2:22 - I remember that storm well. We had about three feet of snow in about 22 hours; it started at 1pm and ended around 11am the next day. We were stuck there until a snowplow dug us out two days later. It is definitely the biggest snowstorm I’ve ever seen.
If you are geographically learned, then you'd believe it, but if you aren't, would you believe me if I said Minnesota has a higher record for most snowfall record in 24hrs than New Mexico You'd be wrong
@@EnjoySackLunch From the Weather Channel website: Hawaii's 6.5-inch record was set at Haleakalā on Maui at an elevation of about 10,000 feet on Feb. 2, 1936. No official records exist, but Mauna Kea and Mauna Loa on Hawaii's Big Island may have seen higher totals in 24 hours.
if it hasn't changed since 1936 it's likely that it was beaten(but hasn't been recorded). mauna kea and mauna loa are both almost 4000 feet taller than haleakala.
All of Alaska gets snow. Most of California does not, although the Sierra Nevadas and the San Gabriel Mountains are exceptions. Most of the Alaskan Panhandle and the Alaska Range get very heavy snowfall. Alaska is also about four times larger than California. So I believe that more snow falls on Alaska than on any other state and I don’t even think it would be close.
Gonna have to remake this video with the recent Gulf storm! 😄
Bro I know 😂
2:22 - I remember that storm well. We had about three feet of snow in about 22 hours; it started at 1pm and ended around 11am the next day. We were stuck there until a snowplow dug us out two days later. It is definitely the biggest snowstorm I’ve ever seen.
The fact that it jumps from South Carolina to Illinois is really strange
And not only that, the record for SC was in the lowlands. Doesn't add up to me lol
Coloradooo babbyyy
You should do this it’s daily rainfall records next 😁
Need an updated video cuz of Enzo
where did you get these maps
@emperor192 gisgeography.com/us-map-collection/
This wasn't the exact website, but it has the same images
@@PennTheFrede thanks
Thanks @@PennTheFrede
If you are geographically learned, then you'd believe it, but if you aren't, would you believe me if I said Minnesota has a higher record for most snowfall record in 24hrs than New Mexico
You'd be wrong
My state was first!
Southwest Florida never gets snow sadly.
I've never seen it.
Colorado all day
@@Flavourtorical3220Cant even evict illegal gangs from your apartments lmao
2:16 THATS WHERE I LIVE
Minnesota is relatively low on this list
Very Cool
i find the hawaii one hard to believe, Mauna kea and mauna loa are much taller and much snowier then the mountains on maui
Learn the rules
@EnjoySackLunch What are the rules?
@@EnjoySackLunch From the Weather Channel website: Hawaii's 6.5-inch record was set at Haleakalā on Maui at an elevation of about 10,000 feet on Feb. 2, 1936. No official records exist, but Mauna Kea and Mauna Loa on Hawaii's Big Island may have seen higher totals in 24 hours.
if it hasn't changed since 1936 it's likely that it was beaten(but hasn't been recorded). mauna kea and mauna loa are both almost 4000 feet taller than haleakala.
and now floridas record is broken!
Dc record?
According to Weather.gov the record was set on Jan 28, 1922 at 21.0". I didn't include it since it's not a state.
Collectively as a state, California gets more inches of snow than any other state
Wrong, Alaska.
That's what I was thinking @@lmaobrae_wut
@@lmaobrae_wutAlaska does not get as much precipitation as California, so i assume it is california.
All of Alaska gets snow. Most of California does not, although the Sierra Nevadas and the San Gabriel Mountains are exceptions. Most of the Alaskan Panhandle and the Alaska Range get very heavy snowfall. Alaska is also about four times larger than California. So I believe that more snow falls on Alaska than on any other state and I don’t even think it would be close.
Well, this video didn't age well