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Central MA too, especially in the woods and the hills where it is not as susceptible to melting from the sun. It can snow in October and it can snow in April.
No. Seattle and areas north has low snowfall. Moving further east, yes. But then as it approaches Chicago and then New England, the snowfall is hit or miss.
No. Seattle and areas north has low snowfall. Moving further east, yes. But then as it approaches Chicago and then New England, the snowfall is hit or miss.
Yea I-90 is not necessarily a good gauge for immediate coastal areas. The map below is pretty good representation for the entire season though.
Last edited by Thealpinist; 04-28-2021 at 11:44 PM..
That map must be very old as most of those areas of 24-48'' range get nowhere near even 24'' on average anymore.
I had to look at that twice too. It's absurd. The map shows northern TN and KY getting up to 48" of snow. Maybe during the last ice age 5" to 12" of snow would be reality.
Last edited by marino760; 04-29-2021 at 07:27 AM..
I had to look at that twice too. It's absurd. The map shows northern TN and KY getting up to 48" of snow. Maybe during the last ice age 5" to 12" of snow would be reality.
Probably it’s measuring in metric, 24 cm = 9.4 in and 48 cm = 18.9 in
This map is better and a more detailed analysis. This is the period between 9/2020 and 4/2021 measured in feet.
But as I have stated before. Gives you a pretty good idea of where snow is most consistent.
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