Dont laugh you northern folks... a hard freeze is a big WOW for my area


We had that freak orographic snow, I think it was 2002 and that was SOOO cool.
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Scorpion wrote:I remember that! It was January 2003. It was unprecedented, 43 for a high here! There were actual flurries all the way down here during the day! And it got down to a record 28 that night! Hopefully it happens again this year.
Amanzi wrote:I was just wondering if anyone had any info about past florida cold "events" particularly if Florida had ever experiance any ice storms.
Dont laugh you northern folks... a hard freeze is a big WOW for my area![]()
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We had that freak orographic snow, I think it was 2002 and that was SOOO cool.
But the most paralyzing event occurred two days before Christmas 1989 (pictured, right). A steady light rain and tumbling temperatures caused the rain to turn to freezing rain which made travel over bridges and overpasses impossible.
As the temperature fell to 26 degrees on Dec. 23, the rain turned to sleet, then to snow. The snow did not melt and winds caused snowdrifts several inches deep in some areas.
This was the first white Christmas in Jacksonville's history, the snow lasting in some areas for three or four days.
Steve wrote:>>I can't find anything on the web regarding icestorms in Florida ... which is probably in part due to cold air damming scenarios playing a huge factor in favorable icestorm setups that almost never make it down into Florida
There have definitely been snow storms, ice storms and all other sorts of wintry weather in Florida over the last 20 years. Mobile got 4" of snow back in 96 or 97, and Pensacola wasn't far behind. When it gets cold in the southeast, it's usually 8-14 degrees colder in Tallahassee than it is in New Orleans. It's snowed there a bunch of times. And we've had more ice storms here in my lifetime than snowstorms. So no doubt Florida has had some too (besides snow events).
Steve
Amanzi wrote:Steve wrote:>>I can't find anything on the web regarding icestorms in Florida ... which is probably in part due to cold air damming scenarios playing a huge factor in favorable icestorm setups that almost never make it down into Florida
There have definitely been snow storms, ice storms and all other sorts of wintry weather in Florida over the last 20 years. Mobile got 4" of snow back in 96 or 97, and Pensacola wasn't far behind. When it gets cold in the southeast, it's usually 8-14 degrees colder in Tallahassee than it is in New Orleans. It's snowed there a bunch of times. And we've had more ice storms here in my lifetime than snowstorms. So no doubt Florida has had some too (besides snow events).
Steve
Thanks for the info Steve! I hope I get to experiance some frozen stuff....
NC George wrote:I can confirm the event of Christmas Eve 89 as well. I was 19, and my family was driving from Eastern NC to Miami. I saw the Weather Channel before we left, and said we shouldn't go. After getting on the road at 5am my stepfather felt a vibration in the wheel and wanted to have the tires balanced. 2 hours later we get back on the road just as the snow starts. I-95 backs up and traffic slows down to 35 mph, where it stays the entire way to Bruswick, GA. There the Red Cross was setting up shelters for the soon-to-be-stranded public on Christmas Eve.
We purchased the last hot food at the Krystal, and continued on. In Jacksonville, FL they were beginning to turn around traffic across the St. Johns River on I-95, effectively closing I-95 that night. We were one of the last cars let through (perhaps because we were in a Volvo.) Once across the river the traffic cleared dramatically, and the snow gradually tapered off. The road cleared of snow quickly after J'ville, and by Ft. Pierce flurries were tapering off. By the time we got to Miami, it was 7 am, 25 hours after we left. The trip normally took 15 with my parents driving, and with the higher speed limits now I can do it in about 12 hours.
We turned around and drove home the day after Christmas, giving us a big 1 day in Miami with about 40 hours of driving. My mom later admitted we should have heeded my warning and not gone at all. Incidentally we missed the only White Christmas in recorded history in Eastern NC where I live.
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