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Weather Diary

February

Weather Events: Canada | United States | World

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Quote of the Month

“Whether it is raining or snowing, the weather is never so bad outside as it looks through a living room window."
— John Kieran.





Significant Weather Events

Canada

31 January to 9 February 1947, Saskatchewan: Memorable blizzard in Saskatchewan. All highways into Regina are blocked. Railway officials declare worst conditions in Canadian rail history. Train is buried in a snowdrift one kilometre (0.6 mile) long and eight metres (36.7 ft) deep.

1 February 1955, Sisson Dam, New Brunswick: New Brunswick's coldest recorded temperature: -47.2° C (-53° F).

1-2 February 1992, Moncton, New Brunswick: A major winter storm blasts the Maritimes dumping 60-90 cm (2-3 feet) of snow across New Brunswick and Nova Scotia. Moncton registers 163.7 cm (64 inches) of snow setting their all time single storm record.

1-3 February 1916, Victoria, British Columbia: . Thirty-eight hour snowstorm shuts down city under 78.3 cm (30.8 in) of white. Strong northerly winds pile the snow into three-metre (9.8 ft) drifts.

2 February 1989, Dawson, Yukon Territory: Highest sea-level pressure ever recorded in Canada: 107.96 kPa (31.88 inches Hg).

2 February 1976, Saint John, New Brunswick: Groundhog Day Storm, one of the fiercest Maritimes storms ever batters Bay of Fundy region with winds clocked at 188 km/h (118 mph), generating 12-m (39 ft) waves with swells of 10 m (32.5 ft).

2 February 2002, Ottawa, Ontario: Ottawa's Rideau Canal, renowned as the world's longest skating rink, finally opens, its latest opening date ever. For most of the winter the Canal has been a stretch of slush and puddles for most of the winter. It will be the shortest skating season ever: 25 days.

2 February 2003, New Brunswick: Freezing rain begins in New Brunswick causing thousands of power outages. Initial estimates indicated the storm costs New Brunswick Power between $3-6 million (CAN) in damage repair. A power company spokesman calls the ice storm the worst in the utility's history, eclipsing the 1998 ice storm in New Brunswick.

2 February 2011, Nova Scotia: The Groundhog Day Blizzard buries parts of Nova Scotia with over 30 cm (1 foot) of snow. New daily snowfall records were set in Halifax, Greenwood and Sydney. Lower Sackville receives 38 cm (15 inches); Greenwood 34 cm (13.4 inches); Halifax, 28 cm (11.0 inches); and Sydney, 24 cm (9.4 inches)

3 February 1947, Snag, Yukon Territory: Temperature drops to minus 63° C (minus 81.4° F), North America's lowest recorded official temperature, capping week of intense cold in the Yukon.

4 February 1878, Montreal, Quebec: White and shivering describe the day in Montreal as 40 cm (16 inches) of snow are followed by temperature dropping to -21.1° C (-6° F).

4 February 1893, Calgary, Alberta: Calgary's coldest day sees temperature dropping to -45° C (-49° F).

5 February 1997, Colchester, Ontario: High winds push mountains of ice against the northern shore of Lake Erie crushing several houses and cottages in Colchester.

5 February 2007, Winnipeg, Manitoba: Winnipeg's temperature plummets to -42.2° C (-44° F), the city's coldest day in 31 years. Wind chill values drop below -50 freezing exposed flesh in less than two minutes.

6 February 2001, New Brunswick: A winter storm drops 30 to 60 cm of snow across New Brunswick. Bathurst records 45 cm (17.7 inches) of snow and Charlo receives 49 cm (19.3 inches).

6 February 2010, Newfoundland: An intense low pressure system brings blizzard conditions to Eastern Newfoundland. When the storm had passed, Bonavista is coved with 53.7 cm (21 inches) of snow. Gander International Airport reports 45.0 cm (17.7 inches); St. John's International Airport, 38.0 cm (15 inches); and Terra Nova, 37.3 cm (14.7 inches).

6-8 February 1885, Nova Scotia: A severe blizzard buries parts of the Province under 40 cm (15.7 inches) of snow. Rain traffic is disrupted as only trains with snowplows attached are able to push through.

7 February 2008, Southern Vancouver Island: High winds, Rain and snow hit much of the southern Vancouver Island but it is the high winds that bring the most attention West to southwest winds blow at 50 to 60 km/h (30-38 mph), with gusts up to 80 km/h (50 mph)in Greater Victoria and the southern Gulf Islands

8 February 2008, British Columbia: A high avalanche risk shuts down critical highways across British Columbia including one of the major routes linking the Lower Mainland and the Interior -- the Coquihalla. (Whiteout conditions on the Coquihalla Highway (Hwy 5) between Merritt and Hope, was closed indefinitely due to an avalanche the pervious day

8-18 February 1979, Iqaluit, Northwest Territories: Temperatures drop to –40° C (-40° F) with winds of 100 km/hour (62 mph) blow and drift the snow around the community, as blizzard forces residents to stay indoors for ten days.

9 February 1899, Norway House, Manitoba: Temperature drops to minus 52.8° C (minus 63° F) to set the province's record for lowest temperature.

9 February 2009, Winnipeg, Manitoba: Between 10 and 15 mm (0.4-0.6 inches) of rain fall across the city The last time Winnipeg reported rain in February was nine years previous, and only eight times in more than a century have significant rains occurred in this month.

10 February 1987, St John's, Newfoundland: A few days after the year's biggest blizzard dumps 30 cm (12 inches) of snow on St John's, a section of a mall roof collapses under the weight of snow on the roof. Seven are injured but none seriously.

10 February 2004, Regina, Saskatchewan: Blizzard conditions and whiteouts under winds gusting to 85 km/h (52 mph). contribute to a multi-vehicle on the Trans-Canada Highway east of Regina. The spectacular 50-vehicle pileup causes many injuries but no deaths.

11 February 1999, Tahtsa Lake, British Columbia: Canada's snowiest day is recorded as Tahtsa Lake located in the Whitesail Range of the Coast Mountains receives 145 cm (57 inches) of snow.

11-12 February 2012, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island: A six-hour snowfall of 32 cm (12.6 inches) buried the provincial capitol during an overnight blizzard that dumped a total of 42 cm (16.5 inches) on the city.

12 February 1934, Calgary, Alberta: Temperatures climbs to 18.9 ° C (66° F) in Calgary, the warmest February day to date.

13 February 1923, House River and Fort McMurry, Alberta: Morning temperature drops to -50° C (-58° F).

14-16 February 1988, Iqaluit, Northwest Territories: A blizzard dumps 20 cm (8 inches) of snow on Iqaluit. Gusty winds exceeding 100 km/h (50 mph) produces drifting that reaches building second floors.

14 February 2010, Vancouver, British Columbia: Vancouver continues to struggle with above normal, non-winter-like temperatures during the first weekend of the 2010 Winter Olympics. In fact earlier this morning, Vancouver was warmer 8.9° C (48° F) than Miami, Florida 7.2° C (45° F)!

15 February 1990, Vancouver, British Columbia: Heavy snow is uncommon in Vancouver, but on this date, residents had to cope with 14 cm (5.5 inches) of wet snow. The moisture-laden snow disrupted traffic and caused school closures.

15-17 February 2003, Badger, Newfoundland: The Exploits, Red Indian and Badger rivers flood the town as ice jams give way on the 15th. This is followed by extremely cold temperatures as low as -20°C (-4°F) which freeze the floodwaters encasing cars, snowmobiles and some homes in ice. Most of Badger's 1,100 residents are evacuated.

16 February 1959, Newfoundland: Five meter (16.7 ft) drifts form during blizzard across The Rock. Six die and 70,000 left without power.

17 February 1974, Lakelse Lake, British Columbia:Record snowfall at Lakelse Lake as 118.1 cm (46.5 inches) falls over 24 hours. Record stands for quarter century as Canada's greatest 24 hour snowfall on record. (see 11 February 1999 above).

17 February 2009, Newfoundland:A large North Atlantic storm hammers Newfoundland t with tremendous wind and heavy snow. Bonavista receives 41.4 cm (16.3 inches) of snow; Terra Nova gets 31.1 cm (12.2 inches). The wind gusts to130 km/h (81 mph on Sagona Island.

17 February 2010, Nova Scotia:A low pressure system developes to the southwest of Nova Scotia and races across the province. Peak snowfalls are recorded at Cape Sable Island and Stanfield International Airport with 32 cm (12.6 inches).

18 February 1966, Winnipeg, Manitoba: Temperature drops to minus 45° C (-49° F), the city's lowest recorded temperature.

18 February 2012, Nova Scotia:A nor'easter moves up the East Coast and hits eastern Nova Scotia and Cape Breton with 20-40 cm of snow (8-16 inches) including 23 cm (9.1 inches) at Sydney.

19 February 1972, Southwestern Quebec: A blizzard smacks southwestern Quebec with 80km/h (50 mph) winds and deposits 37cm (14.6 inches) of snow.

19-20 February 2004, Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island: A super weather bomb Nor'easter strikes Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island. Snow accumulates to nearly a metre (3.3 ft). Blowing and drifting snow under winds gusting to 100 km/h (62 mph) halts all transportation including snowplows, cuts power, and closes schools and businesses. Nova Scotia issues first "Code Black" emergency measures in history.

20 February 1974, Bonilla Island, British Columbia: The mean wind spead hits 143km/h (89 mph), the highest sustained speed on record in British Columbia.

21 February 2011, Saskatchewan: Low temperature records fall in parts of Saskatchewan. Weyburn drops to -32.6°C (-26.7° F), and the community of Rockglen shivvers at a frigid -27.2°C (-17° F).

22-27 February 1982, Prince Edward Island: Five-day blizzard strands Islanders. Winds exceed 80 km/hr (50 mph) and drift the 60-cm (24-inch) snowfall into 7 m (23.3 ft) drifts.

23 February 1999, Corner Brook, Newfoundland: Ice storm strikes Western Newfoundland, knocking out power to 1600 customers. In Corner Brook, ice covers wires and branches to 7 cm (2.75 inches) thick.

23 February 2011, Victoria, British Columbia: A major snowfall hits the Victoria area. While the official accumulation at the airport in Sidney is a record breaking 5 cm (2 inches), other areas of the metropolitan area are buried by greater totals such as the 20 cm (8 inches) at Swan Lake..

24 February 1996, St John's, Newfoundland: St John's warmest February day recorded when thermometer hits 16° C (60.8 ° F).

24 February 2007, Whitehorse, Yukon: Thousands of athletes and visitors descend on Whitehorse for the 2007 Canada Winter Games in late February and are greeted by extreme cold. Temperatures varied from daily highs of -20° C (-4 ° F) to nightly lows of -36° C (-33 ° F) with wind chills dipping to -50. The 24th registered the coldest morning -36.7° C (-34 ° F).

25 February 1965, Toronto, Ontario: The snowiest day on record at Toronto's Pearson International Airport measures 39.9 cm (15.7 inches)

25 February 2012, Wiarton, Ontario: The combination of storm and lake-effect snow hits the southern shores of Lake Huron and Georgia Bay with 15-30 cm (6-12 inches) of snow. Wiarton tops the list with 29 cm (11.4 inches).

26 February 1914, Claresholm, Alberta: Blustery, turbulent winds from the south and west cause extensive damage to the local curling rink. Many buggies, wagons and cars blown hundreds of metres.

26 February 2003, St. Anthony, Newfoundland: A fierce storm batters the Northern Peninsula of Newfoundland, stranding about 300 staff and students in St. Anthony schools. Winds gusting to 90 km/h (56 mph) produce drifting snow and continuous whiteouts, leaving many marooned at schools and the airport.

26 February 1988, Calgary, Alberta: The Winter Olympics? Calgary's high temperature of 18.1° C (64 ° F), is only slightly cooler than the Miami, Florida maximum temperature of 19.4° C (67° F) .

26 February 2006, St John's, Newfoundland: A massive blizzard buries eastern Newfoundland with up to 60 centimetres (24 inches) of snow. Winds gusting to 130 km/h (81 mph) pushes snowdrifts up to 1.5 metres deep (5 ft) and leave many roads in the capital littered with stranded cars.

26-27 February 2010, Noval Scotia: Heavy rains deluge Nova Scotia with Kejimkujik reporting 76 mm (3.0 inches); Western Head, 74 mm (2.9 inches); and Greenwood, 70 mm (2.8 inches). Les Suetes winds in Northern Inverness county gust to 109 km/h (68 mph).

27 February 1992, Trois-Rivières, Quebec: Blowing snow produces near-zero visibility during an intense winter storm causes massive highway pile-up involving 27 cars, 2 ten-wheelers and 4 tractor trailers. Two die and 15 are injured.

27-29 February 2004, Cartwright, Labrador: Blowing snow driven by a powerful blizzard batters parts of eastern Labrador. Snowfall at Cartwright over three days measures 121 cm (47.6 inches). Under wind gusts in excess of 110 km/h (69 mph) blowing snow reduces visibility to zero.

28 February 1959, Listowel, Ontario: An accumulation of heavy snow on the roof of a Listowel Arena causes it to collapse during a peewee hockey practice. Seven boys and the arena director inside are killed.

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United States

1 February 1893, Saint Louis, Missouri: Although the air temperature is only 13° above zero, Fahrenheit (-25° C), thunder and lightning accompany sleet and snow during the evening hours.

1 February 1920,New England: Atmospheric pressure builds over New England to unprecedented levels. Barometer in Portland, Maine reads 31.09 inches Hg (1053 mb), the highest February sea-level pressure ever recorded at sea level in the Eastern US. Hartford, Connecticut hits 31.06 inches Hg (1051 mb).

1 February 1951, Texas to Pennsylvania: Great ice storm produces glaze up to four inches (10 cm) thick from Texas to Pennsylvania. Twenty-five deaths, 500 serious injuries and $100 million damage. Tennessee hardest hit by the storm. Communications and utilities are interrupted for seven to ten days.

1 February 1986, United States: The longest recorded, national run without a tornado ends, 52 days from December 12, 1985 to February 1, 1986.

1-2 February 1916, Seattle, Washington: Seattle is buried under 21.5 inches (54.6 cm) of snow, its greatest 24-hour snowfall on the first. A total of 32.5 inches (82.6 cm) of wet snow accumulates over three days. Seattle cathedral dome collapses under weight.

2 February 1956, New Mexico and west Texas: A record snowstorm brings 15 inches (38 cm) of snow to Roswell New Mexico, and up to 33 inches (84 cm) in the Texas Panhandle.

2 February 2006, New Orleans, Louisiana: As if the devistation of 2005 was not enough, New Orleans is struck by two tornadoes, collapsing at least one previously damaged house and battering Louis Armstrong International Airport.

2 February 1996, Tower, Minnesota: Temperature plummets to a Minnesota record low of 60° below zero, F (-51° C), cancelling Tower's annual Icebox Days festival because it is too cold.

2 February 2008, Hilo,, Hawaii: Hilo is deluged by 10.82 inches (275 mm) of rain in a period of 24 hours, breaking the previous record set in 1969 by 89 mm (3.5 inches).

2 February 2011, Phoenix, Arizona: A high temperature of 44°F (6.7° C) registered at Sky Harbor Airport sets an all-time February record for the coldest high temperature for the city.

2-3 February 1952, South Florida: South Florida hit by the only tropical storm of record, known as the Groundhog Day Storm to hit the U.S. in February. Storm moves out of the Gulf of Mexico with 60 mph (96 km/hr) winds and two to four inches (5 to 10 cm) of rain.

3 February 1803, Winston Salem, North Carolina:The region is hit by 20 inches (50 cm) of snow.

3 February 1947, Tanacross, Alaska: Temperature plunges to a record 75° below zero, Fahrenheit (-59° C).

3 February 1963, Montezuma, Arizona: February's record maximum temperature in the United States 105°F (40.6° C).

3 February 1997, Centralia, Washington: Centralia sets the state record for consecutive days of precipitation at 55 between 10 November 1996 and 3 February 1997.

3 February 2006, Point Lay, Alaska: Temperature plunges to a local record of 56° below zero, Fahrenheit (-48.9° C).

3-12 February 2007, Northern New York:A 10-day stretch of intense lake-effect squalls finally ends for communities along eastern Lake Ontario, leaving behind from 7 to 12 feet (2.1 to 3.6 m) of snow. In Oswego County, Redfield's unofficial total of 141 inches (358 cm) since 3 February sets a state record for snowfall from a "single event," according to the National Weather Service. Final snowfall totals include: 121 inches (307 cm) in Parish and 106 inches (269 cm) in Mexico, both in Oswego County, and 106 inches (269 cm) in Osceola in neighboring Lewis County. The city of Oswego receives 85 inches (216 cm).

4 February 1996, Couderay, Wisconsin: The coldest temperature ever recorded east of the Mississippi River: -55 °F (-48.3° C).

4 February 2004, Pinson, Alabama: All-time record rainfall over 24 hours deluges Pinson: 7.15 inches (181.6 mm).

4 February 2012, McPherson County, Nebraska: A band of heavy snow stalls over central Nebraska and drops more than 20 inches (51 cm) in rural McPherson County.

4 February 2007, Kahului, Hawaii: Kahului reports a minimum temperature of 54 °F (12.2° C), a daily low temperature record for the date.

5 February 1887, San Francisco, California: A rare snowfall dumps four inches (10 cm) on downtown San Francisco, with the city's western hills receiving seven inches (17.5 cm). Reportedly, excited crowds went on a snowball-throwing rampage.

5 February 1996, Greene, Rhode Island:Rhode Island's coldest temperature: -25 °F (-31.7° C).

5 February 2006, Mount Washington Observatory, New Hampshire: The heat is rising. Mount Washington Observatory reaches a high of 41°F (5° C), the warmest February 5th on record at the summit and two degrees off the monthly mark, where records have been kept since 1932.

5 February 2008, US Southern States:Communities across the South are grieving for the dead after the deadliest round of tornadoes in nearly a quarter century killed 58 people. The storms kill 32 people in Tennessee, 14 in Arkansas, seven in Kentucky and five in Alabama. Damage is likely to be in the hundreds of millions of dollars.

6 February 1856, Oswego, New York: A rare February lake effect snowfall buries the Oswego area with 6 feet (457 cm) of snow.

5-6 February 2010, Washington DC:A mega-snowstorm, which President Obama dubbed Snowmageddon, has buried the Washington D.C. area with more than 30 inches (76.3 cm) of snow in some areas. At American University in Washington the official snowfall was 27.5 inches (69.9 cm). Snowfall otals in the Washington DC area range from a low of 17.9 inches (45.5 cm)at Ronald Reagan National Airport to 40 inches (101.2 cm) in the northern suburb of Colesville, MD. Dulles Airport reported a record 32.4 inches (82.3 cm), which established a new two-day snowfall record. The Baltimore-Washington International Airport, Md., measures 24.8 inches (63 cm) of snow from the storm breaking the record for the largest two day snowfall there. It is one of the worst blizzards in the city's history.

7 February 1861, Gouverneur, New York: Temperature free-falls a record 70 Fahrenheit degrees (28.9 C degrees) in one day, bottoming out at -40° (C or F). Two days later the mercury soars to 55°F (12.8° C).

7 February 2008, Alaska: An arctic high centered along the Alcan border separating eastern Alaska and Canada's Yukon Territory cause morning temperatures across eastern interior Alaska to lower than minus 60°F (-51° C)at nearly a half dozen locations. The temperature dropped to minus 72°F (-57.8° C) at Chicken, marking the lowest official temperature in the state in more than eight years.

8 February 1987, Chicago, Illinois: Severe winter storm strikes Chicago with mountainous waves along the Lake Michigan shoreline. Waves reached 12-18 feet high (3.6-5.5 m) and the water level in Lake Michigan was raised two feet (0.6 m).

8 February 2009, Hawaii:Snow falls at levels above elevations of 11,000 feet on the Big Island's Mauna Loa and Mauna Kea.

9 February 1933, Riverside Ranger Station, West Yellowstone Park, Montana: February's record minimum temperature in the continguous United States: minus 66°F (minus 54.4 ° C).

9 February 1933, Moran, Wyoming: The temperature at Moran, located next to Teton National Park, plunges to minus 63°F (minus 52.8 ° C) to establish a state record.

9 February 1977, Chicago, Illinois: The Windy City sees its longest recorded stretch of sub-freezing days end at 43. Seventeen days during the run had minimum tempertures below zero °F (minus 18 ° C), the coldest being -19°F (minus 28.3 ° C)

9 February 1934, Vanderbilt, Michigan: Michigan's record minimum temperature: minus 51°F (minus 46.1 ° C).

9 February 2009, Flagstaff, Arizona: By evening, 15 inches (45 cm) of snow had fallen at Flagstaff.

10 February 1899, Monterey, Virginia: The temperature plunges to -29°F (-33.9° C) , establishing the Virginia state minimum record (since broken).

10 February 2010, Washington, DC: A second major snowstorm, dubbed Snoverkill and Snowmaggedon 2.0 further buries the Nation's Capital with 10.8 inches (27.4 cm) of new snow. Schools, businesses and even parts of the Federal government are shut down by blizzard conditions. The city now has a deeper snowpack --- 28 inches (71.1 cm) --- than in either Anchorage Alaska's 20 inches (50.8 cm) or Marquette Michigan's 27 inches (68.6 cm).

10 February 2011, Oklahoma: The coldest day in Oklahoma history sees the temperature plunge to -31°F (-35° C) at an Oklahoma Mesonet station (a state-operated automated weather station) north of Tulsa at Nowata.A US National Weather Service station at Bartlesville recorded a reading of -28°F (-33.3° C). Both locations break the previous low temperature mark of -27°F (-32.8° C) set in 1905 and tied in 1930.

11 February 1988, South Dakota: Bitter cold air grips the region The morning low in Aberdeen plunges to 35 degrees below zero Fahrenheit (minus 37.2 ° C). A reading of minus 42°F (minus 41.1 ° C) is reported from Gettysburg.

11 February 2004, North Dakota: Governor John Hoeven declares a snow emergency as winds gusting over 70 mph (110 km/hr) along with heavy snow produces low visibilities and drifts up to 20 feet (6.1 m) in northwestern North Dakota. Amtrak train service is interrupted in the region

11 February 2009, Indiana/Illinois: Heavy rain, by February standards, falls across the Midwest. Indiana locals' greatest totals are led by Ft. Wayne with 3.05 inches (77.5 mm). In addition to setting a daily record, Ft. Wayne's rainfall also sets a new precipitation record for the month of February. Heavy rain also falls at Indianapolis (1.87 inches/47.5mm) and Valparaiso (1.23 inches/31.2 mm). In downstate Illinois, reported accumulations readch 4.11 inches (104.4 mm) at Hidalgo; 4.00 inches (101.6 mm) at Effingham and 3.10 inches (78.7 mm) at Vandalia.

11-12 February 2006, US Northeast: Snowfall records also fall in Philadelphia and Allentown, Pennsylvania, Bridgeport and Hartford, Connecticut, Newark, New Jersey, and Worchester and Boston, Massachusetts. The highest total reported was 30.2 inches (76.7 cm) at Fairfield, CT.

11-12 February 2006, New York, New York: The Blizzard of 2006 dumps a record one-day New York City snowfall (since records began in 1869) on Central Park: 26.9 inches (68.3 cm).

12 February 1958, Northern Florida and Gulf Coast: Snow blankets northern Florida; Tallahassee reports a record 2.8 inches (7 cm). A ship in the Gulf of Mexico, 25 miles south of Fort Morgan AL, reports zero visibility in heavy snow on the afternoon of the 12th.

12 February 2006, Muskegon, Michigan: An intense snow squall of Lake Michigan cuts visibility to zero along a section of US 31. The resulting whiteout causes 96 cars to pile up; 25 were injured in the melee.

12 February 2010, The United States: Every one of the 50 state in the United States has at least some snow on the ground today. Photographic evidence provided by hikers near the summit of Mauna Kea (elevation: 13,796 feet) verified there were a few tiny snow patches (a foot or two across) in Hawaii. The other least-likely state to have snow on the ground, Florida, reports De Funiak Springs, in the state's panhandle, has 1 inch (2.5 cm) of snow on the ground. More than 67% of the Lower 48 had snow-covered ground.

13 February 1899, Fort Myers, Florida: A trace of snow falls on Fort Myers, the farthest south that snow had been officially recorded in the US until the Miami snow of 1977.

13 February 1899, Tallahassee, Florida: The same day, the temperature plunges to -2°F (-18.9 ° C).

13 February 1899, New Orleans, Louisiana: After weeks of bitter cold, residents of New Orleans find ice 2 inches (5 cm) thick on the Mississippi River. The river reportedly is frozen from its source in Minnesota almost to its mouth in the Gulf of Mexico. Chunks of ice float out into the Gulf.

13-14 February 1887, Chicago, Illinois: Chicago's temperature rises from 0°F (-18 ° C) on the 13th to 58°F (14.4 ° C) on the 14th. The 58 F deg (32.2 C deg) rise is the biggest day-to-day rise on record. The city will experience a similar jump in temperature in March 1972.

14 February 1940, Northeastern States: A Saint Valentine's Day Blizzard blankets New England with up to a foot and a half (45 cm) of snow. Gale force winds associated with the storm strand many in downtown Boston.

14 February 2004, Dallas, Texas: Valentine's Day shows white among the red as Dallas sees 3 inches (7.5 cm) of snow wreaked havoc with Valentine's Day flower deliveries. The greatest snowfall since 1978 caused numerous traffic accidents, power outages and flight cancellations at Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport.

15 February 2004, Tennessee: Up to 11 inches (33 cm) of snow fall in areas south of Nashville, causing power outages and producing hazardous driving conditions.

15 February 2012, Southern California: In high mountain terrain north of Los Angeles, a mix of snow, small hail and ice pellets fell across the foothills to the Tehachapi Mountains in the Antelope Valley. By early evening, San Jacinto Peak measured at least eight inches (20 cm) of snow, while seven inches (18 cm) fell in the San Bernardino Mountains near Big Bear Lake.

15 February 2012, Huntington Beach, California: a Huntington Beach lifeguard reports three funnel clouds developing approximately four miles (6.5 km) offshore.

15-17 February 2003, Ohio Valley, Mid-Atlantic and Northeast States.: The President's Day Storm of 2003 buries the US East. Many all-time snowfall records are broken, including those in Baltimore and Boston. The storm system brings accumulations of 1-2 feet (30-61 cm) with snowfall amounts exceeding 35 inches (89 cm) in parts of northeastern West Virginia, the heaviest snow accumulations to the East Coast since the Blizzard of 1996.

16 February 1903, Pokegama Dam, Minnesota: Minnesota records its coldest temperature ever with -59 °F (-50.6 °C).

16 February 2010, Kahului Hawaii: Kahului reports a record low temperature of 55 °F (12.8 °C).

17 February 1748, Charleston, South Carolina: The coldest temperature ever recorded in the Colonial South: 10 °F (-12 °C).

17 February 1926, Binham Canyon, Utah: . A deadly avalanche, Utah's worst, demolishes 14 miner's cottages and a three-story boarding house. Thirty-six are killed and 13 injured.

17 February 2007, Bismark, North Dakota: Bismark establishes a new Guinness world record for the most snow angels made simultaneously in one place. That's 8,962 snow angels produced on the State Capitol lawn.

17-18 February 2003, Boston, Massachusetts: The President's Day snowstorm sets a new Boston record for the greatest snowstorm total snowfall: a total of 27.5 inches (70 cm).

18 February 1899, San Francisco, California: While much of the central and eastern U.S. was recovering from the most severe cold wave of modern history, the temperature at San Francisco soared to 80° F (26.7° C) to establish a record for month of February.

18 February 1979, Old Forge, New York: The coldest temperature ever officially recorded in New York State -52° F (-46.7° C) at Old Forge in the Adirondacks.

19 February 1884, Southeastern United States: Severe thunderstorms spawn outbreak of sixty tornadoes across the southeastern US, killing more than 420 persons and causing three million dollars damage. Georgia and the Carolinas are hardest hit.

19 February 2011, Washington DC: Strong winds reaching as high as 40 mph (64 km/h) with gusts to 53mph (85 km/h) topple the 48-year old National Christmas tree. The 42-foot (13 m) tall Colorado blue spruce sat just south of the White House on the Ellipse. It was transplanted there from York, Pennsylvania in 1978.

20 February 1898, Eastern Wisconsin: Massive snowstorm buries eastern Wisconson. Racine receives 30 inches, (76 cm) while drifts around Milwaukee soar 15 feet (4.6 m) in height.

21 February 1918, Granville, North Dakota: Extreme chinook winds drive temperature in Granville from -33° F (-36.1° C) to 50° F (10° C), rise of 83 F° (46 C° ).

21 February 1971, Elk City, Oklahoma: Elk City flounders under 36 inches (90 cm) of snow which establish a 24-hour snowfall record for the state.

22 February 1975, New England: Memorable "Cold Sabbath" across the region leaves many with frozen extremities while going to church in Ipswich, Massachusetts. Minus 11 ° F (-24° C) is observed at Dover, New Hampshire.

22 February 1775, Altus, Oklahoma: While surface air temperatures hover near freezing, an F2 tornado kills two and injures 12 as it ripped through a trailer park.

23 February 1802, Northeastern States: A major snowstorm rages along the New England coast bringing 48 inches (122 cm) of snow north of Boston. Three large ships from Salem are wrecked along Cape Cod.

23 February 1998, Otis, Oregon: Otis records its 79 straight day of of rain, the streak which began on 7 December 1997 is the longest in the contiguous US.

24 February 2004, Northern New Mexico: Heavy snows blanket wide areas of northern New Mexico, closing schools and highways. Snow accumulates to 20 inches (50 cm) on the mountains east of Santa Fe; Sandia Park, east of Albuquerque, measures 11inches (28 cm); 8 inches (20 cm) falls at Los Alamos.

24-26 February 1910, Laconia, Washington: The state's greatest snowstorm dumps 129 inches (328 cm) of snow on Laconia over 3 days.

24-28 February 1977, Virginia to Florida: Dust from western Great Plains reduces visibilities from eastern Virginia through the southeastern states to Florida.The dust originated in the western Great Plains on the 22nd and 23rd, as winds gust above 100 mph (160 km/hr) at Guadalupe Pass, Texas and White Sands, New Mexico, and over Sherman County, Kansas and eastern Colorado.

25 February 1989, Jacksonville, Florida: Jacksonville, where the temperature dips to 24°F (-4.4 °C) is one of thirteen Florida cities to reported record low temperatures. The severe cold in Florida claims three lives and results in $250 to $300 million in crop damage.

25 February 1922, Los Angeles, California: The temperature in Los Angeles hits 92°F (33.3 °C) to establish a record for the month of February.

25 February 2009, Alaska: Two Alaskan communities set their all-time records for highest windspeed: St Paul registers a wind of 91 mph (146 km/h), and on St George Island the wind reaches the wind at 94 mph (151 km/h).

26 February 1988, Central and Western U.S : Eight cities in the central and western U.S. report new record high temperatures, including Lamoni Iowa with a reading of 67 °F (19.4 °C). Temperatures in North Dakota were as warm as those in Florida.

26 February 2004, Charlotte, North Carolina: Major snowstorm dumps up to 20 inches (51 cm) of snow accumulated in the Charlotte metropolitan area. Charlotte's third largest snowstorm on record accumulates 11.6 inches (29.5 cm) at the airport.

27 February 1969, Maine: A record snowstorm in Maine comes to an end. Two to four feet (60-120 cm) of snow bury southern and central Maine, with a state record of 57 inches (145 cm) reported at West Forks. Drifts cover many single story homes, and the weight of the snow collapse many roofs.

27 February 1988, Ventura County, California: Torrental rains from thunderstorms along a cold front dumps 2.52 inches (64 mm) in Ventura County.

27 February 2010, San Joaquin Valley, California: A weak EF0 tornado (on the Enhanced Fujita Scale) causes no damage as it moved across California's southern San Joaquin Valley. It is the only tornado reported in the United States during the month. According to the Storm Prediction Center, only five months since 1950 have lacked a tornado report:

28 February 1900, Kansas to New York: A massive storm spreads record snows from Kansas to New York State. Some of the record nowfall totals: 17.5 inches (44 cm) at Springfield Illinois, 43 inches (109 cm) at Rochester, New York and up to 60 inches (152 cm) in the Adirondack Mountains of New York State.

28 February 2011, Vandalia, Illinois: A tornado damages two homes near Vandalia in south central Illinois during the early morning hours .

28 February 2012, Harrisburg, Illinois: A devastating EF-4 tornado kills six, injures approximately 100, and damages 200 homes and 25 businesses. The tornado, one of a severe outbreak to sweep across the middle US, cut a path 26.5 miles (42.4 km) long and 275 yards (250 m) wide across the town according to the NWS damage survey.

28-29 February 2012, Seven States across the Plains to the Midwest: An outbreak of 20-30 tornadoes ravages cities and towns across the area along an 800-mile (1280 km) track. The outbreak takes 14 lives and causes an estimated $475 million in damage. The tornado near Gandy, Nebraska on the 28th is the first tornado ever reported in that state during the month of February.

29 February 1988, Ventura County, California: A wet Leap Day for southern California. 4.76 inches (120.9 mm) of rain is reported at Tommys Creek in Ventura County.

29 February 2008, Bethel, Maine: The world's tallest snowman, actually a snowwoman, is unveiled in the western Maine town of Bethel. "Olympia," named for Maine Senator Olympia Snowe, is about 122 feet (37.2 m) tall, 10 feet (3.1 m) taller than "Angus, King of the Mountain," which has held the tallest snowman record since 1999. He was named for Angus King, Maine's governor at the time.


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World

1 February 1953, The North Sea: Intense low pressure system (96.6 kPa / 29.52 inches Hg ) sweeps acros the North Sea. Wind speeds at Aberdeen, Scotland exceed 200 km/h (125 mph). Storm surge of 4 m (13.3 ft) breaches the dams along the Zuider Zee in The Netherlands, flooding 1.6 million hectares (3.95 million acres) or one-sixth of the country.

1 February 2002, Ireland: High winds and heavy rain tear across Ireland leaving 25,000 homes without power and forcing motorists to abandon their cars due to flooding.

1 February 2012, Eastern Europe: The low temperature in the Ukraine plunges to minus 33 ° C (-27° F ), the coldest registered in that country in six years. Eastern Bosnia experiences lows of minus 31° C (-23.8° F ) and Poland, Romania and Bulgaria minus 30° C (-22.0° F ).

2 February 2003, Democratic Republic of Congo: A tornado strikes remote areas of the central Congo about 250 km (150 miles) northeast of the capital of Kinshasa. The tornado kills more than 100, injures another 1,700 people, more than 200 critically.

2 February 2010, Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil: Porto Alegre residents swelter as the thermometer soars to 37° C (99° F ), including the humidity, apparent temperature reaches at about 44° C (110° F ).

2 February 2012, Marselle, Southern France: Snow falls along the normally sun-kissed Mediterranean coastline of southern France, covering palm trees in Marselle.

2-3 February 2005, Melbourne, Australia: A 24-hour record rainfall event across the State of Victoria, many local records set including Melbourne with 120 mm (4.72 inches).

2-3 February 2011, Chihuahua, Mexico: Temperatures these two mornings bottom out in the -10 to -15 ° C (5 to 14° F ) range, the coldest readings in decades. The temperature at the university in Chihuahua drops to -18° C (0° F ).

3 February 1997, Thames River, England: Portions of the Thames River freeze over for the first time since World War II.

3-4 February 2012, Rome, Italy:A rare blanket of snow, the heaviest since the 1980s, covers the historic centre of Rome Friday, forcing closure of schools and tourist sites such as the Colosseum.

4 February 1824, Reykjavik, Iceland: Sea-level pressure falls to 924.0 mb (27.28 inches), lowest observed pressure on land in the North Atlantic.

4 February 1976, Hobart, Tasmania: Tasmania's hottest recorded day, the high soars to 40.8° C (105.4°F).

4 February 2008, Afganistan: Bitter cold weather and heavy snow leaves 37 people dead in central Afghanistan. The victims, including 20 children, died in remote areas of Ghazni province.

4 February 2012, Lelystad,The Netherlands: The severe cold across most of Europe brings The Netherlands its lowest temperature in 27 years as Lelystad dips to -21.8 ° C (-7° F )

4-5 February 2007, Swaziland: Severe thunderstorms strike the Shiselweni and Lubombo regions of Swaziland, producing strong winds and hail that damage 500 houses and produce widespread power outages.

5 February 1963, Madrid, Spain: Temperature falls to -14.8° C (5.4° F ), the coldest temperature ever recorded in Madrid.

5 February 2007, Godthab, Greenland: Godthab's temperature soars to a whopping plus 7° C (45° F ).

6 February 1933, Oimekon, Russia: Temperature falls to minus 76.8° C (minus 90° F ), coldest temperature ever in Asia.

6 February 2002, Afghanistan: An avalanche buries 20 cars under the snow near the Salang tunnel which leads through some of Afghanistan's highest mountains.

6 February 2012, Tripoli, Libya: A rare snow storm moves over North Africa, bringing 2 - 3 inches (5-7.5 cm) of snow to Tripoli, Libya. It was the first snow in Tripoli since at least 2005, and perhaps the heaviest since February 1956.

7 February 1892, Verkhoyansk, Russia: Temperature falls to minus 76.8° C (minus 90° F ), coldest temperature ever in Asia.

7 February 1973, Rangiora and Jordan, New Zealand: The nation's highest temperature in history is observed: 42.4°C ( 108 °F).

7 February 2012, Myoko, Japan: Heavy snow continues to fall along the Sea of Japan. By evening, snow accumulations approach 40 centimeters (16 inches) in Myoko, Niigata Prefecture.

7-8 February 1991, France: France faces its coldest 48 hours in recent memory as the temperature drops to 10° F (minus 12.2° C) in Paris the morning of the 8th.

8 February 1927, Takada, Japan: Takada, the snowiest place in Asia, reports 148.8 cm (58.6 inches) of snowfall this day.

8 February 2005, Amman, Jordan: Snow falls on the Jordanian capital and surrounding regions, blocking roads and closing schools. The storm brought snow, heavy rain and high winds to the Holy Land and Middle East.

8 February 2005, Tonga: Torrential rain falls on the Pacific island nation of Tonga. According to the Tonga Meteorological Office, a total of 184 mm (7.2 inches) of rain accumulated in a six-hour period, almost a typical month's worth of rain. The heavy rain cause flash floods in many low-lying areas.

8 February 2012, The Danube River: At least four Balkan nations, Bulgaria, Croatia, Romania and Serbia, have suspended shipping on the Danube River because of severe amount of ices blocking the heavily traveled waterway. The floating ice, has made it extremely difficult to traverse Europe's main commercial waterway, which winds 2,860-kilometer (1,777-mile) down from Germany. In some sections of the Danube, ice is 15 centimeters (6 inches) thick.

9 February 1992,Perth, Australia: Perth's wettest day on record: 120.6 mm (4.75 inches).

9 February 2009,Tartagal, Argentina: Heavy downpours cause a devastating landslide in Tartagal. It destroys 30 houses and damages over 300 more. Electric, water, and telephone services are disrupted, effecting nearly 20,000 people.

9 February 2010,The Cook Islands: Cyclone Pat slams The Cook Islands with 200 km/h winds (125 mph), destroying about 80 percent of the island of Aitutaki.

10 February 2010, France: Five inches of new snow cover Lyon, France, and a light dusting on Paris. Bitterly cold mistral winds rage over much of the nation's Mediterranean coast.

10-23 February 2004, Australia: The fifth most intense heat wave settles over Australia setting many temperature records. Ivanhoe, New South Wales reaches 48.5° C (119.3 ° F) on 15 February, the highest temperature in NSW since 1973. Wilcannia NSW exceeds 40 ° C (104 ° F) on 16 consecutive days.

10-11 February 1935, Ifrane, Morocco: Temperature of minus 11° F (minus 23.9° C), coldest temperature ever in Africa.

11 February 1935, Ifrane, Morocco: A soaking rain covers northwest Jordan from Amman to Irbid, accumulating to nearly 4 cm (about 1.55 inches) at both Amman and Irbid --- at least half of the normal monthly rainfall for February. The rain was preceded by strong, dust-laden winds that cut visibilityat the Amman airport to about 100 yards/meters for a few hours.

11 February 1895, Braemar (Grampian), Scotland: Temperature of -27.2 °C (-17 °F) is the coldest temperature ever measured in the United Kingdom.

11-13 February 2012, San Pedro de Atacama, Chile: San Pedro de Atacama,the world's driest city located in the world's driest desert, receives unusually heavy rains. After two days of heavy rain, area rivers began flooding their banks.

12 February 1987, La Brévine), Switzerland: Switzerland's coldest morning on record, low drops to -41.8°C (-41 °F).

13 February 2003, Jakarta, Indonesia: Heavy rains in the capital city of Jakarta cause flooding that affects 10,000 homes and snarls traffic.

13 February 2004, Istanbul, Turkey: A snowstorm sweeps across the southern Black Sea region bringing cold and snow to Turkey and Greece. Istanbul receives 35 cm (14 inches).

14 February 2007, Kathmandu, Nepal: Kathmandu residents see the first snowfall here in over 60 years (since 1944), despite the city's location in the foothills of the Himalayas.

14 February 2012, Eastern Madagascar: Powerful Tropical Cyclone Giovanna, equivalent to a Category 4 hurricane, hits eastern Madagascar with devastating winds and flooding rain near the port city of Tamatave. Maximum sustained winds are estimated at 232 km/h (143 mph). In the capital, Antananarivo, rainfall totals almost 150 mm (6 inches).

14-15 February 2004, Amman, Jordan: Parts of Jordan receive as much as 60 cm (2 feet) of snow forcing closure of the Jordanian parliament in Amman where snowmen lined the streets.

12-14 February 2010, Rome, Italy: A rare snowfall covers Rome during a cold snap much to the delight of the Romans and tourists alike.

15 February 2001, Seoul, Korea: The heaviest snowfall in three decades dumps 22.9 cm (9 inches) on Seoul forcing hundreds of flight cancellations and delays, blocking roads and halting some ferry services.

15 February 2012, Auckland, New Zealand: A waterspout crosses over Auckland harbor at about 4 pm, local timeto the amazement of residents of New Zealand's biggest city. The thin funnel cause no significant damage.

16 February 1929, Dartmoor, Great Britain: Britain's greatest snowfall as 180 cm (70.9 inches) falls in just 15 hours.

16 February 1966, Whenuapai, New Zealand: 107 mm (4.2 inches) of rain falls in 1 hour, the record for that time period in New Zealand.

17 February 1490, Florence, Italy: An ice storm damages many trees in Florence.

17 February 2006, Guinsaugon, The Philippines: Heavy rainfall across the Philippine island of Leyte triggers a deadly landslide that buries the village of Guinsaugon. The Philippine Geosciences Bureau estimates the landslide at 4 meters (13 feet) deep, covering an area of approximately 3 square kilometers (1.2 square miles). As of February 23, there were 85 fatalities, 19 injuries and 981 people listed as missing.

17-18 February 2009, Austria: Atop Zugspitze, snowfall totals 35 cm (14 inches.) On Sonnblick Mountain, the storm dumps 66 cm (26 inches) while in the town of Bregenz 25 cm (10 inches) falls.

17 February 2010, Maheshpur, Bangladesh: A tornado races across 22 villages in Maheshpur, Bangladesh, reportedly killing one child and injuring about 150. The storm damages 1200 homes and acres of crops.

18 February 1996, Bainoa, Cuba: Cuba's coldest morning on record as low drops to 0.6° C (33 ° F).

18 February 2008, Turkey: Heavy snow falls over much of Turkey causing traffic accidents, disrupting air transport and closing schools. Snow piles 152 cm(5 ft) high in the province of Van in eastern Turkey; Istanbul records snow 9 inches (22.8 cm) deep..

19 February 1998, Mardie, Western Australia: Temperature of 50.5 ° C (122.9 ° F) , second hottest temperature ever in Australia.

19 February 2002, La Paz, Bolivia: Powerful thunderstorms rage across northern Bolivia, causing flash flooding in La Paz and killing at least 50 people. The storm, also drops widespread hail and injures more than 100.

20 February 1997, Southeastern Peru: A vast mudslide sweeps off an Andean mountainside onto two remote villages burying up to 300 people. Inhabitants had been evacuated after weekend flooding, but their refuge above the village put them in the path of the mudslide.

20 February 2006, Dhamar, Yemen: Heavy rain causes flash flooding that traps around 1,900 people in their homes, and leads to five deaths.

20-21 February 2010, Moscow, Russia: A snowstorm dumps a record 63 cm ( 24.8 inches) on Moscow, breaking the previous record of 62 cm (24.4 inches) set in 1966.

21 February 2001, Idlib, Syria: This northern Syrian town reportedly receives 190 mm (7.6 in) of rain on the day.

21 February 2011, Vanuatu: Tropical Cyclone Atu pounds this South Pacific island nation with winds as high as 100 km/h (62 mph) at the island of Anatom.

22 February 1929, Floresta, Sicily: This mountain village reports 130 cm (51.2 inches) of snow over 24 hours.

22 February 2011 Oymykon, Siberia: The temperature bottoms out at a bone-chilling -59° C (-74 ° F) in this notorious cold Russian community..

22-26 February 1995, Western Australia: Cyclone Bobby slams into the Western Australia coast causing widespread flooding. Some areas report up to 300 mm (12 inches) of rain from the storm.

23 February 1991, Eastern Turkey: A black rain falls on eastern Turkey as soot from the Kuwait oil field fires mixes with the precipitation.

24 February 1982, Chuping, Malaysia: Peak temperature this day of 38.4 ° C (101 ° F) ties Malaysia's record for hottest day.

24 February 2012, Sidrap on the island of Sulawesi, Indonesia: A tornado hits near Sidrap, flattening homes and leaving more than 200 people homeless. At least three die and 49 are injured.

25 February 1947, Woburn, Bedfordshire, Great Britain: One of Britain's worst winter months is punctuated by a minimum of -21° C (-5.8° F) was recorded at Woburn.

25 February 2003, Middle East: A rare snow storm sweeps across the Middle East — Israel, Lebanon and Jordan — cutting power, closing schools and highways, and blanketing the palm trees of Jerusalem with over 30 cm (12 inches) of wintry white.

26 February 2010, Les Cayes, Haiti: Torrential rains dump more than 1.5 m feet (5 ft) of flood waters into the streets in the Haitian coastal city of Les Cayes, an area unscathed by the massive January 2010 earthquake. Eleven people die during this storm and flood.

26 February 20111, Lake Vyrnwy Estate, Wales, United Kingdom: Less than a week after winds topple the US National Christmas tree in Washington DC, another famous tree falls:the tallest tree in Wales. Located on the Lake Vyrnwy Estate, this 124-year-old Douglas fir stood at 63.7 m (208.9 feet). The tree reportedly was leaning over and had suffered two substantial cracks in the main trunk

27 February 2000, Beersheba, Israel: The town of Beersheba experiences it's first snow in 50 years as parts of Israel, Lebanon and Jordan receive a rare taste of winter. Locally, over 20 cm (8 inches) of snow accumulates, disrupting transportation and closing schools and business throughout the region.

27 February 2007, Canberra, Australia: A hail storm, which struck with little warning, damages houses, businesses and roads across Canberra in an arc from Civic to Belconnen.

27-28 February 2007, France: A severe storm, named Xynthia, blows into France, smashing sea walls, destroying homes, polluting farmland with saltwater and devastating the Atlantic coast's oyster farms. Winds reach to about 200 km/hr (125 mph) on the summits of the Pyrenees and up to nearly 160 km/hr (100 mph) along the Atlantic Coast. Wind speeds of 175 km/hr (109 mph) are measured atop the Eiffel Tower in Paris. The storm hits hardest in the Vendee and Charente-Maritime regions in southwestern France. The storm is blamed for 52 deaths in France.

28 February 2012, Greece: Cold temperatures and heavy snows invade most of Greece. Snow blankets the suburbs of Athens where temperatures dropped to 2 ° C (36° F ). Central and northern Greece are covered in snow.

28-29 February 1964, Belouve, La Reunion Island: The world's 12-hour rainfall record is set: 1340.1 mm (52.76 inches). Records for 9 hours and 18.5 hours are also set: 1086.87 mm (42.79 inches); and 1688.85 mm (66.49 inches), respectively

February 1972, Iran: A blizzard in Iran ends a four-year drought but the week-long cold and snow causes the deaths of approximately 4,000 people.



NEW FEATURE

This Month in Weather History

The greatest storm surge on record for the North Sea as a whole occurred on 31 January and 1 February 1953. At its peak, the surge reached 3.36 m (11 ft) in the Netherlands where fifty dykes in the provinces of Zeeland, South Holland and Noord-Brabant burst almost simultaneously drowning 1,836 people. The surge waters flooded nine per cent of all Dutch agricultural land and three per cent of its dairy country. Flooding from the storm surge also struck Belgium, England and Scotland.


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