Extremeweatherguy wrote:I lived in Raleigh, NC during the January 2000 blizzard. It was the largest snowstorm in 107 years for the city. I recieved 24" of snow at my house in less than 16 hrs!!! Raleigh has very few snow plows (my street was not plowed for 6 days) and the snow stayed on the ground for about 2 weeks! Raleigh completly shut down during that storm. Schools closed for 9 days and most offices were closed for 3+ days. If the same scenario occured in Houston (which it did in 1895); then the city would see even more chaos then I did in Raleigh. With no snow plows, all the roads would be un-passable until natural melting occured, which in 1895 took 9+ days. It would be quite exciting though, many places (except the snowbelts of the great lakes) rarely see snowfalls like that...so to have a snowfall like that in a place that usually should not see it would be awsome!
I was in the "Storm of the Century" in 1993 in Birmingham, AL. We broke the all-time snowfall record (13" officially) and had about 16" at our house.
It was awesome for about 6 hours.
Some of the things we experienced, that a place like Houston might experience:
No power for a week
No HEAT for a week
No phone for a week
No cable for 2 weeks
Massive tree and branch loss (they are not used to such snows)
Carrot-top (yes, the comedian) lost all of his props when the Improv burned down
Thousands trapped on the roadways had to be rescued by the National Guard in Humvees; many sent to the hospital with frostbite and hypothermia
Many houses burned down because they were unreachable (roads impassible)
As a whole: The storm caused $3 billion in damage, killing an estimated 270 people. According to The National Climatic Data Center (NCDC) that death toll is more than three times the combined number of deaths attributed to Hurricanes Hugo and Andrew.
Yeah, sounds awesome to me...I just can't wait for my power to go out, my heat to get cut off, and most of my palm trees to die. Yipee!!