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Blizzard photos and how does Tulsa snow compare to rest of the U.S.?

By WEATHER WORLD on Dec 20, 2011, at 2:34 PM  Updated on 12/20 at 2:48 PM



WEATHER WORLD

...and the livin's easy

At the cookout I went to Sunday evening, it was tank top, cutoff jean shorts and flip flops. My friend said to me, “you look ...

How do Tulsa's June temperatures compare with last June?

This blog was inspired by some of our early morning commenters on the weather forecast story .

Yes, as one of you pointed ...

Rains improve drought conditions, but we're still on the edge

The deluge earlier this month was exciting. For a second, I though that maybe the near-record parched May was just a fluke ...

2011/12/fungraphic1120.jpg

The Weather Channel puts Valdez, Alaska snowfall in perspective.


To date, Tulsa has received 23.07 inches of snow for 2011. This is also our total for the 2010-11 winter season.

The most we've had in one season was 25.6 inches, back in 1923-24.

The Weather Channel compiled the average annual snowfall of areas that are known for snow:

Syracuse, N.Y.: 128 inches
Buffalo, N.Y.: 96.1 inches
Cleveland, Ohio: 68.3 inches
Denver, Colo.: 52.8 inches
Boston, Mass.: 45.1 inches
Chicago, Ill.: 37.7 inches
New York City: 26.7 inches

So, even our highest snowfall year doesn't come close to a typical snowfall year in New York City.

But, those aren't even the highest snowfall areas for the United States. To view those, check out their feature here.

To keep Tulsa's snowfall in perspective, Here's how the snowiest place in the U.S., Valdez, Alaska, compares:

Average yearly snowfall in Tulsa: 9.7 inches
Average yearly snowfall for Valdez: 326.3 inches

Snowiest month in Tulsa on average: January (2.7 inches)
Snowiest month in Valdez on average: December (71.9 inches)

Snowiest month ever in Tulsa: 22.5 inches
Snowiest month ever in Valdez: 180 inches

Snowiest day in Tulsa: 13.2 inches (Feb. 1, 2011)
Snowiest day in Valdez: 47.5 inches (Jan. 16, 1990)

But... that's Alaska, right? What about the rest of the U.S.? The No. 2 city, Crested Butte, Colo., also laughs at Tulsa's meager snowfall:

Average yearly snowfall in Crested Butte: 215.8 inches
Snowiest month on average: January (39.5 inches)
Snowiest day: 31 inches (Dec. 31, 1923)

Well, we beat both their cities' populations! Crested Butte (1,487 people) and Valdez (3,976 people) are relatively small compared to Tulsa (according to the most recent Census, we have 391,906. You can read more on our Census here).

Even with smaller populations, I can tell you from my days of growing up in rural Wisconsin that areas that deal regularly with snow, much like areas that regularly deal with hot temperatures, tornadoes and wildfires like Oklahoma... just deal with it. While Tulsa might have had many non-main road residents snowed in for several days in February, even rural areas in Wisconsin had a fleet of snowplows ready to go at a moment's notice.

And now, I believe I promised you all some blizzard photos. These are from Monday-Tuesday's snowfall, as well as an Arizona one from last week:


Jaydon Deavers, holding stop sign, help kids cross Plains Boulevard Monday in Amarillo, Texas as the "After School Rocks" program left Margaret Wills Elementary School. A severe winter storm hit Amarillo Monday dropping about an inch of snow and ice and closing several highways in the Texas Panhandle. MICHAEL SCHUMACHER/AP Photo/Amarillo Globe-News


A driver tries to dig his car out of the snow at the intersection of U.S. Highway 64 and North 15th Street Tuesday in Guymon. The Oklahoma Panhandle received half a foot of snow on top of a layer of ice and sleet, closing all major highways in the region, stranding motorists. SHAWN YORKS/AP Photo/The Guymon Daily Herald


A skier makes his way through Buffalo Park in Flagstaff, Ariz. on Dec. 13 after more than a foot of snow fell on the mountains of Northern Arizona. JOSH BIGGS/AP Photo/Arizona Daily Sun


Snow covered trees make for a scenic view of the east entrance to the Santa Fe New Mexico state capitol as Santa Fe residents deal with the winter storm that hit Monday . New Mexico state police say a winter storm is shutting highways and causing difficult driving across northern New Mexico. CLYDE MUELLER/AP Photo/The New Mexican

And now... my favorite photo that I've seen thus far from the blizzard:

Fog begins to lift from the Sandia Mountains near Albuquerque, N.M., on Tuesday after a major winter storm moved through the state. New Mexico highway officials say they are mopping up and getting major thoroughfares reopened. SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN/AP Photo

--Althea Peterson
WEATHER WORLD

...and the livin's easy

At the cookout I went to Sunday evening, it was tank top, cutoff jean shorts and flip flops. My friend said to me, “you look ...

How do Tulsa's June temperatures compare with last June?

This blog was inspired by some of our early morning commenters on the weather forecast story .

Yes, as one of you pointed ...

Rains improve drought conditions, but we're still on the edge

The deluge earlier this month was exciting. For a second, I though that maybe the near-record parched May was just a fluke ...

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NEWS FEED

Religious License Plate

1 day ago

119 Comments

Obama's red line Buy ...

5 days ago

90 Comments

Immigration Reform-o-rama Buy ...

3 days ago

79 Comments

NSA spying

4 hours ago