Ladies of St. Peter Claver. “If more Catholics would come out and experience this, they would find it very refreshing.”
In short, as seven-year-old Carla Ruiz of St. Joseph Parish in Denver put it, “I’m happy! I felt something special in my heart.”
As the nation prepares to celebrate 250 years and Colorado 150, Saturday’s public witness of faith offered attendees the chance to be a “city on a hill,” showing God’s light and love to the surrounding culture.
“We live in such a dark world, and we’re a light to the world,” said Caleb Gallardo. “So it’s a great way to just show off my faith. It was a great display of our Christian faith.”
“This was all so beautiful, to see so many people coming to follow our Lord. Blessed be God who is helping us to come back to the faith, because there are so many who are lost, right? So I’m really happy to have been able to be here with Jesus in the Eucharist,” added Margarita Gutierrez, a parishioner of St. Anthony of Padua Parish in Denver.
No matter the witness effect of such a grand procession, though, attendees couldn’t help but feel a profound sense of encouragement and gratitude for being able to come together with Jesus in the Eucharist and each other.
“Getting to pilgrimage with Our Lord through Downtown Denver is pretty darn special!” said Alicia Toenjes. “I’m just so grateful. I’m very grateful that we could have a gathering of Catholics and have Our Lord and families together. It’s just such a blessing.”
“This is real joy. This is the feast, the feast of the Lord,” added Marina.
“I like praying before the Blessed Sacrament, being in the presence of the Lord. So to be able to bring him to the streets is really beautiful — and to witness to our faith to those others who are here, too,” said Diana, a parishioner of Queen of Peace Parish in Aurora.
When it comes down to it, said Father Ben Unachukwu, O.M.V., parochial vicar at Holy Ghost Parish in Denver, Saturday’s procession and other acts of faith like it come down to one thing: a eucharistic spirit of gratitude (the word “Eucharist” does mean thanksgiving, after all!).
“It’s so wonderful. It’s so special. The Lord gave us his best, so we have to give him our best. This is the smallest gift we can give to say, ‘Thank you, Lord, for all that you’ve done for us,” he concluded.
Denver, CO
Denver weather: More hot weather Sunday
DENVER (KDVR) — After officially hitting 90 degrees for the first time this season, the Denver weather forecast features more hot weather Sunday and next week before temperatures begin to moderate.
Dry and breezy conditions will create fire danger concerns for parts of the northeastern plains.
Denver weather tonight: Another mild night
Skies will gradually clear overnight Saturday, but it’s still going to be mild with low temperatures falling into the middle and upper 50s around metro Denver. Some locations elsewhere may only cool to about 60 degrees.
Denver weather tomorrow: Temperatures in the 90s again

Sunday will be another hot day with widespread temperatures again in the 90s. Denver’s record high is 98 degrees, but we’ll stay well short of that. We’ll begin the day sunny, but clouds will steadily increase in the afternoon.
Mostly dry conditions are forecast but a stray pop-up storm may develop. Winds will turn to the northwest with gusts up to 20 miles per hour.
Looking ahead: Hot, breezy, and mostly dry
We start next week with partly sunny conditions and temperatures “cooling” to the upper 80s in the afternoon, still above normal. Gusty winds will persist from the east-southeast. There will be a slightly better chance for isolated storm development in the afternoon.
We’ll jump back to the 90s on Tuesday with wind gusts up to 35 miles per hour or higher possible.
Temperatures start to moderate Wednesday onward, starting with low 90s on Wednesday, then middle 80s Thursday into the weekend, closer to normal.
Overall, the forecast for most of next week looks predominantly dry, but rain chances do return for next weekend.
Denver, CO
My Morning Jacket, Death Cab For Cutie, Tash Sultana Elevate Denver’s Outside Days Festival
Sometimes, music can be an awesome addendum to other activities without being the whole raison d’etre for a festival.
In 2019, Amazon put together a spectacular lineup for Intersect—with Foo Fighters, Beck, and Kacey Musgraves among the biggest names—which was essentially an extension of the e-commerce giant’s company conference in Las Vegas. In Arizona, Innings Festival and Extra Innings Festival have emerged as tentpole events in the desert by using live music to draw in baseball fans visiting the area for spring training. In Las Vegas, SEMA Fest has treated motorsports lovers to large-scale rock concerts, in between thrilling scenes of car and bike stunts.
Over the last three years, Outside Days has begun to make its mark in the category of not-just-a-music-festival festivals. In this case, the three-day event is built on top of Outside Magazine’s professional conference, which brings together brands and companies from the outdoors industry with active-lifestyle enthusiasts and those either working therein or looking to break into the field.
This year, all of those same brands—from REI and The North Face to Capital One, Jeep and many more—got additional exposure via marketing activations and booths spread across Auraria Campus in downtown Denver, while the previous location (Civic Center Park) underwent renovations.
Though film screenings and panel discussions were also part of the proceedings, the vast majority of the 30,000 attendees seemed rightly focused on the acts performing on the stage that dominated the Tivoli Quad at Metropolitan State University of Denver. From one day to the next, there were no misses; only superb sets played (nearly) perfectly for a citizenry that’s turned Denver into one of America’s great hubs for live music.
Friday’s lineup brought more of an indie bent to the air, thanks in no small part to Death Cab For Cutie. Ben Gibbard and company leaned into their new album, I Built You A Tower, with an opener of “Riptide” and the live debut of “Trap Door.” Those songs, as well as “Punching The Flowers,” “Stone Over Water,” and the title track from their latest release, fit seamlessly alongside tried-and-true Death Cab classics like “The New Year,” “I Will Follow You Into The Dark,” “Crooked Teeth” and “Soul Meets Body.”
Japanese Breakfast and Goth Babe both did their part to warm up the crowd for DCFC. The former peppered the populace with indie pop favorites like “Paprika,” “Picture Window,” “Everybody Wants To Love You” and “Be Sweet.” The latter followed that up with feel-good songs like “Mexico,” “Encinitas” and “Weekend Friend,” as well as a cover of Weezer’s “Undone – The Sweater Song.” That is, when they weren’t busy encouraging fans to crowd surf on camping mattresses or doling out household appliances as prizes for cheering.
Saturday took a decisive turn toward jams—a prime pivot, given the Mile High City’s proclivities for musical improv. My Morning Jacket certainly seemed to understand that assignment. The outfit’s sprawling, two-hour set incorporated seemingly every highlight from their discography, starting with “Wordless Chorus” and ending with “Touch Me I’m Going to Scream Pt. 2.” In between, the Louisville-based group broke into “Off The Record,” “Anytime,” “Gideon,” “One Big Holiday,” “Circuital”, “Victory Dance,” and a version of “Spring (Among The Living)” that included a sprinkling of The Beatles’ “Dear Prudence.” Even with a setlist so jam-packed, lead singer and guitarist Jim James managed to squeeze in not one, but two callouts of the full moon that was on brilliant display in the Denver sky.
That all came as a thrilling finale to a day that saw Karina Rykman take her bass out for much more than a walk in the park, Eggy egg on the jams with “Laurel,” “Waiting Game” and “Through The Mist;” and Dawes put an L.A.-style spin on jam rock with “Time Spent in Los Angeles,” “When My Time Comes,” “Most People” and “All Your Favorite Bands.”
The only fly in the ointment on Saturday showed up at the start of The Flaming Lips’ allotted time. Lead singer Wayne Coyne announced that a piece of the band’s equipment had blown out, prompting a 15-minute delay. That didn’t stop them from pulling out most of their usual theatrical stops, from the towering inflatable robots for both parts of “Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots” and giant eyes and lips for “The Yeah Yeah Yeah Song (With All Your Power)” to an American flag cape for a cover of Black Sabbath’s “War Pigs,” a blowup rainbow during “Do You Realize??”, a bubble for Wayne on “A Spoonful Weighs a Ton,” and various other stage toys along the way.
(Perhaps, though, the technical difficulties were a bad omen for The Flaming Lips’ hometown team, the Oklahoma City Thunder, whose NBA title defense came to an end that night, while most of the band wore the team’s jerseys onstage.)
Sunday at Outside Days was tailor-made for those seeking an edgier approach to rock music. Girl Tones gave the audience an early taste of Bowling Green, Kentucky’s punk spirit, courtesy of sisters Kenzie and Laila Crowe. GROUPLOVE infused the day with a bit of pop sensibility by way of a well-tested combination of “Tongue Tied” into a Beatles-esque cover of The Top Notes’ “Twist and Shout.”
Tash Sultana stepped up as, arguably, the single most talented musician to take the stage at Outside Days. The Australian multi-instrumentalist emerged with a full band for a cover of The Wailers’ “I Shot The Sheriff” before eventually shifting toward their usual solo show, with loops of drums, keys, bass and synths laid behind vocals, guitar riffs, bits of trumpet and saxophone to form songs like “Milk & Honey,” “Notion,” and “Jungle.” At one point, Tash took a moment to acknowledge a rainbow in the distance, speaking about it as a sign of her recently departed dog looking out from the heavens.
As much as Outside Days knocked it out of the proverbial park with marquee acts, the festival and its organizers also did well to create time and space for local artists and bands. On Friday, that slot fell to Wildermiss, a Phantogram-esque indie rock band led by Emma Cole on vocals and synth bass, Joshua Hester on guitar, and Caleb Thoemke on drums. Saturday saw The Brothers of Brass—who bill themselves as Denver’s only New Orleans-style brass band—add to the ambiance with brassy covers of Michael Jackson’s “Rock With You,” Bill Withers’ “Just The Two of Us,” Aaliyah’s “Try Again” and Destiny Child’s “Survivor,” both onstage during their main set and during some interstitial busking on the festival grounds. Come Sunday, the lineup included spots for both the indie rock of The Mañanas and the edgy pop provisioned by N3ptune.
Those acts, in particular, lent additional heart and soul to an event that, while very much corporate in nature, didn’t leave attendees drowning in a sea of brand marketing. If anything, the music of it all made it more than held its own as the strongest gravitational force on the grounds. (Save for, perhaps, the Cotopaxi booth and the Capital One lounge, both of which had perpetual lines that seemingly extended into infinity.)
Still, in the grand scheme, it was impressive to see Outside Days not only put together a top-flight event in just its third year, but also draw such a substantial crowd given the competition in town—between Morgan Wallen at Empower Field and FAN EXPO Denver at the Colorado Convention Center.
With any luck, Outside Days will continue to grow in both scope and lineup strength in the years to come. And even if it doesn’t, it’s always worthy of being a staple on anyone’s live music calendar, especially for those who call the Rocky Mountains home.
Below, check out a selection of photos from the 2026 edition of Outside Days via Josh Martin.
Outside Days Festival | Various Artists | Denver, CO | 5/29/26–5/31/26 | Photos: Josh Martin
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