Thundersnow Report

(YouTube link)

Remember the movie The Jerk when Steve Martin got excited about the new phone books? Jackie Mason’s line was “I wish I could get that excited about nothin’!” That’s the impression I got from this video. Storm Tracker Jim Cantore of The Weather Channel was reporting live in Plymouth, Massachusetts when he confirmed the storm was thundersnow. A true weather geek knows how rare that is, and to be reporting live at the scene excited him to no end. See the longer version of this weather report at The Weather Channel.

Massachusetts has had a huge amount of snow: Boston recorded over 45.5 inches of snowfall in February, the most in one month since at least 1872, when record-keeping began. They’ve received over 89 inches of snow this winter, another record. And more is on the way. The forecast for my corner of Kentucky calls for 6-12 inches tomorrow, the most snow since 1998. But unless the electricity goes out, I’ll be able to get to work. -via Uproxx


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I have been on a stopped ski-lift when thundersnow happened.
I was initially excited, because I knew it was a unique weather occurrence.
And then the realization of being on a stopped ski lift with the pellet snow falling and the chance that lightning could hit the lift set in.
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I have seen it a few times, but the most memorable was in blizzard like conditions in Keystone. 60 mph winds, whiteout snow, and just blazing flashes that illuminated everything as blinking freeze frames of the chaotic conditions outside the house.
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About 15yrs ago, in the middle of winter in Vermont, it was snowing to beat the band, the sky was an odd green color and lightning flashed a couple times. I remember it perfectly because it seemed so matching to how odd my life was at the time. I had never seen anything like it before or since.
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This really is a legitimate reaction to thundersnow, for the right minded kind of folks. We had it frequently on the tundra in Alaska. Imagine that much light after being no brighter than dusk for months! The refraction of the lightning on the horizontal snowfall turns everything into 200 watt spot lights for a split second, which leaves you blind and blinking for far too long, if you are doing anything that requires seeing what you are doing. At its peak, thundersnow can be as initially impactful as a flash bang grenade. In my experience, at least.
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