Hello,
It's another freezing cold winter day in Boston, but the sunshine and blue sky bear little resemblance to what was happening 29 years ago in the Boston area. On February 6, 1978, what started out as a normal somewhat cloudy, snowy day turned into the Great Blizzard of '78 (1978). I have seen on Amazon and Barnes&Noble that a book about the event has been published. In the afternoon of that memorable day, the snow started coming down, at some points, at the rate 0f 4 inches per hour. It took many people hours to get home from work and others were stranded wherever they were for the next week. The snow came down so fast that some people abandoned their cars on Route 128 because the snow was coming so fast that it was impossible to drive in. What a mess after the storm. It snowed continually for two days leaving over 50 inches of snow in some locations and some snow drifts as high as 15 feet. If you were here during the Blizzard of '78, you probably feel that no storm that we have had since that time compares with that blizzard. After the storm, many people were left without power, there was a ban on driving in some towns to allow for the clean up crews to do their work, and some people went out to cross-country ski in the streets of Boston. Fortunately, weather prediction technology has improved, so we would probably receive more warning prior to such an event now, even in the unpredictable weather scene of New England.
Tuesday, February 6, 2007
Monday, February 5, 2007
Another cold day in Boston
It's another cold day in Boston. This is making up for all that warm weather we had in December and January. But, still no significant snow.
Of historical interest, 29 years ago today, a storm started brewing in the Carolinas. Next historical Boston weather bit to come in the next blog.
Of historical interest, 29 years ago today, a storm started brewing in the Carolinas. Next historical Boston weather bit to come in the next blog.
Saturday, February 3, 2007
It finally snowed (a little)
Hello,
This is a blog that will be added to until February 9, 2007. Yesterday was Groundhog Day and I am not sure whether the official groundhog saw his shadow or stayed up and about to anticipate an early spring. In the Boston area, it was cloudy part of the day and sunny part of the day, so we may be in for a lot more winter, or may look forward to an early spring. Last night it snowed a couple of inches in the Boston suburbs, which is news because it has been one of the most snowless winters in history in Boston. Today it is sunny and seasonally cold; not at all like the strange 60 degree weather we had in December. Could this really be global warming, or is it just a strange New England weather pattern, or maybe some of each.
Anyways, February is traditionally the month when we have had some of our biggest snowstorms. We will see how our weather pattern goes this week for this blog.
February in Boston
This is a blog that will be added to until February 9, 2007. Yesterday was Groundhog Day and I am not sure whether the official groundhog saw his shadow or stayed up and about to anticipate an early spring. In the Boston area, it was cloudy part of the day and sunny part of the day, so we may be in for a lot more winter, or may look forward to an early spring. Last night it snowed a couple of inches in the Boston suburbs, which is news because it has been one of the most snowless winters in history in Boston. Today it is sunny and seasonally cold; not at all like the strange 60 degree weather we had in December. Could this really be global warming, or is it just a strange New England weather pattern, or maybe some of each.
Anyways, February is traditionally the month when we have had some of our biggest snowstorms. We will see how our weather pattern goes this week for this blog.
February in Boston
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