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Thread: Some Perspective on This "huge" Storm in the Sierra

  1. #1
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    Some Perspective on This "huge" Storm in the Sierra

    Apparently, this isn't the first, or last time this will happen. I fucking love Tahoe! link to story

    Unforgettable Winter Storms

    Truckee’s history is rich with tales of unforgettable winter storms. For example, the winter of 1880 was one of heroic dimensions when it snowed and blowed incessantly for five days with hardly a moment’s interruption.

    A series of brutal storms in 1889 brought 22 feet of snow to Donner Pass by New Year’s Eve, bringing nighttime temperatures of thirty-five degrees below zero. By January 6th, 24 feet of snow had fallen in downtown Truckee.

    The winter of 1907 produced 20-foot snowdrifts. The biggest storm came with wet, heavy snow that snapped the power lines on Donner Summit, plunging Truckee, Reno, Carson City and Virginia City into an eerie darkness. By the time spring arrived, a record 884 inches of snow had fallen in the Sierra.

    In 1916, another mammoth snowstorm descended upon northern California. By January 1st, snow was reported as far as Oakland and Fresno. In the Sierra, the blizzard raged on for 48 hours dropping nearly five feet of snow in downtown Truckee and 13 inches in Reno.

    The “Friday the 13th Storm” of November, 1931, was the first of a series of brutal winter storms that brought 54 inches of continuous snow for five days, bringing below zero temperatures with it. By the time winter was over, 600 inches of snow had fallen in the Sierra.

    Most old-timers agree that the “Mother of all Storms” was the Blizzard of 1952. Weather historian, Mark McLaughlin, refers to it as “the winter that overwhelmed everyone.” In one furious storm, lasting from January 10 to January 17, Donner Summit recorded 154 inches of snow. 80 mph winds blew forty-foot deep snowdrifts, burying homes and cars.

    1952 was the year that the 15-car luxury streamliner, the “City of San Francisco,” became snowbound near Yuba Pass, stranding 196 passengers and a crew of 30. The storm raged on so fiercely that two days passed before the first contact from outside came. Nearly a week passed before the passengers were finally rescued. The rescue was the subject of news headlines worldwide.

    Many old timers remember the winter of 1952 when people used the second-floor windows of their homes as the front door. Smaller homes were totally buried beneath the snow.

    Most of Truckee’s old-time residents are in agreement that winters in the first half of the century were colder and had much greater snowfalls than today.

    Frank Titus, Jr. attended school in Truckee between 1927 and 1938. “I chuckle at today’s storms,” he says. “When I hear about the schools closing, I have to laugh. I remember that we went to school on skis over six feet of snow.”

    The old Truckee High School was located west of the present site of the Veteran’s Building. “When the snow got deep, the teachers who lived in town would wait for the children to clear a path up the hill to the school before venturing out themselves,” says Titus. “If we didn’t clear a path for them, the teachers could not have made it to school.”

    Titus also recalls the power outages in those days. “We kept ourselves prepared for winter,” he says. “We always had kerosene lanterns. We anticipated being snowed in.”

    “Our house had a wood stove in the kitchen,” Titus recalls. “There were no hot water heaters. Hot water was generated through coils in the wood stove that went into a 40 or 50 gallon tank in the bathroom, so you could always have a hot bath.”

    In a 1982 interview, eighty six year old Everet Parker shared his memories of past winters in Truckee. Some of his comments are worth repeating:

    “Roads were not plowed back in the 1920s like they are today. People would walk, skied or ride horse-drawn sleighs to get where they were going. The roads lay covered with snow from November until late June. After the snow hardened, you just walked on top of it.”

    “In 1911 the snow was so deep that a tunnel had to be dug in the snow across Donner Pass Road from the train depot to the stops on Commercial Row,” said Parker.

    With the winter outdoors fun came the tourists. Old highway 40 was usually closed during the winter and, because of the snow, the only way in or out of town was by train. Weekend visitors often stayed on the trains overnight, enjoying all the comforts of the Southern Pacific.

    “Snow sculptures lined Commercial Row,” recalled Parker. “Large sculptures of every kind delighted children and amazed visitors to Truckee.”

    “Even the U.S. mail was delivered by sleigh,” according to Parker. “Sleigh horses were fitted with small snowshoes that allowed them to go over snow banks,” he said.

    “People didn’t let heavy snow affect their activities,” Parker said. “Bonfires on Donner Lake to warm ice skating parties were a popular way of warding off the winter chill.”

    Whether Truckee winters were milder or more severe during the first half of the century remains a subject for lively debate.

  2. #2
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    EWA
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    Ah yes...the "Storm King." There's been some mighty big ones roll through there over the years. Some time ago I watched a PBS special on the history of those mountains and the lives it's claimed. Some wild shit, indeed.

    HEY!!! Let's be careful out there!
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  3. #3
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    no mention of new years 1997, when we got 6 feet followed by rain and reno flooded?

  4. #4
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    man, I would love to live through that. I want a new ice age

  5. #5
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    amidst 5 mountains
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    1907 - 884 inches that year. Now that's a winter. This ninny 500" stuff we get these days.....
    "In the woods, we return to reason and faith. There I feel that nothing can befall me in life, — no disgrace, no calamity, (leaving me my eyes,) which nature cannot repair." -Emerson

  6. #6
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    PA
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    Quote Originally Posted by wookalar
    no mention of new years 1997, when we got 6 feet followed by rain and reno flooded?
    My one and only tahoe experience. Got there it had snowed TONS, then it proceeds to rain the rest of the week and the snow sucked! That really sucked!

  7. #7
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    Jun 2004
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    the backcountry
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    Hells yeah!

    I doubt this storm will break any of these records but it is nice to see nonetheless.
    Who doesn’t love powder?

    The real crux will be (as previously stated) if it stays cold through the end of the storm. There is nothing more depressing when it gets warm at the end of the storm and rains on all the pow pow.

    So fuggin’ stoked to get some this weekend.

  8. #8
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    Feb 2004
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    Loveland, Chair 9.
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    80 mph winds blew forty-foot deep snowdrifts, burying homes and cars.
    Now, that's what I call winter; Alaskans probably laugh at that.
    TGR forums cannot handle SkiCougar !

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Jan 2004
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    Mammoth
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    433
    Mammoth FULL of tourists w/ only limited lift service(lower mountain).
    June Mtn. closed due to high winds and excessive snow amounts.
    4 more feet of snow due by Saturday.
    All day traffic jams and fender benders.
    Sitting in your $500 a night condo all day, priceless!
    2005 is gonna be gooood! (once we get back to empty midweek)
    Gave up on the bottle, give me the lobotomy.

  10. #10
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    Oct 2003
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    Ta-hoes Love Face Shots!
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    Well, maybe this one will stack up. Just heard that the gas stations in Truckee are running out or already out of - yup, you guessed it - gas. Sweet.

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Oct 2003
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    seattle
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    612
    fuck. i'm so glad i decided not to fill up this morning, when my gas light came on. goddammit.

    I-80 just closed too.

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Feb 2004
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    Tawho Citti
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    There wasn't even a chance to get in line at the stations in Tahoe City this morning. Good thing my XTerra runs on pure radness.

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