For the second consecutive day, Nassau County reported snow on Thursday as winter weather came back for another round in Northeast Florida.
It was a unique morning Wednesday as many in Northeast Florida and Southeast Georgia woke up to snow and a mix of winter precipitation!
While the rare weather event has brought joy to many, it’s also causing disruptions for local businesses, as the icy conditions prompt people to stay indoors.
The counties on the First Coast that recorded the highest snowfall totals between Tuesday morning and Wednesday morning are Ware, Glynn and Nassau.
Areas of northern Florida are under a winter storm warning starting on Tuesday, with snow, sleet and ice accumulations possible.
“North winds 25 to 30 knots with gusts up to 45 knots. Seas 7 to 10 feet, occasionally to 13 feet,” the NWS marine forecast from Fernandina Beach south to St. Augustine said. “Intracoastal waters very rough. Showers. Freezing rain after midnight.”
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In January 1977, two Arctic blasts swept through Florida from Jan. 16-20, bringing the coldest temperatures and unprecedented snowfall as far south as Homestead on Jan. 19 — a first in South Florida recorded history. The temperature dropped to 23 degrees in Vero Beach, according to a previous TCPalm article.
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Sankofa: Looking Back to Go Forward opens Jan. 31 and runs through Feb. 28 at the A. L. Lewis Museum at American Beach, 1600 Julia St, Fernandina Beach.
Our winter of discontent has hit a near all-time low as of Jan. 23rd - the 4th coldest January on record so far! And the winter as a whole has had the most freezes since three straight cold winters from 2008-2011.
Jacksonville International Airport (Sleet) 0.1 in The distinction for snow is nuanced by how it forms and this yields several other forms of frozen precipitation. Let’s dive into the differences between snow, sleet, and snow grains, and what makes each unique.