desh ([personal profile] desh) wrote2006-01-06 11:24 am

10 years ago today



The snow started late on the Saturday evening of the 6th, and din't stop until Monday morning, the 8th. It was illegal to drive for non-emergency purposes on any Philadelphia highways for at least all day Monday, and perhaps Tuesday as well. The final total at the Philly airport was 30.7 inches, a record for one storm.

Where I lived, up on a hill in the Philly suburbs, it might've been more. I couldn't tell, because of all the snow blowing around. I kept trying to measure with my yardstick, and I found that the snow was falling at over an inch per hour for awhile. When the snow plows finally came, they blocked the end of my driveway, such that the only way to get past (or at least the most fun way) was to backflop over the plowed hill and land on the two-foot-plus cushion on the driveway itself. They even had to fully plow in a connecting street in our development, because there wasn't anywhere else to put the snow, so for weeks afterwards we had to drive around the block an extra quarter-mile or so to get anywhere.

For days after, I played with my neighbors: 3 kids about my age, and an Alaskan Malamute. We made the dog pull Lauren around the neighborhood on a sled, and they both loved it. Once Lauren actually got stuck in a snow drift, and I had the dog take care of her while I went to get more help to pull her out. Sort of a reverse Lassie situation, I guess. I was having the time of my life.

And yet, my school opened that Thursday. Couldn't even get a full week off! (At least another storm came on Friday and closed everything down again.)

[identity profile] angrychicken.livejournal.com 2006-01-06 04:37 pm (UTC)(link)
I remember that! School was closed for two days straight - it was awesome. I'd never seen that much snow before in my life. I remember I tried to stand on a snow drift in the yard and fell right through. I think we had two feet of snow? Not exactly sure.
zorkian: Icon full of binary ones and zeros in no pattern. (Default)

[personal profile] zorkian 2006-01-06 05:03 pm (UTC)(link)
I was there in the white area -- not far from Philly, actually. Around McGuire AFB in NJ. It was pretty intense. Totally fun storm though! We were out trying to shovel it as it fell to keep the sidewalks clear, but it wasn't working so well. Heh.

[identity profile] captainjew.livejournal.com 2006-01-06 05:37 pm (UTC)(link)
The plow made a GIANT hill on my street that was easily 20 feet high. A friend of mine and I hollowed it out and made an igloo.

[identity profile] captainjew.livejournal.com 2006-01-06 05:37 pm (UTC)(link)
Then we buried my sister in there.
janinedog: (Default)

[personal profile] janinedog 2006-01-06 06:44 pm (UTC)(link)
I totally remember the blizzard of '96. I lived in Stormville, NY at the time...which is in the gray area of that map. However, that town was at a higher elevation than everything around it, so we always got more snow than everyone around us. If I remember correctly, we did get the whole week off from school. I do remember we couldn't even open the doors of the house for a day or two. It was awesome.

[identity profile] rue101.livejournal.com 2006-01-07 06:26 am (UTC)(link)
i think that was the year my brother sister and i went to play in the snow in the playground across the street and got stuck bc she was smaller than the snow. she was only ~3, and we had to do a kind of leapfrog thing where one of us would climb a few feet, the other would hand her over and repeat until we got out =P

[identity profile] tobeginagain.livejournal.com 2006-01-08 05:18 pm (UTC)(link)
At first I thought this said 4 years ago today and I was confused because I thought I remembered it. But I was wrong, and I do remember it. We shoveled so much snow on both sides of our driveway that on one side we carved out a multi-room igloo with extra storm windows as skylights and on the other side we made a luge all the way down our front yard. All the neighbors came to play on it - you climbed a ladder up to the top and we put an old bedrail at the edge to keep people from falling off and onto the driveway.