Nashy you love drama
Fukkin storm was a baby
Fukkin storm was a baby
You people in the north need to count your blessings and quit your bitching. The weather services have models and called what they did reason. It isn't an exact science. You don't see Florida bitching when a projected cat 5 storm comes land at a cat 1. Mother nature isn't predicable. Good fukkin grief.
| YEAR | DATE | "NAME" | TOTAL | NESIS3 | COMMENTS |
| 2011 | January 26th-27th | TBD | 19.0" | 1 | Snowfall rates of over 3 inches per hour; NYC public schools closed |
| 2010 | December 26th-27th | Blizzard of 2010 | 20.0" | 3 | Massive disruptions to transit systems; wind gusts to 70mph in Suffolk County; over 30" of snow in parts of NJ |
| 2010 | February 25th-26th | N/A | 20.9" | 3 | Extensive damage & power outages from wet snow North; dry snow South & heavy rains East; 3rd major Eastern snowstorm in February |
| 2006 | February 11th-12th | Blizzard of 2006 | 26.9" | 3 | Largest snowstorm in NYC history, surpassing Dec. 26-27, 1947 (26.4"); rare thundersnow reported |
| 2003 | February 16th-17th | Presidents' Day Snowstorm II | 19.8" | 4 | 25.6" of snow recorded at JFK Airport; "Presidents' Day Snowstorm I" brought 12.7" on Feb. 19, 1979 |
| 1996 | January 7th-8th | Blizzard of '96 | 20.2" | 5 | Areas of more than 30" across portions of New Jersey; NYC schools closed, first time since Blizzard of '78 |
| 1983 | February 11th-12th | Megalopolitan Snowstorm | 17.6" | 4 | Occurred during one of the strongest El Niño's of the 20th Century |
| 1978 | February 5th-7th | Blizzard of '78 | 17.7" | 3 | Long Island & New England hardest hit, near hurricane strength winds, thundersnow, 36-hour storm duration |
| 1969 | February 9th-10th | Lindsay Storm | 15.3" | 2 | Mayor John Lindsay took the heat after sections of NYC remained unplowed for a week |
| 1967 | February 6th-7th | N/A | 15.2" | 2 | Blizzard conditions produced totals of over 20" in parts of New Jersey |
| 1961 | February 3rd-4th | N/A | 17.4" | 4 | Storm followed prolonged cold period (16 days of teens and 20's); JFK Airport recorded 24.0" |
| 1960 | December 11th-12th | N/A | 15.2" | 3 | 20.4" recorded at Newark and 17.0" at The Battery |
| 1948 | December 19th-20th | N/A | 16.0" | - | 20-hour duration; Widespread totals of 12-18" across the Metropolitan Area |
| 1947 | December 26th-27th | Big Snow | 26.4" | 2 | The worst blizzard since 1888, and record holder until 2006 |
| 1941 | March 7th-8th | N/A | 18.1" | - | Quick drop-off towards the coast as parts of New Jersey and Eastern Suffolk reported less than 10" of snow |
| 1935 | January 22th-24th | N/A | 17.5" | - | Snows from Gulf Coast to Maine |
| 1920 | February 4th-7th | N/A | 17.5" | - | Parts of Westchester received over 20" of snow |
| 1899 | February 12th-13th | The Blizzard of 1899 | 16.0" | 4 | Temperatures in the single digits for most of the storm |
| 1894 | February 25th-27th | N/A | 15.2" | - | Before the storm, temperatures started out around 0°F, before rising to just above freezing. |
| 1893 | February 17th-18th | N/A | 17.8" | - | Followed a warm spell when temperatures reached as high as 54°F |
| 1892 | March 16th-18th | St. Patrick's Day Snowstorm | 15.4" | - | Largest snowstorm on record for many areas in the South |
| 1888 | March 12th-14th | The Blizzard of '88 | 21.0" | 4 | Extreme blizzard conditions left behind over 50" of snow in some areas of Connecticut and the Hudson Valley |
| 1872 | December 26th | The Great Snow-Storm | ~18" | - | Snow fell from Virginia to Maine and West to Mississippi River |
| 1836 | January 8th-10th | The Big Snow | ~15" | - | Interior sections saw widepread 30-40" tallies |
| 1831 | January 14th-16th | The Great Snowstorm | ~15" | - | Rivals Superstorm of 1993 for expansiveness of coverage |
| 1805 | January 26th-28th | N/A | ~24" | - | 48 hours of continous snow |
| 1798 | November 19th-21th | The Long Storm | ~18" | - | Snow from Maryland to Maine |
| YEAR | DATE | "NAME" | TOTAL | NESIS3 | COMMENTS |
| 2011 | January 26th-27th | TBD | 19.0" | 1 | Snowfall rates of over 3 inches per hour; NYC public schools closed |
| 2010 | December 26th-27th | Blizzard of 2010 | 20.0" | 3 | Massive disruptions to transit systems; wind gusts to 70mph in Suffolk County; over 30" of snow in parts of NJ |
| 2010 | February 25th-26th | N/A | 20.9" | 3 | Extensive damage & power outages from wet snow North; dry snow South & heavy rains East; 3rd major Eastern snowstorm in February |
| 2006 | February 11th-12th | Blizzard of 2006 | 26.9" | 3 | Largest snowstorm in NYC history, surpassing Dec. 26-27, 1947 (26.4"); rare thundersnow reported |
| 2003 | February 16th-17th | Presidents' Day Snowstorm II | 19.8" | 4 | 25.6" of snow recorded at JFK Airport; "Presidents' Day Snowstorm I" brought 12.7" on Feb. 19, 1979 |
| 1996 | January 7th-8th | Blizzard of '96 | 20.2" | 5 | Areas of more than 30" across portions of New Jersey; NYC schools closed, first time since Blizzard of '78 |
| 1983 | February 11th-12th | Megalopolitan Snowstorm | 17.6" | 4 | Occurred during one of the strongest El Niño's of the 20th Century |
| 1978 | February 5th-7th | Blizzard of '78 | 17.7" | 3 | Long Island & New England hardest hit, near hurricane strength winds, thundersnow, 36-hour storm duration |
| 1969 | February 9th-10th | Lindsay Storm | 15.3" | 2 | Mayor John Lindsay took the heat after sections of NYC remained unplowed for a week |
| 1967 | February 6th-7th | N/A | 15.2" | 2 | Blizzard conditions produced totals of over 20" in parts of New Jersey |
| 1961 | February 3rd-4th | N/A | 17.4" | 4 | Storm followed prolonged cold period (16 days of teens and 20's); JFK Airport recorded 24.0" |
| 1960 | December 11th-12th | N/A | 15.2" | 3 | 20.4" recorded at Newark and 17.0" at The Battery |
| 1948 | December 19th-20th | N/A | 16.0" | - | 20-hour duration; Widespread totals of 12-18" across the Metropolitan Area |
| 1947 | December 26th-27th | Big Snow | 26.4" | 2 | The worst blizzard since 1888, and record holder until 2006 |
| 1941 | March 7th-8th | N/A | 18.1" | - | Quick drop-off towards the coast as parts of New Jersey and Eastern Suffolk reported less than 10" of snow |
| 1935 | January 22th-24th | N/A | 17.5" | - | Snows from Gulf Coast to Maine |
| 1920 | February 4th-7th | N/A | 17.5" | - | Parts of Westchester received over 20" of snow |
| 1899 | February 12th-13th | The Blizzard of 1899 | 16.0" | 4 | Temperatures in the single digits for most of the storm |
| 1894 | February 25th-27th | N/A | 15.2" | - | Before the storm, temperatures started out around 0°F, before rising to just above freezing. |
| 1893 | February 17th-18th | N/A | 17.8" | - | Followed a warm spell when temperatures reached as high as 54°F |
| 1892 | March 16th-18th | St. Patrick's Day Snowstorm | 15.4" | - | Largest snowstorm on record for many areas in the South |
| 1888 | March 12th-14th | The Blizzard of '88 | 21.0" | 4 | Extreme blizzard conditions left behind over 50" of snow in some areas of Connecticut and the Hudson Valley |
| 1872 | December 26th | The Great Snow-Storm | ~18" | - | Snow fell from Virginia to Maine and West to Mississippi River |
| 1836 | January 8th-10th | The Big Snow | ~15" | - | Interior sections saw widepread 30-40" tallies |
| 1831 | January 14th-16th | The Great Snowstorm | ~15" | - | Rivals Superstorm of 1993 for expansiveness of coverage |
| 1805 | January 26th-28th | N/A | ~24" | - | 48 hours of continous snow |
| 1798 | November 19th-21th | The Long Storm | ~18" | - | Snow from Maryland to Maine |

