I lived in Oswego from 1963 thru 1973 when I graduated from HS and left for college and better opportunities in big cities. That winter of 1966, when I was 11, was very memorable since we had a whole week of school off. Built snow forts and did lots of sledding. Shoveling snow that year and the years after was a brutal exercise, though, since we didn't have a snow blower.
Thanks! Great video. I was a junior @ Oswego State and lived on Bridge Street. Massive amounts of snow. Eventually made it to the Beta frat house and there celebrated class cancelations with a beer or two. I remember helping my landlords Ross and Floss Gardner shovel off the roof. We exited the house through a window. Didn't see my car for two weeks. Super memories. Thanks for the trip back to another time. B.T.E. Geek Pledge 1964 S.U.N.Y. Grad. 1968
Excellent job! I lived down at Mexico Point, east side of the river & it was 2 weeks before the plows started on our road. I was 12 years old & my job was to stand on top of the snow chopping it down into my Fathers snow blower. Occasionally I still have nightmares of falling into a giant snow blower.
I will never forget that week. I was stranded in my dorm on the Syracuse campus. Our doors were blocked by drifts and the only way out was through upstairs windows. I remember walking to the dining hall and seeing car antennas coming UP through the snow by our feet. Thanks for posting this!
Great pictures! I was 10 years old and living in Homer, NY during the mighty blizzard of 1966. All I can remember of it now is how fun it was having a whole week off from school!
We were driving home from Great Grandmother's in Bingamton and got stopped on the Tappan Zee overnight. We ended up near the toll booths where everyone kept getting stuck. We we able to use the bathroom and people were taking shelter in that building by.The NY Daily News had a back page picture of all the cars stuck on the bridge and we could see our car. The headline was "It Ain't Zee place to be".Our family of 6 were in a Plymouth Valiant convertible holding the roof bars down as Dad drove and my brother pushed us up hills and both were heros to save us. Many got stuck off the side of the road and got trapped. My Dad was an excellent driver and could fix anything and always knew what to do. We had some leftovers and the drink of milk I had tasted so good. The next morning we were taken to the big state truck building and Dad got the biggest pastrami sandwiches I ever had. We were able to drive back to CT. that afternoon and got stuck on a hill near my Mimi and Pop's house in Trumbull so I was chosen to go thru 3ft of snow to get my Pop to help. When I got there I remember my Pop saying "Don't worry, I will take care of you". It was the most secure feeling I ever had and never forgot. I lost my Dad last yr. at 90, Mom is 88 and I am 64. My brothers and sister are well. The worst part was finding my poor cat had not made it and I felt so horrible, I can still see everything. I thought it was 68 but I remember Ella Grasso was Gov. and the state was closed for 3 days. A different world before 24hr tv, cell phones, weather channel etc.
I believe you have your storms and dates mixed up. The cars stuck on the tappan zee bridge was from the storm on February 9th and 10th 1969. The storm of January 1966 that dropped over 100 inches of snow on Oswego New York was mostly from lake effect off of lake Ontario. I was living in Queens New York at the time of both storms. While the storm of January 1966 was a coastal storm, the snow in New York City and Westchester county where the tappan zee bridge is located turned to rain washing away most of the accumulation. The storm of 1969 paralyzed New York, Northern New Jersey, and Connecticut. Food had to be brought in by helicopter to people stranded at Kennedy airport. I remember both storms very well.
Great job! I lived down the road from Mr. Sykes and vividly remember his voice on local radio explaining what was going on and how unusual this storm was. Thanks!!
My mom was the nurse/manager of the newborn nursery of the Oswego Hospital when this happened, I remember her telling about how they brought the patients in labour in on snowmobiles! We lived across the street from the hospital, and I remember she was working 12-16 hour shifts because so many of the nurses couldn't get in--my aunt lived with us, she was the night supervising nurse, and she worked very long hours too. Great video!
I was going on 10 yrs old, and my parents wouldn’t allow me out because the snow was too high. I watched my Dad and Grandpa shovel for what seemed like days. It was the first time we could not go to church....although my Mother still tried to walk!
Hi there Mr Cardinali, I think you taught me earth science in central square NY; you always liked snow! Nice video. I've been looking for blizzard 66 video to share at my mother' (hertha) 90th birthday party--she taught music at jr high in CS. DT
I grew up in Clark Mills, NY, I remember awakening to my fathers car buried in snow . Paths had to be shoveled to make it to the local store . When they came around to remove the snow from the roads they asked my father if it was okay to put it in our yard . We had one heck of a snow pile .
Gladys Fenick...I grew up on Seneca Turnpike and attended Clark Mills Elementary. Finished sixth grade in 1974, the last year the school was open. I was only 3 in 1966 and have no recollection of the blizzard. i remember local store Jimmy Nolan's and Meelan's Market.
I remember this storm, my mother and her Aunts were on there way to Florida, they had gotten snowed in at Baltimore, Maryland. My father, he was home to care for the business and their 3 children. The business waited while he was snowed in with 3 young kids.
my mom was in 1st grade during this blizzard. she and my grandparents had to walk to the nearby store for milk cuz of all the roads being closed. they lived off Portland Avenue. beautiful clear pictures! It looks like these were taken today.
I was in Seneca Falls, NY during this storm. In front of my girl friends house on ST RT 89 the snow was so deep there was an actual one lane tunnel through a drift across the road so cars could get past. And the next year in 1967 I was a freshman at SUNY at Oswego and we got a slide show on the 66 storm and what to expect for the upcoming year. We didn't get that much snow but between the 30 ft tall ice wall on the shoreline and constant lake effect snow with high winds it was quite the experience. Much different than the snow storms in the Finger Lakes.
I believe just a week or so before it was in the 60's, just like spring! I was living in Fairport, NY with my folks and 4 sisters. I believe we had around 80 inches! Out of school for the entire week!!
One small correction concerning the nature of the 'Blizzard of '66'. but otherwise your tale is a great memory story...very accurate. The only thing was that this was a combination storm. It began as you said, on Thursday as the blizzard that had come up the coast dragging Atlantic moisture (heavy stuff) but as it turned and headed east, we in upstate NY, myself on West Seneca St. in Oswego, got hammered by the WNW backwash wind wind, following the east bound 'Atlantic' storm. This change in wind direction turned the coastal storm into our first officially labelled 'lake effect' storm. At the time Bob Sykes was reporting on WSGO,. What we now know as lake effect bands, Bob labeled as 'cloud streets'. He observed these formations from his own weather tower in his back yard. I've tried for a long time, to no avail, to find if Bob Sykes originated the term 'lake effect' shortly after this legendary weather event occurred.
This makes sense to me, having lived there. Anytime a big storm rolls through, it's the lake effect after that really does it. And makes sense why they got more snow than anyone else. And why it snowed for days. And usually those rates of snowfall, are only from lake effect.
Wow! I can remember the Blizzard of 1966 down here in Maryland. We thought we had it bad, but nothing like this. I was in third grade and we didn't have school for two weeks. I remember how hard it was to shovel - the snow was like concrete. Our recent encounter with Jonas was nothing compared to 1966.
I remember '77. My parents house in Brownville. Dad had to put a stepladder to the roof of the house, from there he built a staircase into the snow so we could get to the top of the snow and play. "Watch out for the power lines..", as they were eye level.
I was born and raised in Philadelphia I was born in December 1966 at 9:28 pm my mother went into labor with me at 4:00pm my father came home from work took my mother straight to the hospital the snow was coming down bad. That was December 1966. My father was stuck ar the hospital . While my 3 brothers were home with the chicken pox. They said that blizzard was bad.
I too lived in the Gardener's at the time and remember Bob disappearing in the snow. Toward the end of the video I spotted Beta Brother Bob Paris' MGA coupe buried by the snow. As we were just up the road from Buckland's, being marooned wasn't too bad!
@MyFreedomChannel I read your post and had to see if I knew you. Guess not but boy do I love your videos. You are well spoken on our heritage. Keep speaking up!
Moved there in the late 70's for 3 years,worked on the lake.Before that visited a girlfriend that went to college there in 71 thru 74. Got snowed in with her in late Jan 72 storm. People in town always talked about this 66 monster. 72 was a complete white out. Visibility was maybe 2 feet.Serious.Her dorm Oneida Hall had 20 foot drifts., up to 2nd floor.I fell in love with that city. lived in Speculator ,had serious snow, but not Oswego serious.
I was due to have a baby the beginning of Feb., 1966. We had a 4 year old. No one could get out of the street..ours wasn't plowed for 4 days. We were scared to death I would go into labor..there was literally no way to get out of the house. The snow was so high we couldn't open the front door. Andrea was born 2-17-66 and she's still late for everything!
I was 5 and the snow in the country was piled and wind blown right up to my 2nd floor bedroom window. I remember wanting to take my sled out my bedroom window. My memory tells me I did, though I can't imagine my Mom allowing it! I also remember riding in a dog sled behind my Dad's snow mobile, we were riding along and all of a sudden we dropped about 15 feet straight down. Dad didn't realize we were heading to a back roadway where the banks were up that high. Thankfully we landed safely!
Blizzard of '66 left a swath of snow inland from Virginia to upstate NY. The greatest amount was snow was on Jan. 31st in CNY where Lake Ontario enhanced the snow amounts. According to National Weather co-operative observers the St Alban's area received only about 10" on that day. The same co-op observer recorded on March 20th, 1966 a cloudy cool day with temperatures in the mid 30's and low 40's with a trace of precipitation
Anybody remember rescue crews in snowshoes poking down through the snow on the main st. in Oswego, looking for occupied cars? The comraderie when everyone finally got out on foot on the only cleared street was memorable. Cyril
Folks forget the 1972 winter storm,drove thru it from cats to Oneida Hall,followed trooper and plow from Marathon on 81 n to 481, cried with joy when I saw the elks statue at104.Did it for love with a dose of stupidity.Snowed in for a week,with girlfriend at the time who lived in dorm.God Bless Southern Comfort.
I was there. It happened during intersession, which was mid to late January. There were terrible thunderstorms, worse than any I ever saw in the summer. Guy in Hart or Funnelle got appendicitis and they had to drag him to the hospital on a sled. I went out as the storm was ending and went downtown. I wore hockey equipment under my parka. Still was all beat up when I got back. There was little snow on campus as the winds pushed it all inland, so I was trying to get back to Riggs on ice. Two feet forward, one foot back.
@windy208 Hello is This the same Paul that was a teacher at Central Square--I remember your name but don't remember what you taught or anything--I graduated the square in 68--had 7 younger brothers and was from West Monroe near the edge of Constantia--By the way good pictures.
Because generally regular plows are more useful. The snowblowers are much more expensive. You only need 1 or 2 to trim back the sides of the road after the regular plows go through.
Yes, we are a couple of years away from the 50th anniversary. I had just been discharged from the USAF. Where? San Francisco Ca. I hooked up with a buddy Gary, who went in at the same time. He was in Tacoma Wash. I, who had money, (Gary, who had gotten married, didn't have any) bought a 1954 Mercury and we proceeded to load it up with their belongings. which included a young baby. Then, in the middle of January 1966 we drove across the U.S. this included all the mountain ranges. By the way, we did this with no snow tires, it was dicey in the Rockies. We arrived in Martville, N.Y. (Hannibal grads) and I gave the car to Gary, I figured I would find one in the next day or two. Yeah, right, the next day was the start of the blizzard. What an Idiot, I left California with it's hot sun, hot women, hot cars, women, surf, beaches. Did I mention the women? BTW I also remember the blizzard of '58 which I think was worse. Then there was "77
roadtester--similar story--Went to Camp Pendleton in '70(with my new wife) in a '68 SuperBee with no a/c in August..Guess my story is slightly warmer!!!!!!
The streets around my house were cleared by payloaders, graders, and even bulldozers. All heavy equipment was conscripted by the City when it declared a state of emergency.
most of new york state gets snow like this every winter, mostly buffalo, they get 12-14 feet every year, now i know why florida is busy with tourists every winter
I lived in Oswego from 1963 thru 1973 when I graduated from HS and left for college and better opportunities in big cities. That winter of 1966, when I was 11, was very memorable since we had a whole week of school off. Built snow forts and did lots of sledding. Shoveling snow that year and the years after was a brutal exercise, though, since we didn't have a snow blower.
Thanks! Great video. I was a junior @ Oswego State and lived on Bridge Street. Massive amounts of snow. Eventually made it to the Beta frat house and there celebrated class cancelations with a beer or two. I remember helping my landlords Ross and Floss Gardner shovel off the roof. We exited the house through a window. Didn't see my car for two weeks. Super memories. Thanks for the trip back to another time.
B.T.E. Geek Pledge 1964
S.U.N.Y. Grad. 1968
Excellent job! I lived down at Mexico Point, east side of the river & it was 2 weeks before the plows started on our road. I was 12 years old & my job was to stand on top of the snow chopping it down into my Fathers snow blower. Occasionally I still have nightmares of falling into a giant snow blower.
I had that same job for my Dad!
I will never forget that week. I was stranded in my dorm on the Syracuse campus. Our doors were blocked by drifts and the only way out was through upstairs windows. I remember walking to the dining hall and seeing car antennas coming UP through the snow by our feet.
Thanks for posting this!
Great pictures! I was 10 years old and living in Homer, NY during the mighty blizzard of 1966. All I can remember of it now is how fun it was having a whole week off from school!
Oswego is tough to get around with that much snow. It's actually a pretty place. I was born in Rochester NY 1966!!
We were driving home from Great Grandmother's in Bingamton and got stopped on the Tappan Zee overnight. We ended up near the toll booths where everyone kept getting stuck. We we able to use the bathroom and people were taking shelter in that building by.The NY Daily News had a back page picture of all the cars stuck on the bridge and we could see our car. The headline was "It Ain't Zee place to be".Our family of 6 were in a Plymouth Valiant convertible holding the roof bars down as Dad drove and my brother pushed us up hills and both were heros to save us. Many got stuck off the side of the road and got trapped. My Dad was an excellent driver and could fix anything and always knew what to do. We had some leftovers and the drink of milk I had tasted so good. The next morning we were taken to the big state truck building and Dad got the biggest pastrami sandwiches I ever had. We were able to drive back to CT. that afternoon and got stuck on a hill near my Mimi and Pop's house in Trumbull so I was chosen to go thru 3ft of snow to get my Pop to help. When I got there I remember my Pop saying "Don't worry, I will take care of you". It was the most secure feeling I ever had and never forgot. I lost my Dad last yr. at 90, Mom is 88 and I am 64. My brothers and sister are well.
The worst part was finding my poor cat had not made it and I felt so horrible, I can still see everything. I thought it was 68 but I remember Ella Grasso was Gov. and the state was closed for 3 days. A different world before 24hr tv, cell phones, weather channel etc.
Thank you for sharing your memories.
Amazing! Thx!
I believe you have your storms and dates mixed up. The cars stuck on the tappan zee bridge was from the storm on February 9th and 10th 1969. The storm of January 1966 that dropped over 100 inches of snow on Oswego New York was mostly from lake effect off of lake Ontario. I was living in Queens New York at the time of both storms. While the storm of January 1966 was a coastal storm, the snow in New York City and Westchester county where the tappan zee bridge is located turned to rain washing away most of the accumulation. The storm of 1969 paralyzed New York, Northern New Jersey, and Connecticut. Food had to be brought in by helicopter to people stranded at Kennedy airport. I remember both storms very well.
Great job! I lived down the road from Mr. Sykes and vividly remember his voice on local radio explaining what was going on and how unusual this storm was. Thanks!!
My mom was the nurse/manager of the newborn nursery of the Oswego Hospital when this happened, I remember her telling about how they brought the patients in labour in on snowmobiles! We lived across the street from the hospital, and I remember she was working 12-16 hour shifts because so many of the nurses couldn't get in--my aunt lived with us, she was the night supervising nurse, and she worked very long hours too. Great video!
My daughter was still being carried and born on the 26th amid the snow banks and folly. Truly a memorable time in my life.
That was a wonderful presentation. Thank you.
I was going on 10 yrs old, and my parents wouldn’t allow me out because the snow was too high. I watched my Dad and Grandpa shovel for what seemed like days. It was the first time we could not go to church....although my Mother still tried to walk!
Great photographs & narration -- very well done, thanks!
I've been sharing this video for years, especially the photo pan out at 1:55.
Hi there Mr Cardinali, I think you taught me earth science in central square NY; you always liked snow! Nice video. I've been looking for blizzard 66 video to share at my mother' (hertha) 90th birthday party--she taught music at jr high in CS. DT
I grew up in Clark Mills, NY, I remember awakening to my fathers car buried in snow . Paths had to be shoveled to make it to the local store . When they came around to remove the snow from the roads they asked my father if it was okay to put it in our yard . We had one heck of a snow pile .
Gladys Fenick...I grew up on Seneca Turnpike and attended Clark Mills Elementary. Finished sixth grade in 1974, the last year the school was open. I was only 3 in 1966 and have no recollection of the blizzard.
i remember local store Jimmy Nolan's and Meelan's Market.
I remember this storm, my mother and her Aunts were on there way to Florida, they had gotten snowed in at Baltimore, Maryland. My father, he was home to care for the business and their 3 children. The business waited while he was snowed in with 3 young kids.
I was in 3rd grade and the snow drifts were up to my chest! We had loads of fun!
My Grandparents lived on East Seneca St in Oswego, only a couple of blocks from the lake. I remember seeing pictures of the storm.
wow..alot of snow..this snowfall happened a year before i was born...very nicely put together and narratated!
Lived in Auburn and was out of work for three days.
Was out of work 3 days during the blizzard of 93 as well.
my mom was in 1st grade during this blizzard. she and my grandparents had to walk to the nearby store for milk cuz of all the roads being closed. they lived off Portland Avenue. beautiful clear pictures! It looks like these were taken today.
I was in Seneca Falls, NY during this storm. In front of my girl friends house on ST RT 89 the snow was so deep there was an actual one lane tunnel through a drift across the road so cars could get past. And the next year in 1967 I was a freshman at SUNY at Oswego and we got a slide show on the 66 storm and what to expect for the upcoming year. We didn't get that much snow but between the 30 ft tall ice wall on the shoreline and constant lake effect snow with high winds it was quite the experience. Much different than the snow storms in the Finger Lakes.
I believe just a week or so before it was in the 60's, just like spring! I was living in Fairport, NY with my folks and 4 sisters. I believe we had around 80 inches! Out of school for the entire week!!
My Nana died the week before, and the ground was bare so they could bury her and not have to wait until spring.
One small correction concerning the nature of the 'Blizzard of '66'. but otherwise your tale is a great memory story...very accurate. The only thing was that this was a combination storm. It began as you said, on Thursday as the blizzard that had come up the coast dragging Atlantic moisture (heavy stuff) but as it turned and headed east, we in upstate NY, myself on West Seneca St. in Oswego, got hammered by the WNW backwash wind wind, following the east bound 'Atlantic' storm. This change in wind direction turned the coastal storm into our first officially labelled 'lake effect' storm. At the time Bob Sykes was reporting on WSGO,. What we now know as lake effect bands, Bob labeled as 'cloud streets'. He observed these formations from his own weather tower in his back yard. I've tried for a long time, to no avail, to find if Bob Sykes originated the term 'lake effect' shortly after this legendary weather event occurred.
This makes sense to me, having lived there. Anytime a big storm rolls through, it's the lake effect after that really does it. And makes sense why they got more snow than anyone else. And why it snowed for days. And usually those rates of snowfall, are only from lake effect.
Wow! I can remember the Blizzard of 1966 down here in Maryland. We thought we had it bad, but nothing like this. I was in third grade and we didn't have school for two weeks. I remember how hard it was to shovel - the snow was like concrete. Our recent encounter with Jonas was nothing compared to 1966.
I remember '77. My parents house in Brownville. Dad had to put a stepladder to the roof of the house, from there he built a staircase into the snow so we could get to the top of the snow and play. "Watch out for the power lines..", as they were eye level.
I was 7 living in Baltimore, and remember it well...... have pics too....
I was born and raised in Philadelphia I was born in December 1966 at 9:28 pm my mother went into labor with me at 4:00pm my father came home from work took my mother straight to the hospital the snow was coming down bad. That was December 1966. My father was stuck ar the hospital . While my 3 brothers were home with the chicken pox. They said that blizzard was bad.
I too lived in the Gardener's at the time and remember Bob disappearing in the snow. Toward the end of the video I spotted Beta Brother Bob Paris' MGA coupe buried by the snow. As we were just up the road from Buckland's, being marooned wasn't too bad!
I am SW New York. An elderly man in the store today told me about this blizzard. Said he rode his snowmobile around - it was something!
@MyFreedomChannel I read your post and had to see if I knew you. Guess not but boy do I love your videos. You are well spoken on our heritage. Keep speaking up!
Moved there in the late 70's for 3 years,worked on the lake.Before that visited a girlfriend that went to college there in 71 thru 74. Got snowed in with her in late Jan 72 storm. People in town always talked about this 66 monster. 72 was a complete white out. Visibility was maybe 2 feet.Serious.Her dorm Oneida Hall had 20 foot drifts., up to 2nd floor.I fell in love with that city. lived in Speculator ,had serious snow, but not Oswego serious.
I was due to have a baby the beginning of Feb., 1966. We had a 4 year old. No one could get out of the street..ours wasn't plowed for 4 days. We were scared to death I would go into labor..there was literally no way to get out of the house. The snow was so high we couldn't open the front door. Andrea was born 2-17-66 and she's still late for everything!
I was 5 and the snow in the country was piled and wind blown right up to my 2nd floor bedroom window. I remember wanting to take my sled out my bedroom window. My memory tells me I did, though I can't imagine my Mom allowing it! I also remember riding in a dog sled behind my Dad's snow mobile, we were riding along and all of a sudden we dropped about 15 feet straight down. Dad didn't realize we were heading to a back roadway where the banks were up that high. Thankfully we landed safely!
This was a great reminsece(sp).. thanks much!
Nice job, thanks; very nostalgic.
I was born that evening in Ontario and always remember the story of my adventure.
What states got this amount of snow?I was born on March 20th,1966 in St.Albans, Vermont.7:07am.What day was that date on?
Blizzard of '66 left a swath of snow inland from Virginia to upstate NY. The greatest amount was snow was on Jan. 31st in CNY where Lake Ontario enhanced the snow amounts. According to National Weather co-operative observers the St Alban's area received only about 10" on that day. The same co-op observer recorded on March 20th, 1966 a cloudy cool day with temperatures in the mid 30's and low 40's with a trace of precipitation
Anybody remember rescue crews in snowshoes poking down through the snow on the main st. in Oswego, looking for occupied cars? The comraderie when everyone finally got out on foot on the only cleared street was memorable. Cyril
Cool video
Folks forget the 1972 winter storm,drove thru it from cats to Oneida Hall,followed trooper and plow from Marathon on 81 n to 481, cried with joy when I saw the elks statue at104.Did it for love with a dose of stupidity.Snowed in for a week,with girlfriend at the time who lived in dorm.God Bless Southern Comfort.
I was there. It happened during intersession, which was mid to late January. There were terrible thunderstorms, worse than any I ever saw in the summer. Guy in Hart or Funnelle got appendicitis and they had to drag him to the hospital on a sled. I went out as the storm was ending and went downtown. I wore hockey equipment under my parka. Still was all beat up when I got back. There was little snow on campus as the winds pushed it all inland, so I was trying to get back to Riggs on ice. Two feet forward, one foot back.
@windy208
Hello is This the same Paul that was a teacher at Central Square--I remember your name but don't remember what you taught or anything--I graduated the square in 68--had 7 younger brothers and was from West Monroe near the edge of Constantia--By the way good pictures.
Anyone know where I can find photos of Long Island during this storm?
Thanks.. Dan
And here in Houston everyone panics when we have ANY snow or ice.
I remember digging out the neighbors across the street as the snow drifted over their roofs.
Why are there almost no dpw snowblower in oswego?
Because generally regular plows are more useful. The snowblowers are much more expensive. You only need 1 or 2 to trim back the sides of the road after the regular plows go through.
Yes, we are a couple of years away from the 50th anniversary. I had just been discharged from the USAF. Where? San Francisco Ca. I hooked up with a buddy Gary, who went in at the same time. He was in Tacoma Wash. I, who had money, (Gary, who had gotten married, didn't have any) bought a 1954 Mercury and we proceeded to load it up with their belongings. which included a young baby. Then, in the middle of January 1966 we drove across the U.S. this included all the mountain ranges. By the way, we did this with no snow tires, it was dicey in the Rockies. We arrived in Martville, N.Y. (Hannibal grads) and I gave the car to Gary, I figured I would find one in the next day or two. Yeah, right, the next day was the start of the blizzard. What an Idiot, I left California with it's hot sun, hot women, hot cars, women, surf, beaches. Did I mention the women? BTW I also remember the blizzard of '58 which I think was worse. Then there was "77
roadtester--similar story--Went to Camp Pendleton in '70(with my new wife) in a '68 SuperBee with no a/c in August..Guess my story is slightly warmer!!!!!!
j wenum
Oh,went from Ohio out to the left coast!!
Interesting, thanks.
The streets around my house were cleared by payloaders, graders, and even bulldozers. All heavy equipment was conscripted by the City when it declared a state of emergency.
I remember mom opening the drapes and it looked like the world disappeared.scary for my age back then.yes we as are due for another.
It was a bad winter. It will happen again.
You can read me bedtime stories anytime.
Thank God for Joseph Armond Bombardier! (The Canadian the inverted the ski doo!)
1966 was a bad blizzard year.
97 did I hear that wrong
2019 Rochester New York snow trucks outside snow melt on the streets
Onterio ny i lived i was 8
Posted on Facebook 2019
holy crap the most I ever got was 34 lol
most of new york state gets snow like this every winter, mostly buffalo, they get 12-14 feet every year, now i know why florida is busy with tourists every winter
Screw this. You have to be out of your mind to live in areas that get snow like this.
Wow...man, she must have been SOME girl! I hope the date was worth it!
cool
Thank God for Global warming..