Quantcast

The More You Snow

2006_02_snowmound.jpg

Yesterday was the city's first weekday dealing with the "Blizzard of 2006," and it actually wasn't that bad, with snow starting to melt and people not complaining as much as they could about snow removal. The usual rule of thumb in determining how much a snow storm's cleanup cost is $1 million per inch of snow, but Mayor Bloomberg said he doubt the clean-up would cost $26.9 million. Forget clean-up, how about fixing potholes and those huge holes at street corners? Gothamist's favorite game during these days is "Do You Know How Deep That Slush-Topped Puddle Is?" when you gingerly tap a puddle to see if it's a manageable 1-2 inches deep or a monstrous 5+ inches deep, which requires waterproof boots and making you've plotted a route out (the alternate title is "How To Cross The Street By Stepping Into As Few Puddles As Possible"). Besides worrying about slushy sidewalks, officials are worried about flooding...and possibly drunken snow plowers. But we learned something very interesting from the NY Times article about how this storm's aftermath was surprisingly normal:

One more thing. Not to cast doubt on a record — or on the hard-working people who keep it — but do you know who measures the snow at Central Park? The security guards at the zoo. They read the numbers off a stick set in a flat, tree-ringed clearing near the sea lion pool.

Therefore, the words, "According to the National Weather Service, the snowfall in Central Park..." actually mean, "According to the security guards at the Central Park Zoo."

The only way that factoid could be better is if Gus the formerly depressed polar bear also determined whether or not storms could be classified as blizzards.

Photograph from Gothamist Contribute via Flickr

Contact the author of this article or email tips@gothamist.com with further questions, comments or tips.

Comments [rss]

  • Snow removal never seems to apply to crosswalks. NYSD is great at clearing roads, but can never get it right at crosswalks.



    Also: look for very thin strips of heavy snow on sidewalks. These happen between property lines: nobody wants to clear the very thin spaces between properties! After all, why should they shovel where they aren't responsible for snow removal? It's comical...



    In general it was a 12-18" snow for most people with isolated areas getting a lot more. Central Park happened to be in that swath.



    www.forgotten-ny.com

  • I was thinking that maybe the heaviest snow just fell right on Central Park, like that big dark cloud that used to follow the Addams Family around. Then I read in the Times article:



    "...according to Geoff Cornish, a meteorologist at Pennsylvania State University, the heaviest snow fell in a 15-mile-wide band that passed directly over Midtown Manhattan, the southeastern Bronx and northwestern Queens. Thus La Guardia Airport in Flushing received 9 inches more snow than Kennedy, and nobody in Brooklyn saw even 20 inches, let alone two feet."



    So, strange as it sounds, I was right!

  • All issues of blame/no blame aside, this "history breaking" storm certainly does seem like the bar equivalent of a short pour, at least B-burg way. At least a couple storms in the past 5 years felt like they buried the city more. Does anyone else have that sense or is it just me?

  • Jen

    I don't think people are trying to blame the people who measure the snow. They are mysterious creatures, and we're just curious about them! And the other thing is that other people saw less snow and have wondered if maybe Central Park is a drift magnet (but if records are *always* measured there, then so be it!).

  • Hats off to Gothamist for their Blizzard coverage. For anyone interested, tons and tons of snow pix on Flickr. Go there and do searches for some or all of the following tags: blizzard2006, blizzard06, nycblizzard, blizzardnyc, blizzardof06, blizzard, noreaster. I'm sure there are many more tags, but those are the ones I am aware of.

  • MT

    What is up with everyone suddenly attacking the dudes who measure the snow fall? This has to be the lamest attempt at stirring up controversy I have ever seen. Do news people really need to find something bad in everything? We got a lot of snow and they are doing a good job cleaning it up. Deal with it and quit your b****ing

blog comments powered by Disqus

send a tip

tips@gothamist.com