farlymac
PF McFarland
Snow. In April. It's only supposed to do this in the higher elevations this late in the year. But as the weatherman explained it, the air was very dry, the moisture evaporated as it came down, chilling the air. That air then sank far enough to let the snow accumulate, and to come down in these monster size flakes. Of course, the ground was warm enough that it took a while before it started to pile up.
We may total about two inches before it's over, but then this is all supposed to turn to rain after mid-night. You go ten miles east of here, and there is no snow, but ten miles west of here they have five inches, with more to come.
I'm just glad I won't have to shovel any of it, as it should be gone by the morning.

Not Your Regular Flurry by br1078phot, on Flickr
This is the way I like it. Sidewalk too warm to let the snow build up. Won't have to shovel.

50/50 by br1078phot, on Flickr
Adobe screwed me on a download of Premiere Elements 8.0, so I can't rotate this to the proper orientation. I'm starting to hate their business model.
http://flic.kr/p/e8H34a
Panasonic DMC-TZ3
PF
We may total about two inches before it's over, but then this is all supposed to turn to rain after mid-night. You go ten miles east of here, and there is no snow, but ten miles west of here they have five inches, with more to come.
I'm just glad I won't have to shovel any of it, as it should be gone by the morning.

Not Your Regular Flurry by br1078phot, on Flickr
This is the way I like it. Sidewalk too warm to let the snow build up. Won't have to shovel.

50/50 by br1078phot, on Flickr
Adobe screwed me on a download of Premiere Elements 8.0, so I can't rotate this to the proper orientation. I'm starting to hate their business model.
http://flic.kr/p/e8H34a
Panasonic DMC-TZ3
PF