The 1895 snowstorm was indeed extraordinary for New Orleans and the Gulf Coast region. During this historic event, a massive snow system spanning from Texas to Alabama dropped approximately 8.2 to 10 inches of snow in New Orleans. The snowfall was so significant that in some areas, the snow was so deep it didn't completely melt for nearly a week. Nearby locations experienced even more dramatic snowfall, with Baton Rouge receiving 12.5 inches, Hammond and New Orleans both getting 10 inches, and some areas like Houma, Louisiana, seeing up to 16 inches.
Is rare to see snow in New Orleans. It happened before, but is very rare. But lets not forget that New Orleans is not tropical; is subtropical. In fact, NYC has the same climate classification, but is colder because is close to the continental climate zone, but is also subtropical like New Orleans.
A "record," eh? Not true - we got snow throughout the eighties & nineties... the news ppl are hyperbolic liars; _don't believe your own eyes,_ right? 😂
This is great!! Thanks for showing this!!
global warming huh?
❤🌨👍
I remember last time u guys did live feed here back in 2021 hurricane ida
you should check the Live Tab on th Channel . Theres a DVR from Hurricane Helene and Miltion
Ah me too! Was that the Spanish Navy pilot episode? The lady and the dog in the truck.
The name of this snowstorm is called Enzo.
This is wild 😂
, '84 Slidell two inches. Made a snow man in the middle of the street (that was NOT my idea lol. Neighbor)
Ppl pretending like this is the first time it snowed in NOLA 😂
YUP., snow was much more common, AND recent here - i 'memba! 🙂↕️
@@lazertroll702 Yeah maybe a cm, but 15 cm? Not even close
North Florida here. Not as much snow but serious ice on our palm trees. It's melting now, and we got power back on. But it's still so cold.
Reminds me of the mission in Crysis, "Paradise lost" where the tropical island gets frozen
The 1895 snowstorm was indeed extraordinary for New Orleans and the Gulf Coast region. During this historic event, a massive snow system spanning from Texas to Alabama dropped approximately 8.2 to 10 inches of snow in New Orleans.
The snowfall was so significant that in some areas, the snow was so deep it didn't completely melt for nearly a week. Nearby locations experienced even more dramatic snowfall, with Baton Rouge receiving 12.5 inches, Hammond and New Orleans both getting 10 inches, and some areas like Houma, Louisiana, seeing up to 16 inches.
It snowed way harder in Baton Rouge than it did in New Orleans.
If I lived there, I'd think it was pretty cool.
global warming huh?
Yes I was hoping you'd go there! Watching from Québec Canada 😉
Thank you, this IS awesome,!!
Is rare to see snow in New Orleans. It happened before, but is very rare. But lets not forget that New Orleans is not tropical; is subtropical. In fact, NYC has the same climate classification, but is colder because is close to the continental climate zone, but is also subtropical like New Orleans.
Is so rare to see palm trees covered in snow! But lets not forget that New Orleans is not tropical, it is subtropical.
Kinda pretty snow on palm trees
i thought the same thing looking out the window here in texas
Palm trees & snow...who'd a thunk? 😂
So how much snow ❄️ did you get in New Orleans,LA?
Just to let you know bourbon street is a one-way🤣
When you don’t live in snow it’s great except the tropical plants don’t do well.
Will the south ever get salt trucks and snow plows so they don't have to totally shutdown?
A "record," eh? Not true - we got snow throughout the eighties & nineties... the news ppl are hyperbolic liars; _don't believe your own eyes,_ right? 😂