110 Inches of Snow in 7 Days

By JOHN KEKIS, Associated Press Writer

With more than 8 feet of snow already coating the ground, it wasn't good news for this winter-weary region when the blue sky turned gray Saturday, signaling another intense snow squall was about to dump some more.

"This is bad," said 67-year-old Dave DeGrau, who has operated an auto repair shop on Main Street for 45 years. "We had a very easy winter until now. Last fall during hunting season it rained every time I went out. I kept saying 'I'm glad this isn't snow.' Now, it's snow."

Persistent bands of lake-effect snow squalls fed by moisture from Lake Ontario have been swinging up and down this part of central New York along the lake's eastern shore since last Sunday.

The National Weather Service said Parish about 25 miles northeast of Syracuse reached a milestone early Saturday with 100 inches of snow during the past seven days. Late Saturday, the total had risen to 110 inches. Unofficial reports pegged totals at 123 inches in Orwell and 131 in Redfield, but those measurements include snow from another storm a couple of days before the current weather system. All three towns are in Oswego County.

A warning in effect until Monday morning said 2 to 4 more feet of snow was possible with wind gusting up to 24 mph.

"That's all we need," Mike Avery said as he took a brief break from loading dump trucks with snow to be hauled to a pile outside town. "It's getting monotonous."

The fluffy new snow was a magnet for snowmobilers, but stopping was out of the question.

"You can't stop or you're done," said Dan Hojnacki, 23, of Syracuse, after he ground to a halt in a field. "I never got stuck until today, and I've been snowmobiling for 10 years."

Residents of the nearby town of Mexico see 5- to 6-foot snowfalls every two or three years, but this time even hardened locals are amazed. The only sign of parked SUVs are their radio antennas or roof racks sticking up above the snow. Front doors are buried and footprints lead to second-story windows. Sidewalks that have been dug out look like miniature canyons.

The state transportation department said 125 workers from elsewhere in the state had been sent in with snow equipment to help.

The region is located along the Tug Hill Plateau, the snowiest region this side of the Rocky Mountains. It's a 50-mile wedge of land that rises 2,100 feet from the eastern shore of Lake Ontario. It usually gets about 300 inches roughly 25 feet of snow a year.

The hamlet of Hooker, near the boundaries of Jefferson, Lewis, and Oswego counties, holds the state's one-year record with 466.9 inches, about 39 feet, in the winter of 1976-77.

Still, less than a month ago it seemed more like spring.

"Gosh, three weeks ago there was green on the ground. We got spoiled," Parish Mayor Leon Heagle said. "This just came fast. This is not normal. God, we can't catch a break. I feel like getting right in the car and driving south, but I'd probably get in trouble."

The intense blast of snow hasn't been blamed for any deaths in Oswego County. Elsewhere, however, more than a week of bitter cold and slippery roads have contributed to at least 20 deaths across the northeastern quarter of the nation; five in Ohio, four in Illinois, four in Indiana, two in Kentucky, two in Michigan, and one each in Wisconsin, and Maryland and elsewhere in New York, authorities said.

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press.

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[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: And _I_ thought it was bad here this winter with several inches of snow lingering on, and solid ice everywhere for about two weeks. This has been a very hard winter for many folks. I guess 1985-86 was bad here and in Oklahoma also, but for some reason I keep remembering 1967 in Chicago and 1978 in Chicago. But a winter I especially remember was when I was a very little guy, about five years old, in 1947 here in Independence. Mother had brought me up from Coffeyville on the interurban train to see a friend of hers. Her friend picked us up in her car (this was in the middle of winter, in February, and there was ice _everywhere_ just like middle January this time around. As we rode from the interurban station down Maple Street, we passed the corner of 6th and Maple, and the Southwestern Bell Telephone Exchange Building. Bell did not bury wires underground in those days, they were above ground on poles, so the closer we got to the telephone building, the more wires there were approaching the building from every direction; finally in what is now the parking lot of that building, all the wires came together and down into the side of the building. (Now, they no longer have a switchboard in there, nor, for that matter a business office. That's all been done away with in the name of 'effeciency'.) But this time, in 1947, icycles were hanging off all the telephone wires in the sky, and when it got over to the edge of the exchange building, it was all solid ice hanging from the wires; like a giant free lance 'ice sculpture' hanging from the wires to the ground and all along the side of the building where the wires entered the building. PAT]

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