About the same here. Sucks I can't go out and enjoy it that much.
heeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeatwaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaave
BRING IT ON, BABY!
Hell yes, cool weather remains.
32 degrees F, snowy almost all day. Usually here during winter it can drop to -4 degrees F during the night.
Climate change putting in work
Around 10 inches of snow overnight possible. RIP to that nice 60 degree weather we had early this week.
27.1" was the official Denver measurement, good for 4th largest snowstorm on record
gotta clear sidewalks within 24hr but it's cool cause i'm a socialist
Took the kids up to snow on Thursday, it's raining and 48 degrees here again today, kinda want to do it again.
Still can't get over snow being a 17 mile drive away.
Only got 5-8 inches in my area but it's the wet and heavy stuff. Not only that but getting back from the clinic after getting my leg examined was hell since the traffic lights were coated in snow.
Some people had crashes because of that according to police reports
Tornado day again
https://www.accuweather.com/en/sever...-states/916726LIVE: Alabama residents take cover as tornado outbreak unfolds
Multiple tornadoes have been confirmed in what is being described as a 'particularly dangerous situation' as severe thunderstorms hit the southeastern U.S.
If any people here live in Alabama, Mississippi or other southern states keep your weather radio on or a phone app and know where the safest place in your house is, and be prepared with some bottled water, flashlights, etc.
This is the first time in almost 10 years that the National Weather Service has issued a high risk alert in March.
Sounds like bama needs to invest is sirens tech.
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/deadly-...ma-birmingham/More than 30 million Americans across the South face the threat of severe weather Thursday night, which has already spawned multiple deadly tornadoes. The series of damaging tornadoes sent sparks and debris flying across northeast Alabama.
At least five people were killed by the storms in Calhoun County, Alabama, which is northeast of Birmingham. There are also reports of people trapped in flattened homes.
Much of Alabama is under a state of emergency as a large tornado left a trail of destruction in an area 50 miles long from Tuscaloosa to Birmingham earlier Thursday. Tornado and flash flood alerts have been posted across Mississippi, Alabama, Tennessee and Georgia.
Powerful winds uprooted trees and sent them crashing onto rooftops. Some of the worst damage happened at the Eagle Point subdivision in Shelby County, Alabama. Torn-off roofs revealed the insides of bedrooms and drone footage showed homeowners sifting through debris.
My phone has been going off all day even though I live in east TN it's technically in the track of this thing. There is another intense line of storms at Nashville now and is expected to hit here sometime during the middle of the night. >_<