The "worst snow in a decade" apparently.

An Amber weather warning for heavy snow has been issued for the UK region where I live, which is due to come into effect tonight. According to a BBC News article, it will be the worst snow in my region for a decade. The local weather forecast for the town where I live states there will be heavy snow between 10pm and midnight, making me inclined to think that it probably won't be the "worst" snow in a decade in my particular area of the region. Therefore, I'm anticipating that I will probably be left feeling underwhelmed.

The "worst" snow (or best snow) I remember was in January 1982, when I was living in South-East Wales. It had snowed for 36 hours, and as a young child I thought it was wonderful.

Parents
  • What is it about this country that has a fascination for snow. A few flakes and the place is in meltdown (excuse the pun). I remember snow used to last for weeks when I was young. People just got on with their lives. I think this country has become a snowflake nation! (pun intended)

  • I think you are in/from Scotland? 

    You get real snow there.

    I am a southern snowflake.

    I actually love it but then I have never been inconvenienced for more than a few days.

    It is very beautiful and I particularly love the silence after.

  • You are correct about Scotland. Even here it has now become panic mode when any snow is forecast or starts. I can remember camping in a campervan at the edge of a loch when the temperature was below minus 12 and you could here the ice cracking on the loch. It was blissful but as long as the heating was on.

  • I was a baby in 1963, so I don't remember that winter, I know my Mum and me stayed with my grandparents, I think my parents sort of got stuck their after xmas or something.

    I think snow is probably a lot more fun when you're a child and don't have to worry about the practicalities?

  • When I was a child I remember going to school in snow and ice

    i remember doing that during the 1963 snow storms. I lived miles further away than other pupils who did not go in. I loved walking thigh deep in the snow through the cemetery - perhaps that was an early manifestation of autism as others were complaining!

  • Where I lived as a child we didn't get a lot of snow. If we did I think a lot of the teachers lived in our town so could walk. These days I think more live further away. Our secondary school was closed for a while once, but that was because the heating broke down.

  • When I was a child we got snow every winter, but now snow winters are rare. Everytime we get heavy snow or more than a couple of flakes people start panicking and asking why we don't have the sort of snow ploughs they do in other countries? I ask them if they be happy ofr thier council tax to be spent on these expensive machines, only to sit there for another 5 or 10 years unused?

    Why are so many schools closed? When I was a child I remember going to school in snow and ice, as did my parents when classrooms were heated by coal and wood stoves.

Reply
  • When I was a child we got snow every winter, but now snow winters are rare. Everytime we get heavy snow or more than a couple of flakes people start panicking and asking why we don't have the sort of snow ploughs they do in other countries? I ask them if they be happy ofr thier council tax to be spent on these expensive machines, only to sit there for another 5 or 10 years unused?

    Why are so many schools closed? When I was a child I remember going to school in snow and ice, as did my parents when classrooms were heated by coal and wood stoves.

Children