Looking Back at Memorable February Storms
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Terrific tales! Thank you for taking the time to share with everyone!
As mentioned previously from a gentleman in New Jersey, We, in West Chester, Pennsylvania, enjoyed a 3-day blizzard totaling 37+ inches. When all was said and shoveling done, the snow was higher than our almost 4 year old. Thank goodness for wood stove heat and being prepared. Riding out the storm was fun for the kids, and the snow forts the following WEEKS kept us entertained. This was also the winter that schools were closed more days than they were open, during January and February, due to snow and then ice storms. Tough (and memorable) winter.
The worst blizzard I have experienced was in Rising Sun, Ohio. Two people died less than a mile from my farm house. We heated with wood and I had to go out to the wood lot and split some wood which had already been cut. I filled my pickup truck but ran out of wood. The only saving grace was a black walnut log I had near the house which I had been saving for cutting slabs from. I sure hated to lose that log.
Thanks for sharing, Michael!
I remember all of the blizzards mentioned in the article, and yet the blizzard I remember most was not covered. For me, the worst blizzard in memory culminated on February 26th, 2010, when it killed my dad.
It had been snowing hard for several days in upstate NY. We had drifts well over our heads, and snow up past our waists. There was nowhere else to put it, despite a pickup with a plow and desperate efforts to keep up. Dad tried to take out his trash, and had a heart attack in the driveway. It took over an hour for the ambulance to finally get through because of the snow. I was fresh out of a wheelchair, myself, yet sitting in the snow breathing for him, while the garbage man pumped his heart, just trying to keep him alive till the paramedics arrived to take over.
February is not my favorite month.
Oh, Gayze, what a story. Sorry for your loss—and appreciate your having the courage to tell us all here. February is almost over…
Be thankful you don’t live in Buffalo, New York — In November 2014, record snowfalls pummeled the area, leaving some stranded or trapped in their homes, schools, and offices for days. Lifelong Buffalo residents are calling it worse than the Blizzard of 1977, the infamous snowstorm that created snow drifts up to 30 feet high. The 24-hour snowstorm dumped 8 feet of snow on the area.
Ah, yes, “lake effect” snow—if memory serves, this even made news around the country and maybe beyond! Thanks for the memories!
While I understand many folks are used to extreme snow events and even blizzards, that is definitely not the case for those of us here in the Deep South. I was in middle school when the Blizzard of '93 hit. None of us believed we'd even get snow (it was March afterall), much less anything more. Well, I remember my friends and I trying to play during what I assume was the height of the storm but could barely stay standing because the winds were so strong. When all was said and done, there were 7' snow drifts and more snow than I've ever seen! I've researched and have been unable to find where Georgia has ever encountered another blizzard.
Wow— that is one for the record books! Thanks for telling everyone about it.