Storm data and unusual weather phenomena

Storm Data, March, 2005

Storm Data and Unusual Weather Phenomena
March 2005

                                   Time       Path      Path
                                   Local/     Length    Width
Location                    Date   Standard   (Miles)   (Yards)

MISSOURI, East
  Cole County
    Jefferson City          07     0134CST

                            The ASOS at the Jefferson City airport
                            recorded a 58 mph wind gust.

MISSOURI, Lower

  Pemiscot County
    Hayti                   30     2030CST
                                   2035CST

MISSOURI, Northeast
                            NONE REPORTED.

MISSOURI, Northwest

  Bates County
    2 NNW Amsterdam         03     1735CST

  Bates County
    1 N Amsterdam           03     1740CST

  Bates County
    4 S Butler              03     1823CST

  Cass County
    Raymore                 03     1835CST

  Clay County
    Kearney                 06     2130CST

  MOZ038                    Lafayette
                            10     1619CST

                            A peak wind gust of 61 mph was measured
                            at Higginsville by the Cooperative
                            Observer. Wind gusts from 40 to 55 mph
                            were common elsewhere across much of
                            west central Missouri.

  Nodaway County
    5 E Maryville           30     0900CST

                            Thunderstorm winds broke off 18 to 24
                            inch tree limbs.

  Nodaway County
    2 E Maryville           30     0903CST

                            One barn had roof blown off. One
                            building suffered minor damage. Trees
                            had some damage and a few power lines
                            were downed.

  Worth County
    Denver                  30     1015CST

                            Barn suffered some damage from strong
                            thunderstorm winds.

  Mercer County
    Princeton               30     1036CST

  Linn County
    6 N Purdin              30     1045CST

                            Six to ten inch tree limbs down.

  Sullivan County
    1 W Browning            30     1045CST

                            Six to ten inch tree limbs down.

MISSOURI, Southeast

  Ripley County
    Fairdealing to          30     1930CST
    7 SE Doniphan                  1932CST

                            Dime to nickel-size hail was reported at
                            three places in eastern Ripley County.

  Butler County
    Poplar Bluff            30     1959CST

  Scott County
    Scott City              30     2000CST

                            One-inch hail occurred along Interstate
                            55.

  Cape Girardeau
  County
    4 SW Cape Girardeau     30     2005CST

                            The tin roof was ripped off a barn on
                            Highway 74, about 2 miles west of
                            Interstate 55. The roof was blown into
                            some power lines, which were knocked
                            down. At the nearby Cape Girardeau
                            airport, the peak wind gust recorded by
                            the automated observing system was 54
                            MPH.

  Cape Girardeau
  County
    Randles to              30     2005CST
    5 W Cape Girardeau             2020CST

                            Dime to quarter-size hail fell in
                            extreme southern Cape Girardeau County.
                            The report of quarter-size hail was from
                            Randles.

  Stoddard County
    Acorn Ridge to          30     2005CST
    Dexter                         2015CST

  Butler County
    2 W Fisk                30     2015CST

  Scott County
    Oran                    30     2025CST

  Stoddard County
    Advance                 30     2045CST

  Scott County
    2.5 N Sikeston to       30     2049CST
    Sikeston                       2055CST

                            One-inch hail fell just north of
                            Sikeston, while dime-size hail fell in
                            Sikeston.

  Mississippi County
    Charleston              30     2110CST

                            A line of thunderstorms developed over
                            southeast Missouri, near a line from
                            Poplar Bluff to Cape Girardeau. As the
                            line moved east to the Mississippi
                            River, some storms along the line
                            produced large hail and an isolated
                            report of damaging winds. The most
                            severe storm along the line tracked
                            through northern Scott and southern Cape
                            Girardeau Counties, producing hail up to
                            golf ball size and minor wind damage.

MISSOURI, Southwest

  Vernon County
    Fair Haven              03     1906CST

  Vernon County
    6 N Walker              03     1909CST

  Cedar County
    El Dorado Spgs          03     1920CST

  St. Clair County
    7 S Appleton City       03     2015CST

  Cedar County
    Stockton                03     2050CST

  Polk County
    Fair Play               03     2158CST

  Cedar County
    Stockton                03     2158CST

  Polk County
    Half Way                03     2200CST

MONTANA, Central

  MTZ009>011-013-           North Rocky Mountain Front - Eastern
  044>049                   Glacier - Hill - Chouteau - Toole -
                            Liberty - Eastern Pondera - Blaine -
                            Southern Rocky Mountain Front - Eastern
                            Teton
                            06     0420MST
                                   1600MST

                            A deep low pressure system over central
                            Canada was responsible for a high wind
                            event along the Rocky Mountain Front and
                            adjacent plains on the 6th. Reported
                            wind speeds include: a gust to 73 mph at
                            East Glacier Park 11 SE; a gust to 54
                            mph at Harlem 16S and a gust to 46 mph
                            at Great Falls Airport. Additionally,
                            sustained winds of 40 mph were reported
                            for several hours at Oilmont 14E,
                            Fairfield 7NE, Cut Bank, Valier,
                            Blackleaf, Turner 6NW, Inverness 20N
                            and Loma 20N. The strong wind helped
                            spread a grass fire near Valier. Over
                            150 acres of grass burned from a fire
                            caused by exhaust from a vehicle.

  MTZ012-050-054            Cascade - Judith Basin - Meagher
                            14     1800MST

                            Heavy snow fell across a portion of
                            North Central Montana during the
                            afternoon and early evening of the 14th.
                            Reported snow fall amounts include: 11
                            inches at Neihart 7NW, 8 inches at
                            Millegan 14SE and 6 inches at Hobson
                            20SW. The heavy snow created slick and
                            hazardous driving surfaces and
                            contributed to over 40 motor vehicle
                            accidents.

  MTZ009-012>015-           North Rocky Mountain Front - Cascade -
  044-046>047-051-          Chouteau - Southern Lewis And Clark -
  054>055                   Madison - Toole - Eastern Pondera -
                            Blaine - Fergus - Meagher - Gallatin
                            17     0900MST
                                   1930MST

                            A Canadian cold front swept across a
                            broad area of North Central Montana on
                            the 17th bringing heavy snow and gusty
                            winds. Reported snow fall amounts
                            include: 14 inches at the Crystal Lake
                            SNOTEL site; 8 inches at Neihart 7S; 7
                            inches at Neihart, Gold Butte and
                            Conrad; 6 inches at Marias Pass 1 WNW,
                            Shonkin, Pony and Lewistown 25S and 5
                            inches at Bozeman 7SE and Chester.

  MTZ009>014-044-           North Rocky Mountain Front - Eastern
  047>050                   Glacier - Hill - Cascade - Chouteau -
                            Southern Lewis And Clark - Toole -
                            Blaine - Southern Rocky Mountain Front
                            - Eastern Teton - Judith Basin
                            23     0732MST
                                   1800MST

                            A vigorous spring storm brought heavy
                            snow to a wide area of North Central and
                            Southwest Montana on the 23rd. Reported
                            snow fall amounts include: 16 inches at
                            Holter Dam; 15 inches at Eden; 12 inches
                            at Shonkin 7S, Holter Dam 6S, Rogers
                            Pass, Heart Butte 6W; 10 inches at
                            Sunburst 6S, Gold Butte 7N; 8 inches at
                            Havre 25S, Hobson, Choteau, Stanford,
                            Millegan 14SE; 7 inches at Great Falls,
                            Cut Bank 25NW, Hogeland 2W, Babb,
                            Augusta 25NW, Neihart 7NNW, Great Falls
                            3SW; 6 inches at Grass Range and 5
                            inches at Martinsdale 3NNW and West
                            Yellowstone 9N.

MONTANA, East

  MTZ016>017-               Central And Se Phillips - Central And
  019>020-022>026-          Southern Valley - Sheridan - Western
  059>062                   Roosevelt - Garfield - Mccone - Richland
                            - Dawson - Prairie - Northern Phillips
                            - Little Rocky Mountains - Northern
                            Valley - Eastern Roosevelt
                            06     0805MST
                                   1650MST

                            Strong winds affected much of northeast
                            Montana during the morning and afternoon
                            hours of the 6th. The strong winds were
                            associated with a cold front and upper
                            level disturbance that crossed the area.
                            Sustained wind speeds of 40 to 45 mph
                            were common. A few locations had wind
                            gusts in the 58 to 69 mph range. A few
                            of the stronger wind gusts included:

                            King Coulee Raws Site (Valley County):
                            69 mph

                            Bluff Creek Raws Site (Valley County):
                            58 mph

                            Poplar Raws Site (Roosevelt County):
                            58 mph

  MTZ017-017-022-059        Central And Southern Valley - Garfield
                            - Northern Phillips
                            17     0100MST
                                   1600MST

                            An area of low pressure in Wyoming
                            brought heavy snow in narrow bands to a
                            portion of northeast Montana. The
                            heaviest snow fell in a 10 to 15 mile
                            band across northern Phillips county,
                            southwest Valley, and portions of
                            northern Garfield county. A few of the
                            heavier snow totals included:

                            3 miles south of Whitewater (Phillips
                            County): 6 inches

                            20 miles south/southwest of Glasgow
                            (Valley County): 12 inches

                            30 miles southwest of Glasgow (Valley
                            County): 6 inches

                            30 miles northeast of Jordan (Garfield
                            County): 6-8 inches

  MTZ016-059>060            Central And Se Phillips - Northern
                            Phillips - Little Rocky Mountains
                            22     2100MST
                            23     2300MST

                            An area of low pressure that developed
                            in Wyoming brought heavy snow to much of
                            Phillips County late in the evening of
                            the 22nd through the pre-dawn hours of
                            the 23rd. Additional light snow
                            continued to fall through the evening
                            hours of the 23rd. In addition,
                            northeast winds of 15 to 25 mph with
                            high gusts produced areas of blowing and
                            drifting snow. A few of the more
                            impressive snowfall totals included:

                            Zortman: 9 inches

                            35 miles south of Malta: 7 inches, with
                            drifts of 3 to 4 feet

                            Whitewater: 6 inches

                            Malta: 5 inches

MONTANA, South

  MTZ040-056-066>068        Northern Park County - Red Lodge
                            Foothills - Beartooth Foothills -
                            Absarokee / Beartooth Mountains Crazy
                            Mountains

                            12     0600MST
                                   1800MST

                            8 inches 4W Alpine Cole Creek Snotel; 8
                            inches 2S Red Lodge; 7 inches 13ENE
                            Wilsall South Fork of the Shields Snotel
                            in the Crazy Mountains; 7 inches 6S
                            Roscoe; 6 inches 5NW Alpine; 6 inches in
                            Mcleod; 6 inches in Clyde Park; 10
                            inches 5W Red Lodge

  MTZ029-031-063            Musselshell - Northern Rosebud - Judith
                            Gap
                            17     1500MST
                                   2300MST

                            8 inches in Judith Gap; 11 inches LOSE
                            Roundup; 7 inches IOS Roundup; 6 inches
                            15S Colstrip.

  MTZ029-031>032-           Musselshell - Northern Rosebud - Custer
  034>038-040-042-          - Northern Stillwater - Yellowstone -
  056>058-067               Powder River - Carter - Southern Big
                            Horn - Northern Park County - Golden
                            Valley - Red Lodge Foothills - Northern
                            Big Horn Southern Rosebud - Absarokee /
                            Beartooth Mountains
                            24     1000MST
                                   150OMST

                            An early Spring storm moved across South
                            Central Montana bringing heavy, wet snow
                            to portions of the Billings County
                            Warning Area. The following are some
                            totals from this storm:

                            8 inches 18NW Ryegate; 6 inches in
                            Forsyth, Huntley, Fort Smith, Roundup,
                            Broadview, Billings, and Birney; 9
                            inches in Crow Agency; 10 inches in
                            Rapelje; 8 inches 2E Ryegate, 8 inches
                            in Clyde Park, 8 inches 12E Ashland, 6
                            inches 10S Volborg, 9 inches 2S Red
                            Lodge, 6 inches 5SE Volborg, 6 inches
                            16W Alzada, 8 inches 60S Miles City, 8
                            inches at both Cole Creek and Burnt
                            Mountain Snotels

MONTANA, West

  MTZ006>007-043            Bitterroot / Sapphire Mountains - Butte
                            / Pintlar Region - Blackfoot Region
                            12     1044MST
                                   1600MST

                            Vigorous late winter storm blanketed the
                            valleys of West Central Montana with 5
                            to 12 inches of new snow, with as much
                            as much as 14 inches of new snow
                            reported at Georgetown Lake.

  MTZ002-004-006-           West Glacier Region - Lower Clark Fork
  006-043                   Region - Bitterroot / Sapphire Mountains
                            - Blackfoot Region
                            17     0541MST
                                   210OMST

                            Late winter storm brought 8 to 13 inches
                            of new snow over the mountains of
                            Northwest Montana with 4 to 8 inches in
                            the valleys. Widespread west winds at 15
                            to 25 mph also caused drifting of snow.
                            Schools were closed in the northern
                            Flathead valley due to heavy snowfall.
                            Trees also snapped under the load from
                            heavy snow. Some trees fell onto power
                            lines causing outages across the
                            northern Flathead valley as well.
                            Several vehicle rollovers were also
                            reported.

NEBRASKA, Central

  NEZ004>010-               Sheridan - Eastern Cherry - Keya Paha -
  022>029-035>038-          Boyd - Brown - Rock Holt - Garden -
  056>059-069>071-094       Grant Hooker - Thomas Blaine - Loup -
                            Garfield - Wheeler - Arthur - Mcpherson
                            - Logan - Custer - Deuel - Keith -
                            Perkins - Lincoln Chase - Hayes -
                            Frontier - Western Cherry
                            10     0930MST
                                   2000MST

                            A strong low pressure system moved
                            through Nebraska overnight with high
                            winds affecting the area behind the
                            passing cold front. Northwesterly winds
                            of 35-45 mph with gusts to 60 mph caused
                            low visibility due to blowing dust in
                            isolated areas. The low visibility
                            caused a multi-vehicle pile-up on
                            Interstate 80 about 6 miles west of
                            North Platte. The accident occurred at
                            2:05 pm and involved 5 semis and 3 cars.
                            Three semis and 2 cars were engulfed in
                            flames. The accident claimed 3 lives
                            (indirect fatalities) and injured 4
                            (indirect). West bound lanes on
                            Interstate 80 were closed for 4 hours
                            and cast bound lanes on Interstate 80
                            were closed for 10 hours.

  NEZ005>006-               Eastern Cherry - Keya Paha - Brown -
  008>009-023>026-          Rock - Grant - Hooker - Thomas - Blaine
  035>037-094               - Arthur - Mcpherson - Logan - Western
                            Cherry
                            21     15000ST
                            22     15000ST

                            A strong low pressure system moved out
                            of Eastern Colorado and into the Central
                            Plains dumping significant snow. Keya
                            Paha County received 6-8 inches of snow,
                            Blaine County received 9-12 inches, and
                            Eastern Cherry County received 12-16
                            inches. Breezy winds also created areas
                            of blowing and drifting snow across
                            roadways. A semi-trailer and truck
                            rolled over in the Long Pine Hills due
                            to the slick road conditions. No one was
                            injuried in the accident. Other cars
                            lost control on snow covered roads but
                            there were no injuries.

  Logan County
    9 N Stapleton           29     1756CST

  Custer County
    2 NW Arnold             29     1848CST

  Lincoln County
    North Platte            29     1905CST

  Custer County
    13 SW Anselmo           29     1910CST
                                   1925CST

                            Hail covered the ground.

  Lincoln County
    6 NNE North Platte      29     1920CST

  Custer County
    Anselmo                 29     1945CST

                            Hail was 2 inches deep.

  Blaine County
    7 SSE Brewster          29     2010CST

                            Hail covered the ground.

  Loup County
    15 W Taylor             29     2025CST

  Loup County
    Almeria                 29     2030CST

  Loup County
    10 NW Almeria           29     2035CST

  Frontier County
    13 SE Stockville        29     2042CST

  Frontier County
    6 S Eustis              29     2055CST

  Holt County
    18 SW Amelia            29     2120CST

  Rock County
    14 ESE Rose             29     2120CST

  Holt County
    17 WSW Chambers         29     2140CST

  Holt County
    5 SW Amelia             29     2150CST

NEBRASKA, East

  Gage County
    1 E Adams               06     1900CST

  Johnson County
    2 W Sterling            06     1905CST

  NEZ011>012-               Knox - Cedar - Thurston - Antelope -
  015>018-030>034-          Pierce - Wayne - Boone - Madison -
  042>045-050>053           Stanton - Cuming - Burt - Platte -
                            Colfax - Dodge - Washington - Butler -
                            Saunders - Douglas - Sarpy
                            10     1000CST
                                   17000ST

                            Intense low pressure over the Great
                            Lakes region combined with high pressure
                            building east out of the Rockies and
                            provided a prolonged high wind event
                            over northeast and cast central Nebraska
                            and portions of western Iowa. Sustained
                            winds of 30 to 40 mph with gusts of 55
                            to a little over 60 mph were common
                            throughout the area. The strong winds
                            caused sporadic tree and roof damage,
                            and there were several reports across
                            the area of trees uprooted and a few
                            semi trucks were overturned. One person
                            was injured in Decatur Nebraska
                            (northern Burt county) when a roof of a
                            building under construction blew on top
                            of his house causing substantial damage.

                            Some of the higher gusts measured by
                            AWOS or ASOS sites included ... 62 mph
                            in Fremont at 110 pm, 60 mph at Norfolk
                            at 247 pm, 59 mph in Albion at 1010 am,
                            59 mph at Columbus at 115 pm, 59 mph in
                            Tekamah at 119 pm, and 55 mph in Omaha
                            at 224 pm.

NEBRASKA, Extreme Northeast

  NEZ013>014                Dixon - Dakota
                            10     1000CST
                                   1730CST

                            Sustained winds of 40 to 45 mph with
                            gusts around 60 mph persisted from late
                            morning until late afternoon. The winds
                            caused tree damage with a few branches
                            and smaller tree debris broken off.
                            There was minor damage to buildings,
                            mostly to shingles and gutters.

NEBRASKA, Extreme Southwest

                            NONE REPORTED.

NEBRASKA, South Central

                            NOT RECEIVED.

NEBRASKA, West

  Scotts Bluff County
    3 NE Scottsbluff        30     1506MST      0.1       50
                                   1509MST

                            Very weak tornado over open country.

NEVADA, North

  NVZ034                    Ruby Mountains/E Humboldt Range
                            23     0300PST
                                   1300PST

                            A winter storm brought 19 inches of snow
                            to the Dorsey Basin Snotel site in the
                            East Humboldt range and 15 inches to
                            Lamoille Canyon #3 Snotel.

NEVADA, South

                            NONE REPORTED.

NEVADA, West

  NVZ003                    Greater Reno/Carson City/Minden Area
                            19     1000PST
                            20     2100PST

                            A winter storm moved through northeast
                            California and western Nevada on the
                            19th and 20th. Two to three feet of snow
                            fell in the higher elevations of the
                            Sierra, with 6 to 8 inches reported in
                            areas to the lee of the Sierra.

                            Storm total snowfall amounts:
                            Virginia City (6340 ft.)        8 inches
                            Carson City (5400 ft.)          6 inches

  NVZ002                    Greater Lake Tahoe Area
                            19     1000PST
                            20     210OPST

                            A winter storm moved through northeast
                            California and western Nevada on the
                            19th and 20th. Two to three feet of snow
                            fell in the higher elevations of the
                            Sierra, with 6 to 8 inches reported in
                            areas to the lee of the Sierra.

                            Storm total snowfall amounts:

                            Mt. Rose Ski Resort (summit)   22 inches
                              (mid-mountain)               10 inches
                            5 ENE Incline Village
                              (7300 ft.)                   20 inches
                            1 NE Incline Village
                              (6500 ft.)                   15 inches
                            Spooner Summit                 12 inches

  NVZ001                    Mineral/Southern Lyon
                            19     1445PST

                            Wind gust of 65 knots (75 mph) recorded
                            at the Walker Lake RAWS sensor.

  NVZ002                    Greater Lake Tahoe Area
                            19     180OPST

                            Wind gust of 55 knots (63 mph) recorded
                            at the Galena Creek RAWS sensor.

  NVZ003                    Greater Reno/Carson City/Minden Area
                            19     190OPST

                            Wind gust of 50 knots (58 mph) recorded
                            at DRI Sage building in Stead.

  NVZ002                    Greater Lake Tahoe Area
                            21     210OPST
                            22     190OPST

                            The second winter storm in a week moved
                            through the Sierra Nevada and western
                            Nevada region. This storm, however, was
                            not as strong as the earlier one. From
                            late on the 21st through the 22nd up to
                            two feet of snow fell in the Sierra,
                            with rain falling western Nevada.

                            Storm total snowfall amounts:
                            Mt. Rose Ski Resort
                              (mid-mountain)      22 inches

NEW HAMPSHIRE, North and Central

  NHZ001>010-               Northern Coos - Southern Coos - Northern
  013>014                   Grafton - Northern Carroll - Southern
                            Grafton - Southern Carroll - Sullivan -
                            Merrimack - Belknap - Strafford -
                            Interior Rockingham - Coastal Rockingham
                            01     0100EST
                            02     0500EST

                            Low pressure developed off the southern
                            New England coast during the evening of
                            Monday, February 28, and intensified as
                            moved northeast into the Gulf of Maine
                            on Tuesday, March 1. Snow moved into New
                            Hampshire during the early morning hours
                            and dropped between 5 and 14 inches
                            across the entire state before ending
                            during the early morning hours of
                            March 2.

  NHZ001>010-               Northern Coos - Southern Coos - Northern
  013>014                   Grafton - Northern Carroll - Southern
                            Carroll - Sullivan - Merrimack - Belknap
                            - Strafford - Interior Rockingham -
                            Coastal Rockingham
                            08     0300EST
                            09     0800EST

                            Low pressure moved across southern New
                            England during the night of Monday,
                            March 7, and redeveloped off the New
                            England coast on Tuesday, March 8. Snow
                            spread into New Hampshire during the
                            early morning hours of Tuesday and
                            accumulated 5 to 12 inches before ending
                            during the morning on March 9.

  NHZ001>002-               Northern Coos - Southern Coos - Northern
  004>010-013>014           Carroll - Southern Grafton - Southern
                            Carroll - Sullivan - Merrimack - Belknap
                            - Strafford - Interior Rockingham -
                            Coastal Rockingham
                            11     1400EST
                            13     0300EST

                            Low pressure moving out of the midwest
                            on Friday, March 11, redeveloped off the
                            New England coast Friday evening and
                            slowly moved through the Gulf of Maine
                            on Saturday, March 12. Snow accumulated
                            4 to 15 inches across most of the state
                            before ending during the early morning
                            hours of March 13.

NEW HAMPSHIRE, Southern

  NHZ011>012                Cheshire - Hillsborough
                            01     0000EST
                                   2100EST

                            Heavy snow and gusty winds affected
                            southwest New Hampshire and all of
                            southern New England, as low pressure
                            reformed off the mid Atlantic coast and
                            tracked southeast of the region.
                            Snowfall totals of 4 to 8 inches were
                            widely observed.

                            Some specific snowfall totals, as
                            reported by trained spotters, included 9
                            inches in Marlow, East Alstead, and
                            Keene; 8 inches in Peterborough; 7
                            inches in Rindge, Hinsdale, and
                            Greenfield; and 6 inches in Francestown,
                            Manchester, Hudson, and Nashua.

  NHZ011>012                Cheshire - Hillsborough
                            08     1400EST
                            09     0300EST

                            Low pressure strengthened rapidly off
                            the Delaware coast and tracked southeast
                            of New England, bringing heavy snow to
                            southwest New Hampshire. Snowfall totals
                            of 4 to 8 inches were widely observed.

                            The snow and gusty winds made travel
                            difficult. Several roads around
                            Manchester were closed due to icy
                            conditions, and many spinouts were
                            reported throughout the region. Many
                            flights were delayed or canceled at
                            Manchester Airport.

                            Some specific snowfall totals, as
                            reported by trained spotters, included 9
                            inches in Manchester, 8 inches in Keene,
                            7 inches in Winchester and Hinsdale, and
                            6 inches in Stoddard, Bedford, Milford,
                            and Hillsborough.

  NHZ011>012                Cheshire - Hillsborough
                            12     0700EST
                                   2100EST

                            Low pressure south of Long Island
                            strengthened rapidly as it headed to the
                            Canadian Maritimes, and brought heavy
                            snow to southwest New Hampshire and much
                            of interior southern New England.
                            Snowfall totals of 6 to 12 inches were
                            widely observed in Cheshire and
                            Hillsborough Counties.

                            State police reported numerous vehicles
                            off roads around the region, especially
                            on Interstate 93. A number of flights at
                            Manchester Airport were delayed or
                            canceled as a result of the storm.

                            Some specific snowfall totals, as
                            reported by trained spotters, included
                            14 inches in Francestown; 13 inches in
                            Alstead; 12 inches in Dublin, Marlow,
                            Stoddard, Keene, Peterborough, and
                            Wilton; 10 inches in Swanzey and South
                            Weare; 8 inches in Hinsdale and Nashua;
                            and 6 inches in Hudson and Manchester.

NEW JERSEY, Northeast

  NJZ003-005>006-011        Bergen - Essex - Hudson - Union
                            01     0000EST
                                   0630EST

                            A weak high pressure ridge extended
                            southwest across the region from New
                            England as a low pressure system
                            intensified and moved northeast. This
                            strong low passed south of Long Island
                            Monday night and east of the New England
                            coast during Tuesday.

                            Light snow developed northeast across
                            the region between 1 and 3 pm Monday
                            afternoon. As the low rapidly
                            intensified and moved closer to the
                            region, narrow bands of heavy snow swept
                            northeast across the region. The last
                            band of heavy snow swept northeast
                            across the region between 5 am and 6:30
                            am Tuesday morning, March 1 st. Storm
                            Total Snowfall amounts ranged from 5
                            to 10 inches.

                            Here are selected snowfall totals for:

                            Bergen County - from 5.4 inches at River
                            Vale to 7.5 inches at Lodi.

                            Union County - from 6.3 inches at
                            Garwood to 7.6 inches at Elizabeth.

                            Essex County - from 6.0 inches at
                            Bloomfield to 9.5 inches at Newark
                            Airport.

                            Hudson County - from 5 .3 inches at
                            Bayonne to 8.0 inches at Harrison.

  NJZ003>006-011            Bergen - Eastern Passaic - Essex -
                            Hudson - Union
                            08     1400EST
                                   1500EST

                            A strong arctic cold front intensified
                            as it swept southeast across the region.
                            This caused rain to change to snow,
                            temperatures to fall from the 40s into
                            the 20s, and northwest winds that gusted
                            between 40 and 55 mph. Near blizzard
                            conditions occurred for a short time.
                            Storm total snowfalls ranged from around
                            2 to 4 inches.

                            Wet and mild antecedent conditions were
                            followed by more than a 20 degree drop
                            in temperature in 3 hours with strong
                            gusty winds. This resulted in a "flash"
                            freeze across roads that resulted in
                            hundreds of vehicle accidents.

NEW JERSEY, South and Northwest

  NJZ001-007>010-           Sussex - Warren - Morris - Hunterdon -
  012>020-027               Somerset - Middlesex Western Monmouth
                            Eastern Monmouth Mercer - Salem -
                            Gloucester - Camden - Northwestern
                            Burlington Western Ocean Southeastern
                            Burlington
                            01     0000EST
                                   0900EST

  NJZ021>022-026            Cumberland - Western Atlantic - Eastern
                            Ocean
                            01     0000EST
                                   0700EST

                            Heavy snow fell across northern and
                            southwestern New Jersey from the morning
                            of February 28th into the morning of the
                            1st. Across coastal Ocean County,
                            interior Atlantic County and Cumberland
                            County precipitation fell as snow, but
                            mixed with rain at times during the
                            daytime on February 28th. Temperatures
                            in these areas remained above freezing
                            until the evening of February 28th and
                            slowed the accumulations. Precipitation
                            fell as mainly rain in Cape May County
                            and coastal Atlantic County until the
                            rain changed to snow late in the evening
                            of February 28th. Snow began during the
                            morning of February 28th in the southern
                            half of the state and from around Noon
                            EST into the afternoon in the northern
                            half of the state. Heavier bands of
                            accumulating snow moved over the
                            southwestern and northern parts of the
                            state during the afternoon and evening
                            of February 28th. The snow ended across
                            the southern half of the state before
                            the sun rose on the 1st and ended during
                            the morning in the northern half of the
                            state. Accumulations averaged 4 to 8
                            inches, with some higher amounts in
                            Sussex and Warren Counties and lower
                            amounts in the southeastern part of the
                            state.

                            Many schools dismissed early on February
                            28th. Rutgers University cancelled all
                            its classes after 430 p.m. EST on
                            February 28th. Many after school
                            activities and classes as well as
                            municipal and school board meetings were
                            cancelled. Many minor accidents occurred.
                            In Burlington County, a 17-year-old boy,
                            a 17-year-old girl and their 41-year-old
                            bus driver were injured when two school
                            buses collided in Medford Township.

                            Specific accumulations included 9.6
                            inches in Barry Lakes (Sussex County),
                            9.1 inches in Belvidere (Warren County),
                            9.0 inches in Califon (Hunterdon County),
                            8.9 inches in Sparta (Sussex County),
                            8.6 inches in Stewartsville (Warren
                            County), 8.0 inches in Southampton
                            (Burlington County), Milton (morris
                            County) and Wrightstown (Burlington
                            County), 7.9 inches in West Windsor
                            (Mercer County), 7.8 inches in Marcella
                            (Morris County), 7.6 inches in Wertsville
                            (Hunterdon County), 7.5 inches in Butler
                            (Morris County) and Hackettstown (Warren
                            County), 7.2 inches in Pottersville
                            (Somerset County), 7.0 inches in
                            Lindenwold (Camden County) and Clarksboro
                            (Gloucester County), 6.8 inches in
                            Medford (Burlington County) and Metuchen
                            (Middlesex County), 6.7 inches in New
                            Brunswick (Middlesex County), Somerville
                            (Somerset County) and Cream Ridge
                            (Monmouth County), 6.3 inches in West
                            Windsor (Mercer County), 6.0 inches in
                            Pennsauken (Camden County), Whippany
                            (Morris County) and Flemington (Hunterdon
                            County), 5.8 inches in Manchester (Ocean
                            County), 5.5 inches in Verga (Gloucester
                            County) and Monroeville (Salem County),
                            5.0 inches in New Egypt (Ocean County),
                            4.4 inches in Hammonton (Atlantic
                            County), 3.8 inches in Seabrook
                            (Cumberland County), 1.3 inches at the
                            Atlantic City International Airport and
                            1.0 inch in Margate (Atlantic County)
                            and Brant Beach (Ocean County).

                            The wintry weather was caused by a true
                            northeaster. A low pressure system
                            developed in the Gulf of Mexico on
                            Sunday February 27th. It moved northeast
                            and already was a 995 millibar low
                            pressure system when it was near
                            Jacksonville, Florida at 7 p.m. EST on
                            February 27th. It moved northeast and
                            deepened to a 992 millibar low near
                            Charleston, South Carolina at 1 a.m. EST
                            on February 28th, a 990 millibar low
                            near Wilmington, North Carolina at 7
                            a.m. EST on February 28th, a 984
                            millibar low just east of Elizabeth City,
                            North Carolina at 1 p.m. EST on February
                            28th, a 980 millibar low about 150 miles
                            east of Fenwick Island, Delaware at 7
                            p.m. EST on February 28th and still a
                            980 millibar low about 250 miles east
                            of Long Beach Island, New Jersey at 1
                            a.m. EST on the 1st. The combination of
                            the low pressure system's storm track
                            being fairly offshore, the lack of a
                            surface high pressure system to its
                            north and marginal surface temperatures
                            for snow kept accumulations from being
                            heavier.

  NJZ014-024>026            Eastern Monmouth - Eastern Cape May -
                            Eastern Atlantic - Eastern Ocean
                            01     0000EST
                                   0200EST

  NJZ014-024>026            Eastern Monmouth - Eastern Cape May -
                            Eastern Atlantic - Eastern Ocean
                            01     0000EST
                                   1500EST

                            Moderate beach erosion and minor tidal
                            flooding occurred with the northeaster
                            along the New Jersey Coast. The most
                            intense onshore flow occurred from mid
                            morning on February 28th into the early
                            morning of the 1st. Minor tidal flooding
                            occurred with the overnight high tide.

                            The intense and offshore storm track the
                            low pressure system took gave the New
                            Jersey coast about a 12 hour period of
                            intense northeast winds (25 to 35 mph)
                            and this led to the minor tidal flooding
                            and beach erosion. In Monmouth County, 2
                            to 3 foot vertical cuts were common from
                            Asbury Park south. In Ocean County, in
                            Harvey Cedars, a 5 foot vertical by 10
                            foot horizontal cut occurred to 800 feet
                            of dune from Bergen to Cumberland
                            Avenues. Two to four foot vertical cuts
                            were common from Ship Bottom additional
                            south. In Beach Haven, there was a
                            complete loss of berm protection and an
                            8 foot loss of sand at the Merivale
                            Avenue street end. One house was now
                            exposed to the ocean. In Atlantic
                            County, two to four foot vertical cuts
                            occurred, except in Ventnor where the
                            vertical cut reached five feet at the
                            south end of the city. Walkways and
                            fences were also damaged. Some walkways
                            now ended at the water's edge. The
                            Ventnor Beach was just rebuilt in 2004.
                            In Cape May County, Ocean City was hit
                            the hardest with 3 to 4 foot vertical
                            cuts from the fishing to the amusement
                            pier and an 8 to 10 foot cut from 8th
                            Street to Seaspray Avenue with dune
                            fencing down in some areas. Elsewhere in
                            the county, vertical cuts averaged 1 to
                            3 feet. Sea Isle City reported loss of
                            dune fencing and rocks were exposed.

                            The overnight (February 28th) high tide
                            reached 6.78 feet above mean lower low
                            water at Sandy Hook (Monmouth County)
                            and 6.80 feet above mean lower low water
                            at Cape May (Cape May County). Minor
                            tidal flooding begins at 6.7 feet above
                            mean lower low water.

                            The minor tidal flooding and beach
                            erosion was caused by a northeaster. The
                            low pressure system developed in the
                            Gulf of Mexico on Sunday February 27th.
                            It moved northeast and was near
                            Jacksonville, Florida at 7 p.m. EST on
                            February 27th. It moved northeast and
                            deepened and was near Charleston, South
                            Carolina at 1 a.m. EST on February 28th,
                            just cast of Wilmington, North Carolina
                            at 7 a.m. EST on February 28th, just
                            east of Elizabeth City, North Carolina
                            at 1 p.m. EST on February 28th, and
                            deepened to a 980 millibar low about 150
                            miles east of Fenwick Island, Delaware
                            at 7 p.m. EST on February 28th. The low
                            remained about the same strength (980
                            millibar) as it passed about 250 miles
                            east of Long Beach Island, New Jersey
                            at 1 a.m. EST on the 1st. The lack of a
                            surface high pressure system to the
                            north of this system prevented the
                            pressure gradient and hence the winds,
                            heavy surf and tidal flooding from being
                            worse.

  NJZ001-007>010-           Sussex - Warren - Morris - Hunterdon -
  120>027                   Somerset - Middlesex - Western Monmouth
                            Eastern Monmouth Mercer - Salem -
                            Gloucester - Camden - Northwestern
                            Burlington - Western Ocean Cumberland
                            Western Atlantic - Western Cape May -
                            Eastern Cape May - Eastern Atlantic -
                            Eastern Ocean Southeastern Burlington
                            08     0900EST
                                   1900EST

                            The combination of a strong cold frontal
                            passage during the morning of the 8th
                            and a rapidly intensifying low pressure
                            system off the Middle Atlantic and New
                            England States brought snow and plunging
                            temperatures during the day on the 8th.
                            Actual accumulations averaged an inch or
                            two in the southern part of New Jersey
                            and 2 to 4 inches in the northern part
                            of the state. The snow combined with the
                            sharp drop in temperatures to bring
                            treacherous driving conditions on
                            untreated roadways during the afternoon
                            and evening and countless accidents
                            occurred, especially in the northern
                            half of the state.

                            Precipitation started as rain before
                            sunrise on the 8th. The cold front moved
                            through New Jersey between 7 a.m. and 10
                            a.m. EST (from northwest to southeast)
                            as a low pressure system on the front
                            was intensifying. Temperatures dropped
                            quickly behind this front both at the
                            surface and aloft. The rain changed to
                            snow between 8 a.m. (northwest areas
                            first) and Noon EST (southeast areas
                            last). About an hour after the
                            precipitation changed to snow,
                            temperatures dropped below freezing
                            as the snow continued to fall. The snow
                            ended during the mid and late afternoon
                            from west to east across the state. But,
                            its lingering effects lasted well into
                            the morning rush on the 9th as the wind
                            blew the snow back on the road.

                            Townships averaged about a dozen weather
                            related accidents, especially in the
                            northern half of the state. In Hunterdon
                            County, Interstate 78 was closed for
                            five miles because of more than twenty
                            accidents. About 75 accidents were
                            reported across northern New Jersey
                            on interstates 287, 78 and 80 and New
                            Jersey State Route 24. In Somerset
                            County, an accident on westbound
                            Interstate 78 that involved a tractor-
                            trailer and vehicle caused serious
                            injuries. In Monmouth County, a roadway
                            was closed in Holmdel Township after a
                            vehicle knocked down a pole. Problems in
                            Monmouth County persisted through the
                            next morning as multiple accidents in
                            the southbound lanes of New Jersey State
                            Route 18 in Colts Neck closed the road
                            for several hours. In Long Branch, nine
                            accidents occurred within 45 minutes.
                            Many after school activities and classes
                            were cancelled on the 8th. The regional
                            spelling bee in Monmouth County was
                            postponed.

                            Specific snow accumulations included 4.0
                            inches in Oakhurst (Monmouth County) and
                            Brick Township (Ocean County), 3.5 inches
                            in Manalapan (Monmouth County), 3.0
                            inches in Wantage (Sussex County), 2.8
                            inches in Marcella (Moms County) and
                            Stewartsville (Warren County), 2.5
                            inches in Florence (Burlington County)
                            and Skillman (Somerset County), 2.3
                            inches in Ewing (Mercer County), 2.0
                            inches in Metuchen (Middlesex County),
                            1.9 inches in Somerdale (Camden County),
                            1.5 inches in Tabernacle (Burlington
                            County) and East Amwell Township
                            (Hunterdon County), 1.4 inches in
                            Chatham (Morris County), 1.0 inch in
                            Seabrook (Cumberland County) and 0.3
                            inches at the Atlantic City
                            International Airport.

                            The snow was caused by the combination
                            of the cold frontal passage and the
                            rapidly intensifying low pressure system
                            that developed on the front during the
                            morning of the 8th. The low moved
                            northeast and was an already intense 986
                            mb near Danville, Virginia at 7 a.m. EST
                            on the 8th. From there it continued to
                            move northeast and deepened to a 978 mb
                            low just east of Long Beach Island, New
                            Jersey at 1 p.m. EST on the 8th, to a
                            970 mb low over Nantucket Island,
                            Massachusetts at 7 p.m. EST on the 8th
                            to a 964 mb low just southwest of
                            Yarmouth, Nova Scotia at 1 a.m. EST on
                            the 9th.

  NJZ001-007>010-012-       Sussex - Warren - Morris - Hunterdon -
  014>023-025>027           Somerset - Middlesex Eastern Monmouth
                            Mercer Salem Gloucester - Camden -
                            Northwestern Burlington - Western Ocean
                            - Cumberland Western Atlantic Western
                            Cape May - Eastern Atlantic - Eastern
                            Ocean - Southeastern Burlington
                            08     1100EST
                                   2359EST

  NJZ013-024                Western Monmouth - Eastern Cape May
                            08     1200EST
                                   2359EST

                            In addition to the snow, strong gusty
                            northwest winds developed during the
                            afternoon and evening of the 8th as a
                            low pressure system intensified off the
                            Middle Atlantic and New England States.
                            Wind gusts reached around 70 mph in Cape
                            May County. The strong winds caused
                            isolated power outages throughout New
                            Jersey and hampered snow removal crews
                            as it blew snow back onto already
                            cleared or salted roads. Peak wind gusts
                            included 72 mph in Strathmere (Cape May
                            County), 70 mph in Cape May (Cape May
                            County), 64 mph in Keansburg (Monmouth
                            County), 63 mph at High Point (the
                            highest point in New Jersey in Sussex
                            County), 57 mph in Sandy Hook (Monmouth
                            County) and Bamegat Light (Ocean County),
                            50 mph in Atlantic City (Atlantic
                            County), 49 mph in Wrightstown
                            (Burlington County), 45 mph in Millville
                            (Cumberland County) and 44 mph in
                            Trenton (Mercer County).

                            The strong winds were caused by a
                            rapidly intensifying low pressure system
                            that developed on the cold front during
                            the morning of the 8th. The low moved
                            northeast and was an already intense 986
                            mb near Danville, Virginia at 7 a.m. EST
                            on the 8th. From there it continued to
                            move northeast and deepened to a 978 mb
                            low just east of Long Beach Island, New
                            Jersey at 1 p.m. EST on the 8th, to a
                            970 mb low over Nantucket Island,
                            Massachusetts at 7 p.m. EST on the 8th
                            to a 964 mb low just southwest of
                            Yarmouth, Nova Scotia at 1 a.m. EST on
                            the 9th.

  NJZ001-007>008            Sussex - Warren - Morris
                            11     2100EST
                            12     0500EST

                            Snow fell across northwest New Jersey
                            during the evening and overnight on the
                            11th and accumulated between two and
                            five inches in most areas with the
                            highest accumulations over the higher
                            terrain. Snow began in Sussex County
                            during the evening of the 11th and
                            spread into Morris and Warren Counties
                            by Midnight EST. The snow ended before
                            sunrise on the 12th. Untreated and less
                            traveled roads were treacherous. Specific
                            accumulations included 4.9 inches in
                            Marcella (Morris County), 2.5 inches in
                            Butler and Randolph (Morris County) and
                            2.0 inches in Wantage (Sussex County).
                            The snow was caused by an "Alberta type"
                            low pressure system that moved from
                            northern Minnesota on the morning of the
                            10th east into Lake Erie around sunrise
                            on the 11th. The low moved through
                            Northwest New Jersey during the evening
                            on the 11th and intensified as it moved
                            east reaching just south of Nantucket,
                            Massachusetts around sunrise on the
                            12th. Heavier snow fell farther to the
                            northeast.

  NJZ012                    Middlesex
                            15     1200EST
                                   1800EST

                            A brushfire with 30 to 40-foot-high
                            flames burned across 75 to 100 acres in
                            Raritan Center within Edison Township.
                            The fire could be seen from Rahway
                            (Union County) to East Brunswick (within
                            Middlesex County). The fire burned for
                            about six hours until firefighters
                            finished dousing the blaze. One dozen
                            municipalities, twenty-three fire
                            departments and one hundred and three
                            firefighters responded to the scene. The
                            brushfire began in an area with 10 to
                            12-foot-high reeds that were very dry.
                            Gusty northwest winds led to a longer
                            battle with the fire. The peak wind gust
                            at Newark International Airport for the
                            day was 30 mph and the average wind speed
                            of 16.1 mph was the fifth windiest day
                            of March 2005.

  NJZ001                    Sussex
                            20     0300EST
                                   1100EST

                            A high pressure ridge that extended from
                            James Bay, Canada to the Middle Atlantic
                            coastal waters left enough cold air in
                            place near the surface to cause a wintry
                            mix of precipitation to occur during the
                            first half of the day on the 20th.
                            Precipitation moved in aloft preceding a
                            warm front and fell as mainly freezing
                            rain over the higher terrain of Sussex
                            County between 3 a.m. and 11 a.m. EST.
                            Ice accretions were less than one-tenth
                            of an inch. Some snow and sleet mixed in
                            with any accumulations less than one-
                            quarter of an inch. By 11 a.m. EST
                            enough warm air moved in at the surface
                            to change the precipitation over to
                            plain rain in all areas. Untreated
                            roadways were hazardous before the
                            change to plain rain.

  NJZ001                    Sussex
                            23     0900EST
                            24     0500EST

  NJZ007>010                Warren - Morris - Hunterdon - Somerset
                            23     1200EST
                            24     0400EST

                            A low pressure system exiting the United
                            States from the Delmarva Peninsula
                            brought rain and then snow to Warren and
                            Moms Counties and heavy snow to Sussex
                            County. Accumulations averaged 2 to 5
                            inches in most of Warren and Morris
                            Counties and 5 to 8 inches across the
                            higher terrain of Warren and Morris
                            Counties and in Sussex County. Farther
                            south, about an inch or two of snow fell
                            in Somerset and Hunterdon Counties.
                            Following the pattern of other winter
                            storms this season, the accumulating
                            snow hit the evening commute the hardest
                            which was described as a nightmare.
                            Precipitation in northwest New Jersey
                            (except in Sussex County) started as rain
                            during the morning of the 23rd and
                            changed to snow during the afternoon.
                            The change to snow worked its way from
                            the higher terrain downward. Across
                            Sussex County, precipitation fell mainly
                            as snow. In all areas the snow continued
                            through the night and ended just before
                            sunrise on the 24th.

                            Numerous and mostly minor accidents
                            occurred mainly during the evening
                            commute. One fatal accident occurred in
                            White Township (Warren County) when a
                            61-year-old woman died. She lost control
                            of her vehicle on County Route 519 and
                            slid sideways into an oncoming van. The
                            vehicle then struck a guardrail. The
                            driver and passenger of the van suffered
                            minor injuries. The evening commute was
                            progressively worse on the Pennsylvania
                            side of the Delaware River.

                            Accumulations included 7.7 inches in
                            Wantage (Sussex County), 6.8 inches in
                            Barry Lakes (Sussex County), 6.7 inches
                            in Marcella (Morris County), 5.5 inches
                            in Blairstown (Warren County), 5.0
                            inches in Rockaway (Morris County), 3.0
                            inches in Chatham (Morris County), 2.5
                            inches in Hackettstown (Warren County)
                            and Morristown (Moms County), 2.0 inches
                            in Pottersville (Somerset County), 1.9
                            inches in Belvidere (Warren County) and
                            1.0 inch in Flemington (Hunterdon
                            County).

                            The late winter storm was caused by a
                            low pressure system that formed in the
                            Southern Plains States on the 21st and
                            moved east and reached Memphis, Tennessee
                            early in the evening on the 22nd, in
                            central Kentucky around sunrise on the
                            23rd, just west of Norfolk at 1 p.m. EST
                            on the 23rd, just east of Wallops Island,
                            Virginia at 7 p.m. EST on the 23rd and
                            about 200 miles cast of Cape May, New
                            Jersey at 1 a.m. EST on the 24th.

  NJZ001                    Sussex
                            27     2300EST
                            28     0800EST

                            Pockets of freezing rain occurred across
                            Sussex County during the overnight of
                            March 27th. As rain moved into the
                            region on the evening of the 27th, some
                            surface temperatures cooled to or below
                            the freezing mark. Light freezing rain
                            fell through the night until temperatures
                            rose above freezing shortly after sunrise
                            on the 28th. Ice accretions were up to
                            two-tenths of an inch. Untreated roadways
                            and walkways were slippery.

                            The nearest surface high pressure system
                            at the onset of the rain was south of
                            Novas Scotia and could not lock in the
                            cold air near the surface. In addition,
                            the surface pressure difference (and thus
                            the wind) between the low pressure system
                            arriving from the Gulf Coast States and
                            the departing high pressure system
                            produced enough of a southeast wind to
                            scour away the cold air near the surface.

  Burlington County
   Countywide               28     1200EST
                                   2000EST

  Salem County
    Countywide              28     1200EST
                                   1800EST

  Gloucester County
     Countywide             28     1300EST
                                   1900EST

  Hunterdon County
    Countywide              28     1300EST
                                   2100EST

  Sussex County
    Countywide              28     1300EST
                                   2300EST

  Warren County
    Countywide              28     1300EST
                                   2200EST

  Middlesex County
    Countywide              28     1400EST
                                   2200EST

  Monmouth County
    Countywide              28     1400EST
                                   2200EST

                            Heavy rain caused poor drainage flooding
                            and left the region vulnerable to any
                            additional heavy rain as the ground was
                            saturated. Rain began falling during the
                            late evening on the 27th, but fell at its
                            heaviest during the afternoon and evening
                            of the 28th as scattered thunderstorms
                            occurred. The rain ended by late that
                            evening. The evening commute was more
                            difficult as usual as there was much
                            ponding of water in poor drainage
                            locations. Storm totals averaged around
                            two inches.

                            On the 30th, the combination of runoff
                            and melting snow led to isolated low-
                            lying area flooding along the Delaware
                            River in Warren County. In Harmony
                            Township, river flooding reached homes
                            on Riversedge Lane and River Road. The
                            Delaware River at Ricgelsville crested
                            at 21.3 feet that morning. Flood stage
                            at that location is 22 feet.

                            Storm totals included 2.65 in Freehold
                            (Monmouth County), 2.58 inches in Sussex
                            (Sussex County), 2.14 inches in Andover
                            (Sussex County), 2.10 inches in Newton
                            (Sussex County), 2.06 inches in Califon
                            (Hunterdon County), 2.04 inches in
                            Belvidere (Warren County), 2.02 inches
                            in Riegclsville (Warren County), 1.95
                            inches in New Lisbon (Burlington County),
                            1.88 inches in Bloomsbury (Hunterdon
                            County), 1.75 inches in West Deptford
                            (Gloucester County), 1.74 inches in
                            Mount Laurel (Burlington County), 1.72
                            inches in Columbia (Warren County), 1.65
                            inches in Willingboro (Burlington County)
                            and 1.60 inches in Mount Holly
                            (Burlington County).

                            The heavy rain was caused by a low
                            pressure system that formed along the
                            Gulf Coast States. This low pressure
                            system was captured by its support aloft
                            and thus moved only slowly northeast as
                            it tapped abundant moisture from both
                            the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic
                            Ocean. The low pressure system moved
                            from western Alabama at 7 a.m. EST on
                            the 27th northeast to eastern Tennessee
                            at 7 p.m. EST on the 27th and eastern
                            Kentucky at 7 a.m. EST on the 28th. A
                            secondary low pressure system formed
                            over North Carolina during the morning
                            of the 28th. It would become the main
                            low pressure system as it moved northeast
                            to near Norfolk, Virginia at 1 p.m. EST
                            on the 28th, Chesapeake Bay at 7 p.m.
                            EST on the 28th, Delaware Bay at 1 a.m.
                            EST on the 29th and about 100 miles east
                            of Atlantic City at 7 a.m. EST on the
                            29th.

  NJZ018                    Camden
                            28     1729EST
                                   2045EST

                            The combination of heavy rain and
                            saturated ground from recent heavy rains
                            caused poor drainage and some river
                            flooding in Camden County. Rain began
                            falling during the late evening on the
                            27th, but fell at its heaviest during
                            the afternoon and evening of the 28th as
                            thunderstorms occurred. Storm totals
                            averaged between one and two inches.
                            The Cooper River at Haddonfield was above
                            its 2.8 foot flood stage from 529 p.m.
                            through 845 p.m. EST on the 28th. It
                            crested at 2.88 feet at 630 p.m. EST.
                            Storm totals included 1.91 inches in
                            Somerdale, 1.72 inches in Audubon, 1.66
                            inches in Pennsauken and 1.40 inches in
                            Cherry Hill.

                            The heavy rain was caused by a low
                            pressure system that formed along the
                            Gulf Coast States. This low pressure
                            system was captured by its support aloft
                            and thus moved only slowly northeast as
                            it tapped abundant moisture from both the
                            Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic Ocean.
                            The low pressure system moved from
                            western Alabama at 7 a.m. EST on the
                            27th northeast to eastern Tennessee at
                            7 p.m. EST on the 27th and eastern
                            Kentucky at 7 a.m. EST on the 28th. A
                            secondary low pressure system formed
                            over North Carolina during the morning
                            of the 28th. It would become the main
                            low pressure system as it moved northeast
                            to near Norfolk, Virginia at 1 p.m. EST
                            on the 28th, Chesapeake Bay at 7 p.m.
                            EST on the 28th, Delaware Bay at 1 a.m.
                            EST on the 29th and about 100 miles east
                            of Atlantic City at 7 a.m. EST on the
                            29th.

  NJZ015                    Mercer
                            28     1809EST
                                   2318EST

                            The combination of heavy rain and
                            saturated ground from recent heavy rains
                            caused poor drainage and some creek
                            flooding in Mercer County. Rain began
                            falling during the late evening on the
                            27th, but fell at its heaviest during
                            the afternoon and evening of the 28th as
                            thunderstorms occurred. Storm totals
                            averaged between one and two inches.

                            The Assunpink Creek at Trenton was above
                            its 7 foot flood stage from 609 p.m.
                            through 1118 p.m. EST on the 28th. It
                            crested at 7.33 feet at 9 p.m. EST.
                            Storm totals included 2.00 inches in
                            Windsor, 1.72 inches in Hightstown, 1.66
                            inches in Washington's Crossing and 1.46
                            inches in Trenton.

                            The heavy rain was caused by a low
                            pressure system that formed along the
                            Gulf Coast States. This low pressure
                            system was captured by its support aloft
                            and thus moved only slowly northeast as
                            it tapped abundant moisture from both
                            the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic
                            Ocean. The low pressure system moved from
                            western Alabama at 7 a.m. EST on the
                            27th northeast to eastern Tennessee at
                            7 p.m. EST on the 27th and eastern
                            Kentucky at 7 a.m. EST on the 28th. A
                            secondary low pressure system formed
                            over North Carolina during the morning
                            of the 28th. It would become the main
                            low pressure system as it moved northeast
                            to near Norfolk, Virginia at 1 p.m. EST
                            on the 28th, Chesapeake Bay at 7 p.m. EST
                            on the 28th, Delaware Bay at 1 a.m. EST
                            on the 29th and about 100 miles east of
                            Atlantic City at 7 a.m. EST on the 29th.

  NJZ010                    Somerset
                            28     1840EST
                            30     1045EST

                            The combination of heavy rain and
                            saturated ground caused poor drainage
                            and some river flooding in Somerset
                            County. Rain began falling during the
                            late evening on the 27th, but fell at
                            its heaviest during the afternoon and
                            evening of the 28th as thunderstorms
                            occurred. Storm totals averaged around
                            two inches.

                            The Millstone River at Griggstown was
                            above its 10 foot flood stage from 730
                            p.m. EST on the 28th through 1045 a.m.
                            EST on the 30th. It crested at 12.3 feet
                            at 8 a.m. EST on the 29th. The North
                            Branch of the Raritan River at South
                            Branch was above its 7 foot flood stage
                            from 640 p.m. EST on the 28th through
                            733 a.m. EST on the 29th. It crested at
                            8.7 feet at Midnight EST on the 29th.

                            Storm totals included 2.40 inches in
                            Basking Ridge, 2.12 inches in Far Hills,
                            1.96 inches in North Plainfield, 1.90
                            inches in Somerville and 1.44 inches in
                            Belle Mead.

                            The heavy rain was caused by a low
                            pressure system that formed along the
                            Gulf Coast States. This low pressure
                            system was captured by its support aloft
                            and thus moved only slowly northeast as
                            it tapped abundant moisture from both the
                            Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic Ocean.
                            The low pressure system moved from
                            western Alabama at 7 a.m. EST on the 27th
                            northeast to eastern Tennessee at 7 p.m.
                            EST on the 27th and eastern Kentucky at
                            7 a.m. EST on the 28th. A secondary low
                            pressure system formed over North
                            Carolina during the morning of the 28th.
                            It would become the main low pressure
                            system as it moved northeast to near
                            Norfolk, Virginia at 1 p.m. EST on the
                            28th, Chesapeake Bay at 7 p.m. EST on
                            the 28th, Delaware Bay at 1 a.m. EST on
                            and about 100 miles cast of Atlantic
                            City at 7 a.m. EST on the 29th.

  NJZ016>019                Salem - Gloucester - Camden -
                            Northwestern Burlington
                            29     0100EST
                                   0600EST

                            The combination of runoff from the heavy
                            rain, the funneling of water into Delaware
                            Bay and higher than normal astronomical
                            tides coming off the full moon produced
                            minor tidal flooding at the times of high
                            tide early in the morning on the 29th.
                            The high tide in Burlington reached 9.94
                            feet above mean lower low water. Minor
                            tidal flooding begins at 9.0 feet above
                            mean lower low water. The high tide at
                            Philadelphia Pier 12 reached 8.35 feet
                            above mean lower low water. Minor tidal
                            flooding begins there at 8.2 feet above
                            mean lower low water. Less widespread
                            minor tidal flooding occurred with the
                            early morning high tides on the 30th and
                            31st.

                            The onshore flow was caused by a low
                            pressure system that formed along the
                            Gulf Coast States. This low pressure
                            system was captured by its support aloft
                            and thus moved only slowly northeast from
                            western Alabama on the morning of the
                            27th. It reformed over North Carolina
                            during the morning of the 28th and become
                            the main low pressure system as it moved
                            northeast to near Norfolk, Virginia
                            during the afternoon on the 28th,
                            through Chesapeake Bay the evening on
                            the 28th, across Delaware Bay around
                            Midnight EST on the 29th and about then
                            cast of Atlantic City by sunrise on the
                            29th. The counterclockwise circulation
                            around this low helped push water into
                            Delaware Bay and slow the runoff from
                            the nearby heavy rain and the snowmelt
                            from the upper parts of the Delaware
                            River.

  NJZ008                    Morris
                            29     0307EST
                            31     2359EST

                            The combination of heavy rain and melting
                            snow produced poor drainage and river
                            flooding in Morris County that lasted
                            well into April. Rain began falling
                            during the late evening on the 27th, but
                            fell at its heaviest during the afternoon
                            and evening of the 28th as thunderstorms
                            occurred. Storm totals averaged around
                            three inches. Lincoln Park Borough was
                            one of the hardest hit municipalities
                            in the county as they received flooding
                            near the Pompton and Passaic River
                            confluence and the Beaver Brook. Several
                            roads were barricaded. In Denville, some
                            backyards were flooded by the Rockaway
                            River.

                            The Rockaway River above the Boonton
                            Reservoir was above its 5 foot flood
                            stage from 315 a.m. EST through 956 p.m.
                            EST on the 29th. It crested at 5.47 feet
                            at 10 a.m. EST. The Rockaway River below
                            the Boonton Reservoir was above its 5
                            foot flood stage from 307 a.m. EST on the
                            29th through 530 a.m. EST on the 31st.
                            It crested at 6.37 feet at 1045 a.m. EST
                            on the 29th. The Pequannock River at the
                            Macopin Intake Dam was above its 5.5 foot
                            flood stage from 445 a.m.EST on the 29th
                            through 2 a.m. EST on the 30th. It
                            crested at 5.59 feet at 1015 a.m. EST on
                            the 29th. The Passaic River at Pine Brook
                            was above its 19 foot flood stage from
                            1030 p.m. EST on the 29th through 515 p.m.
                            EST on April 1st. It crested at 19.41
                            feet at 645 p.m. EST on the 30th. Farther
                            downstream, the Passaic River at Two
                            Bridges was above its 9 foot flood stage
                            from 10 p.m. EST on the 29th through 4
                            p.m. EDT on April 9th. The March highest
                            crest was 10.26 feet at 3 a.m. EST on the
                            31st. Storm totals included 3.30 inches
                            in Milton, 2.88 inches in Pequannock,
                            2.70 inches in Boonton, 2.60 inches in
                            Lake Hopatcong and Morristown and 1.87
                            inches in Chatham.

                            The heavy rain was caused by a low
                            pressure system that formed along the
                            Gulf Coast States. This low pressure
                            system was captured by its support aloft
                            and thus moved only slowly northeast as
                            it tapped abundant moisture from both
                            the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic
                            Ocean. The low pressure system moved
                            from western Alabama at 7 a.m. EST on
                            the 27th northeast to eastern Tennessee
                            at 7 p.m. EST on the 27th and eastern
                            Kentucky at 7 a.m. EST on the 28th. A
                            secondary low pressure system formed
                            over North Carolina during the morning
                            of the 28th. It would become the main
                            low pressure system as it moved northeast
                            to near Norfolk, Virginia at 1 p.m. EST
                            on the 28th, Chesapeake Bay at 7 p.m.
                            EST on the 28th, Delaware Bay at 1 a.m.
                            EST on the 29th and about 100 miles east
                            of Atlantic City at 7 a.m. EST on the
                            29th.

NEW MEXICO, Central and North

  NMZ002>006-008-           Northwest Mountains Including Jemez -
  010>013                   Upper Rio Grande Valley - Sangre De
                            Cristo Mountains Northeast Highlands -
                            Harding - Westcentral Mountains -
                            Sandia/Manzano Mountains Central High
                            Plains/Estancia Valley County - Conchas
                            Lake/Guadalupe - Quay
                            14     0000MST
                            15     1500MST

                            A storm which began with heavy snows
                            along the eastern slopes of the Sangre
                            de Cristo mountains and the Sandia
                            mountains pushed cold air through the
                            central valleys and covered the eastern
                            plains with cold readings. Amounts peaked
                            at near 17-19 inches at Chacon and Pecos
                            while 24-28 inches was measured near
                            Gascon. The Sandia Park area reported
                            15-22 inches. Snow eventually spread west
                            in the central valley with 4-8 inches
                            reported in Albuquerque metro area and
                            nearly 12 inches across the Jcmcz
                            Mountains and Los Alamos with 10 inches
                            reported cast and southeast of Cuba. The
                            storm dumped 4 to 9 inches across the
                            eastern plains as it finally moved east
                            out of the state, Mountain communities
                            northwest of Las Vegas had 48 hours
                            totals of 30-36 inches.

  NMZ016                    Lincoln County High Plains/Hondo Valley
                            29     0950MST

                            High winds reported at Sierra Blanca
                            Airport 15 NE of Ruidoso.

  NMZ005-007                Northeast Highlands - Far Northeast
                            Plains
                            30     2100MST
                            31     1600MST

                            Heavy snow of 6-8 inches was reported
                            between Raton and Clayton with driving
                            winds.

NEW MEXICO, South Central and Southwest

                            NONE REPORTED.

NEW MEXICO, Southeast

  NMZ028                    Eddy County Plains
                            15     0300MST
                                   1300MST

                            Winter weather affected parts of New
                            Mexico during the day on the 15th. Light
                            snow accumulations up to one inch were
                            reported across the northwestern half of
                            the Eddy County plains.

  NMZ029                    Northern Lea County
                            15     0400MST
                                   1400MST

                            More significant snowfall occurred over
                            northern Lea County on the 15th as a
                            winter storm affected portions of the
                            New Mexico plains. Between four and five
                            inch snow accumulations were reported
                            across northern Lea County from Caprock
                            to Crossroads.

  NMZ028-033                Eddy County Plains - Central Lea County
                            29     1200MST
                                   1600MST

                            A potent storm system moved east over
                            the Southern Plains on the 29th and
                            caused severe non-thunderstorm winds over
                            southeastern New Mexico. Numerous reports
                            of downed power lines and poles were
                            received along with reports of blown down
                            trees. The roof was blown off of a
                            trailer home near Hobbs. Wind gusts to
                            58 MPH were recorded at both the
                            Carlsbad and Hobbs airports.

NEW YORK, Central

  NYZ009-015>018-           Northern Oneida - Yates - Seneca -
  022>025-036>037-          Southern Cayuga - Onondaga - Steuben -
  044>046-055>057-062       Schuyler - Chemung - Tompkins - Madison
                            - Southern Oneida - Cortland - Chenango
                            - Otsego - Tioga - Broome - Delaware -
                            Sullivan
                            1      0300EST
                                   1200EST

                            A strong winter storm brought 8 to 14
                            inches of snow to all of central New
                            York. Isolated snow amounts were as much
                            as two feet. A Midwest storm slowly moved
                            east and combined with another storm
                            moving north along the east coast on
                            February 27th to bring copious moisture
                            to the region on February 28th. The snow
                            moved in from the south starting in the
                            afternoon and early evening on February
                            28th. The snow continued through the
                            night, heavy at times, before tapering
                            off to light snow and flurries late in
                            the morning on March 1st.

  NYZ056>057-062            Broome - Delaware - Sullivan
                            24     0400EST
                                   0700EST

                            An intensifying storm moved north along
                            the east coast on March 23rd and 24th.
                            Light snow, possibly mixed with rain,
                            moved into the region midday on the 23rd.
                            The snow became heavy at times late in
                            the afternoon and continued into the
                            evening. Snowfall amounts were 6 to 8
                            inches with some amounts up to a foot
                            mainly at higher elevations. Water
                            equivalents of the snow were between
                            half an inch and an inch.

  Otsego County
    Gilbertsville           28     1400EST
                                   1730EST

                            A strong Atlantic coast storm brought
                            heavy rain with amounts between 1 and 3
                            inches. A few locations received more
                            than 3 inches. In addition, snowmelt was
                            causing high stream flows before the
                            rain started late on the 27th. The
                            flooding caused Mill Street to be closed
                            in Gilbertsville.

  Tioga County
    Countywide              28     1505EST
                                   2330EST

                            State Route 96 in Owego closed due to
                            flooding of the Owego Creek. Several
                            other roads were closed in Tioga Center
                            and Berkshire. Most roads were closed due
                            to flooding with one road in Berkshire
                            closed due to a mudslide. A strong
                            Atlantic coast storm brought around 2
                            inches of rain that fell on wet or
                            frozen saturated ground. In addition to
                            the rain adding to the runoff there was
                            snowmelt, which could of added another
                            inch or 2 of water equivalent. Streams
                            and creeks were already running high due
                            to snowmelt before the rain came starting
                            late on the 27th.

  NYZ055                    Tioga
                            28     1817EST
                            31     2359EST

                            A strong Atlantic coast storm brought
                            heavy rain with amounts between 1 and 3
                            inches on the 28th. In addition, snowmelt
                            was causing elevated river flows before
                            the rain started late on the 27th. Water
                            equivalent of the snowmelt was a few more
                            inches. The Susquehanna River at Waverly,
                            NY / Sayre, PA rose above its flood stage
                            of 11 feet on the 28th, crested at 15.08
                            feet at 12 AM on the 30th, then fell
                            slowly but stayed over flood stage into
                            April. After the rainstorm, temperatures
                            were warm enough to cause additional
                            snowmelt.

  NYZ057                    Delaware
                            28     1900EST
                            29     1036EST

                            A strong Atlantic coast storm brought
                            heavy rain with amounts between 1 and 3
                            inches on the 28th. In addition, snowmelt
                            was causing elevated river flows before
                            the rain started late on the 27th. Water
                            equivalent of the snowmelt was a few more
                            inches. The Beaver Kill at Cooks Falls
                            went above its flood stage of 10 feet the
                            evening of the 28th. The river crested at
                            10.42 feet at 5:15 AM on the 29th, before
                            falling back below flood stage late
                            morning on the 29th.

  NYZ045                    Chenango
                            28     2133EST
                            31     1039EST

                            A strong Atlantic coast storm brought
                            heavy rain with amounts between 1 and 3
                            inches on the 28th. In addition, snowmelt
                            was causing elevated river flows before
                            the rain started late on the 27th. Water
                            equivalent of the snowmelt was a few more
                            inches. The Susquehanna River at
                            Bainbridge went above its flood stage of
                            13 feet late on the 28th, crested at 15.3
                            feet at 8 PM on the 29th, then fell below
                            flood stage on the 31 st. Additional
                            snowmelt after the rainstorm caused to
                            river to remain high.

  Sullivan County
    Bloomingburg            29     0010EST
                                   0330EST

                            Heavy rain washed out a road. A strong
                            Atlantic storm dropped 2 to 3 inches of
                            rain on an already saturated ground. Most
                            of the rain fell on the 28th. Also adding
                            to the runoff was several inches of water
                            equivalent from snowmelt.

  NYZ056                    Broome
                            29     0100EST
                            31     2359EST

                            A strong Atlantic coast storm brought
                            heavy rain with amounts between 1 and 3
                            inches on the 28th. In addition, snowmelt
                            was causing elevated river flows before
                            the rain started late on the 27th. Water
                            equivalent of the snowmelt was a few more
                            inches. The Susquehanna River at Conklin
                            went above its flood stage of 11 feet
                            early on the 29th, crested at 15.09 feet
                            at 2:30 PM on the 29th. The river stayed
                            above flood stage into April due to
                            additional snowmelt.

  NYZ056                    Broome
                            29     0443EST
                            31     1029EST

                            A strong Atlantic coast storm brought
                            heavy rain with amounts between 1 and 3
                            inches on the 28th. In addition, snowmelt
                            was causing elevated river flows before
                            the rain started late on the 27th. Water
                            equivalent of the snowmelt was a few more
                            inches. The Susquehanna River at Vestal
                            went above its flood stage of 18 feet
                            early on the 29th, crested at 20.80 feet
                            at 6:00 PM also on the 29th, then fell
                            back below flood stage on the 31st.
                            Additional snowmelt occurred after the
                            rainstorm keeping river levels high.

  NYZ045                    Chenango
                            31     1645EST
                                   2359EST

                            A strong Atlantic coast storm brought
                            heavy rain with amounts between 1 and 3
                            inches on the 28th. In addition snowmelt
                            before and after the rainstorm was
                            causing elevated river flows. Water
                            equivalent of the snowmelt was a few
                            more inches. The Susquehanna River at
                            Bainbridge went briefly below its flood
                            stage of 13 feet on the 31st before
                            rising back over flood stage.
                            Temperatures in the 50s on the 31st
                            caused added snowmelt rising the river.
                            Another slow moving storm from the Ohio
                            Valley brought 2 to 3 inches of rain
                            on April 2nd and 3rd. By the time the
                            river fell below flood stage most of the
                            snow had melted. This additional rain
                            and snowmelt caused the river to rise
                            rapidly to a crest of 20.47 feet at 4:15
                            AM on April 4th. This was the 6th highest
                            crest at Bainbridge for almost the last
                            100 years. The river fell below flood
                            stage the morning of April 6th.

  NYZ044                    Cortland
                            31     2005EST
                                   2359EST

                            The Tioughnioga River at Cortland rose
                            above its flood stage of 8 feet late on
                            March 31st. The rise was due to rain that
                            fell on March 28th and snowmelt during
                            the week leading up to the 31st. The
                            water equivalent of the snow amounted to
                            several inches. A slow moving storm from
                            the Ohio Valley brought 2 to 3 inches of
                            rain on April 2nd and 3rd. By the time
                            the river fell below flood stage most of
                            the snow had melted. This additional rain
                            and snowmelt caused the river to rise to
                            a crest of 14.07 feet at 2:00 PM EST on
                            April 3th. This was a record flood crest
                            at Cortland. The previous flood of record
                            was 13.82 feet in 1950.

  NYZ045                    Chenango
                            31     2230EST
                                   2359EST

                            The Chenango River at Sherbume rose above
                            its flood stage of 8 feet late on the
                            31st. The rise was due to rain that fell
                            on the 28th and snowmelt during the week
                            leading up to the 31st. The water
                            equivalent of the snow amounted to
                            several inches. A slow moving storm from
                            the Ohio Valley brought 2 to 3 inches of
                            rain on April 2nd and 3rd. By the time
                            the river fell below flood stage most
                            of the snow had melted. This additional
                            rain and snowmelt caused the river to
                            rise to a crest of 10.78 feet at 2:30 AM
                            on April 3th. This was the 2nd highest
                            flood crest at Sherbume.

NEW YORK, Coastal

  NYZ068>072-               Putnam - Rockland - Northern Westchester
  074>076-078>079-081       - Southern Westchester New York
                            (Manhattan) Richmond (Staten Is.) - Kings
                            (Brooklyn) - Queens - Northwest Suffolk
                            Northeast Suffolk Southeast Suffolk
                            01     0100EST
                                   0815EST

                            A weak high pressure ridge extended
                            southwest across the region from New
                            England as a low pressure system
                            intensified and moved northeast. This
                            strong low passed south of Long Island
                            Monday night and cast of the New England
                            coast during Tuesday.

                            Light snow developed northeast across
                            the region between 1 and 4 pm Monday
                            afternoon. As the low rapidly intensified
                            and moved closer to the region, narrow
                            bands of heavy snow swept northeast
                            across the region. The last band of
                            heavy snow swept northeast across the
                            region between 7:30 am and 8:30 am
                            Tuesday morning, March 1st. Storm Total
                            Snowfall amounts ranged from 5 to 9
                            inches.

                            Here are selected snowfall totals for:

                            Rockland County - from 7.2 inches at New
                            City to 8.0 inches at Sloatsburg.

                            Westchester County - from 5.0 inches at
                            Scarsdale to 8.0 inches at Yorktown
                            Heights.

                            Putnam County - from 6.5 inches at Lake
                            Peekskill to 8.5 inches at Lake Carmel.

                            New York (Manhattan) - 7.5 inches was
                            measured at the Central Park Zoo.

                            Richmond (Staten Island) - from 6.1
                            inches at Bulls Head to 6.5 inches at
                            New Dorf.

                            Kings (Brooklyn) - from 5.0 inches at
                            Graves End to 6.0 inches at Shecpshead
                            Bay.

                            Queens County - from 5.0 inches at JFK
                            Airport to 7.0 inches at LaGuardia
                            Airport.

                            Suffolk County - from 5.5 inches at the
                            NWS Office in Upton, Sag Harbor,
                            Patchogue, and Deer Park to 7.2 inches
                            in Smithtown.

                            At Islip Airport, 6.6 inches was
                            measured.

  NYZ069>081                Rockland - Northern Westchester -
                            Southern Westchester - New York
                            (Manhattan) - Bronx - Richmond (Staten
                            Is.) - Kings (Brooklyn) - Queens -
                            Nassau - Northwest Suffolk - Northeast
                            Suffolk - Southwest Suffolk - Southeast
                            Suffolk
                            08     1300EST
                                   1700EST

  NYZ076                    Queens
                            8      1910EST

                            A strong arctic cold front intensified
                            as it swept southeast across the region.
                            This caused rain to change to snow,
                            temperatures to fall from the 40s into
                            the 20s, and northwest winds that gusted
                            between 40 and 55 mph. A peak isolated
                            wind gust to 58 mph was measured by the
                            Automated Surface Observing System at
                            JFK Airport. Near blizzard conditions
                            occurred for a short time. Storm total
                            snowfalls ranged from around 2 to 4
                            inches.

                            Wet and mild antecedent conditions were
                            followed by more than a 20 degree drop
                            in temperature in 3 hours with strong
                            gusty winds. This resulted in a "flash"
                            freeze across roads that resulted in
                            hundreds of vehicle accidents.

  NYZ078-080                Northwest Suffolk - Southwest Suffolk
                            12     0800EST

                            A low pressure system developed southeast
                            of Long Island before sunrise on Saturday
                            March 12th. This low quickly intensified
                            as it moved northeast. It passed near
                            Nantucket during Saturday afternoon and
                            moved east of Cape Cod by Saturday
                            evening.

                            Light rain developed across the Atlantic
                            coastal waters just south of Long Island
                            between 1 am and 2 am. As the rainfall
                            intensity increased, it quickly changed
                            to heavy wet snow. The band of heavy snow
                            developed from western and central
                            Suffolk County north across New Haven
                            County CT. A few areas, mainly east of
                            Patchogue, experienced snowfall rates in
                            excess of 2 inches per hour.

                            Storm total snowfall amounts ranged from
                            around 5 to 8 inches. Here are selected
                            amounts of at least 6 inches:

                            Patchogue - 8 inches
                            Lake Ronkonkoma - 7.5 inches
                            Rocky Point - 6.8 inches
                            Mount Sinai - 6.7 inches
                            Sayville - 6.5 inches
                            Shoreham - 6.4 inches
                            Port Jefferson - 6.3 inches
                            Medford and North Patchogue - 6.0 inches

  NYZ067>068                Orange - Putnam
                            23      2100EST
                                    2200EST

                            As a ridge of high pressure extended
                            southeast across New England, a low
                            pressure system moved northeast along
                            a warm front. The low quickly passed
                            southeast of Long Island early
                            Thursday morning on March 24th.

                            Snow quickly developed and spread
                            northeast across the region during
                            Wednesday afternoon. It became heavy
                            during Wednesday evening. Storm total
                            snowfall amounts ranged from around
                            6 to 10 inches. In Orange County,
                            snowfall accumulations ranged from
                            6.0 inches at Cornwall-On-Hudson to
                            10.0 inches at Circleville.

NEW YORK, East

  NYZ066                    Eastern Dutchess
                            01      0600EST
                            02      0000EST

  NYZ065                    Western Dutchess
                            01      0600EST
                            02      0000EST

                            The average total snowfall across
                            Dutchess County was 9 inches.

  NYZ064                    Eastern Ulster
                            01      0600EST
                            02      0000EST

  NYZ063                    Western Ulster
                            01      0600EST
                            02      0000EST

                            Average total snowfall across Ulster
                            County was 11 inches.

  NYZ061                    Eastern Columbia
                            01      0700EST
                            02      0000EST

  NYZ060                    Western Columbia
                            01      0700EST
                            02      0000EST

                            Average total snowfall across
                            Columbia County was 10 inches.

  NYZ059                    Eastern Greene
                            01      0700EST
                            02      0000EST

  NYZ058                    Western Greene
                            01      0700EST
                            02      0000EST

                            Average total snowfall across
                            Greene County was 11 inches.

  NYZ052                    Eastern Albany
                            01      0900EST
                            02      0000EST

  NYZ051                    Western Albany
                            01      0900EST
                            02      0000EST

                            Average total snowfall across
                            Albany County was 13 inches.

  NYZ054                    Eastern Rensselaer
                            01      0900EST
                            02      0000EST

  NYZ053                    Western Rensselaer
                            01      0900EST
                            02      0000EST

                            Average total snowfall across
                            Rensselaer County was 11 inches.

  NYZ049                    Eastern Schenectady
                            01      0900EST
                            02      0000EST

  NYZ048                    Western Schenectady
                            01      0900EST
                            02      0000EST

                            Average total snowfall across
                            Schenectady County was 11 inches.

  NYZ047                    Schoharie
                            01      0900EST
                            02      0000EST

                            Average total snowfall across
                            Schoharie County was 10 inches.

  NYZ082                    Northern Fulton
                            01      1000EST
                            02      0000EST

  NYZ039                    Southern Fulton
                            01      1000EST
                            02      0000EST

                            Average total snowfall across
                            Fulton County was 9 inches.

  NYZ040                    Montgomery
                            01      1000EST
                            02      0000EST

                            Average total snowfall across
                            Montgomery County was 9 inches.

  NYZ041                    Northern Saratoga
                            01      1000EST
                            02      0000EST

  NYZ050                    Southern Saratoga
                            01      1000EST
                            02      0000EST

                            Average total snowfall across
                            Saratoga County was 12 inches.

  NYZ043                    Northern Washington
                            01      1000EST
                            02      0000EST

  NYZ084                    Southern Washington
                            01      1000EST
                            02      0000EST

                            Average total snowfall across
                            Washington County was 11 inches.

  NYZ033                    Hamilton
                            01      1500EST
                            02      0000EST

                            Average total snowfall across
                            Hamilton County was 8 inches.

  NYZ032                    Northern Herkimer
                            01      1500EST
                            02      0000EST

  NYZ038                    Southern Herkimer
                            01      1500EST
                            02      0000EST

                            The average total snowfall across
                            Herkimer County was 8 inches.

  NYZ042                    Northern Warren
                            01      1500EST
                            02      0000EST

  NYZ083                    Southeast Warren
                            01      1500EST
                            02      0000EST

                            The average total snowfall across
                            Warren County was 11 inches.

                            A surface low pressure was centered
                            along the mid-Atlantic Coast at the
                            beginning of March. This storm tracked
                            northeastward well off the eastern
                            seaboard, reaching southeast of Cape
                            Cod by midday on March 1. The storm
                            then moved into the Gulf of Maine
                            by late on March 1. At the same time,
                            another vertically stacked storm
                            moved slowly east from the Great
                            Lakes and interacted with the
                            low-level moisture from the surface
                            storm. The combination of the two
                            storms, along with a surface trough
                            anchored between them, resulted in a
                            significant snowstorm across much
                            of eastern New York and adjacent
                            western New England. Snowfall storm
                            totals across the region ranged
                            from 7 inches to a foot or more.
                            Officially, 11.7 inches of snow
                            fell at the National Weather Service
                            station in Albany. The heaviest
                            amount was reported in Bennington
                            County in Vermont, where 17.5 inches
                            of snow was reported in the Town
                            of Wadeford. Other than the usual
                            school and business closures, the
                            storm did not report any unusual
                            problems across the region.

  NYZ053                    Western Rensselaer
                            08      1200EST
                                    1800EST

  NYZ054                    Eastern Rensselaer
                            08      1200EST
                                    1800EST

                            The average snowfall across
                            Rensselaer County was 12 inches.

  NYZ043                    Northern Washington
                            08      1600EST
                                    1800EST

  NYZ084                    Southern Washington
                            08      1600EST
                                    1800EST

                            The average total snowfall across
                            Washington County was 9 inches.

                            A strong cold front moved across
                            eastern New York and adjacent western
                            New England on March 8th. As the
                            front slowed down across eastern New
                            England, a wave of low pressure
                            formed along it and eventually became
                            a closed storm system which
                            intensified as it moved into the
                            Canadian Maritimes. The front and
                            developing storm brought snow across
                            the region. A meso-scale band of
                            enhanced heavier snow and an upslope
                            wind component, resulted in heavy
                            snowfall across portions of the
                            Taconics and Berkshires. Gusty winds
                            also resulted in some blowing and
                            drifting of the snow, but not enough
                            to qualify as a blizzard. The
                            snowfall in these areas ranged from
                            7 inches to locally over a foot.
                            Seventeen inches was reported in
                            Averill Park, Rensselaer County, the
                            highest snowfall total. The snow and
                            blowing snow resulted minor traffic
                            accidents across the region.

  NYZ051                    Western Albany
                            24      0000EST
                                    0600EST

                            The average snowfall total across
                            Western Albany County was 8.0 inches.

  NYZ060                    Western Columbia
                            24      0000EST
                                    0600EST

                            The average snowfall total across
                            Western Columbia County was 8.0 inches.

  NYZ065                    Western Dutchess
                            24      0000EST
                                    0600EST

                            The average snowfall total across
                            Western Dutchess County was 8.0 inches.

  NYZ059                    Eastern Greene
                            24      0000EST
                                    0600EST

  NYZ058                    Western Greene
                            24      0000EST
                                    0600EST

                            The average snowfall total across
                            Greene County was 9.0 inches.

  NYZ054                    Eastern Rensselaer
                            24      0000EST
                                    0600EST

                            The average snowfall depth across
                            Eastern Rensselaer County was 7.0
                            inches.

  NYZ064                    Eastern Ulster
                            24      0000EST
                                    0600EST

  NYZ063                    Western Ulster
                            24      0000EST
                                    0600EST

                            The average snowfall depth across
                            Ulster County was 8.0 inches.

  NYZ041                    Northern Saratoga
                            24      0300EST
                                    0600EST

                            The average snowfall total across
                            Northern Saratoga County: 10.0
                            inches. Highest snowfall amount
                            reported in Gansevoort, 12 inches.

  NYZ043                    Northern Washington
                            24      0300EST
                                    0600EST

                            Average snowfall depth across
                            Northern Washington County: 10.0
                            inches. Highest snowfall amount in
                            Northern Washington County reported
                            in Cossayua, 12 inches.

                            The fourth coastal storm of the
                            month tracked from south of Long
                            Island to east of Cape Cod by early
                            March 24. This storm produced a
                            meso-scale band of heavy snow that
                            first fell to the south and west
                            of Albany. The band weakened as it
                            moved across the Greater Capital
                            District, but then strengthened as
                            it proceeded north in the Saratoga
                            region and Washington County. The
                            result was a significant snowfall
                            across portions of the Catskills,
                            Helderbergs, Saratoga region and
                            Taconics, while lesser amounts fell
                            across the remainder of the region.
                            A foot fell in two serperate spots,
                            Gansevoort, Saratoga County and
                            Cossayua, Washington County. No
                            unusual problems were reported with
                            this storm.

  Montgomery County
    Canajoharie             28      0852EST
                            29      0200EST

                            The Canajoharie Creek exceeded the
                            6.0-foot flood stage at the Canajoharie
                            Creek gage, cresting at 8.19 feet,
                            5:15PM on the 28th.

  Schoharie County
    Warnerville             28      1000EST
                                    1100EST

                            The town of Warnerville was
                            impassable due to flooded roads.

  Saratoga County
    Bemis Hgts              28      1215EST
                                    1315EST

                            Three roads closed, including Route
                            67 and Route 4, due to water coverage.

  Washington County
    Clarks Mills            28      1400EST
                                    1500EST

                            County Route 113 closed due to
                            flooding.

  Schenectady County
    Glenville               28      1600EST
                                    1700EST

                            Droms Road closed between Swaggertown
                            Road and Charlton Road due to flooding.

  NYZ043                    Northern Washington
                            28      1845EST
                                    1945EST

                            Metawee River over flood stage.

  NYZ043                    Northern Washington
                            28      1845EST
                                    0101EST

                            The Metawee River exceeded the
                            7.0-foot flood stage at the
                            Granville gage, cresting at 7.20
                            feet at 9:15 PM on the 28th.

  NYZ064                    Eastern Ulster
                            28      2230EST
                                    2230EST

                            Springtown Road flooded.

  NYZ059                    Eastern Greene
                            28      2230EST
                            29      0000EST

                            In Cairo, 15 County Roads closed
                            due to flooding. Eighteen Fire
                            companies pumped out basements
                            throughout county.

  NYZ060                    Western Columbia
                            29      0030EST
                                    0130EST

                            Every town in Columbia County
                            reported road closures due to
                            flooding.

  NYZ050                    Southern Saratoga
                            29      0154EST
                                    0603EST

                            The Mohawk River exceeded the
                            188.0-foot flood stage at the
                            Crescent Dam gage, cresting at
                            188.26 feet, at 3:00AM on the 29th.

  NYZ065                    Western Dutchess
                            29      0200EST
                                    0242EST

                            Due to tidal flooding as well as
                            locally heavy rain, the Hudson River
                            exceeded the 5.0-foot flood stage at
                            the Poughkeepsie gage, cresting at
                            5.05 feet, 2:30AM on the 29th.

  NYZ066                    Eastern Dutchess
                            29      0300EST
                                    0400EST

                            In the Town of Northeast, Mill Road
                            closed due to flooding.

  NYZ064                    Eastern Ulster
                            29      0356EST
                                    1407EST

                            The Esopus Creek exceeded the
                            20.0-foot flood stage at the Mount
                            Marion gage, cresting at 20.54 feet,
                            8:00AM on the 29th.

  NYZ040                    Montgomery
                            29      1352EST
                            30      0007EST

                            The Schoharie Creek exceeded the
                            6.0-foot flood stage at the
                            Burtonsville gage, cresting at 6.13
                            feet at 7:00PM on the 29th.

  NYZ065                    Western Dutchess
                            29      1352EST
                                    1945EST

                            Wappingers Creek exceeded the
                            8.0-foot flood stage at the
                            Wappingers Falls gage, cresting
                            at 8.09 feet, 4:30PM on the 29th.

  NYZ038                    Southern Herkimer
                            30      0000EST
                            31      0159EST

                            The Mohawk River exceeded the
                            403.0-foot flood stage at the Utica
                            gage, cresting at 403.4 feet, 6:00PM
                            on the 30th.

                            A potent area of low pressure and
                            its associated frontal systems,
                            moved northeast across the Ohio
                            and Saint Lawrence Valleys on the
                            28th of March, bringing with it a
                            significant amount of moisture.
                            Since it took a more western track
                            than previous storms earlier in the
                            month, almost all of the precipitation
                            fell as rain. Rainfall totals,
                            averaging 1-2 inches, but locally as
                            high as 4 inches, accumulated across
                            portions of the eastern New York and
                            adjacent western New England. This
                            rainfall, combined with snow melt,
                            produced significant runoff,
                            resulting in widespread flooding
                            across the region between March 28th
                            through 31st. Many streams and rivers
                            reached or exceed bankful, including
                            the Mettawee, Housatonic and Mohawk
                            Rivers, as well as the Esopus,
                            Wappingers and Schoharie Creeks.
                            Numerous houses in Columbia and
                            Greene Counties sustained damage
                            when their basements became flooded,
                            and there were many reports of road
                            closures across a large number of
                            counties. One Mechanicville man was
                            transported to a local hospital after
                            being swept away by floodwaters of
                            the Anthony Kill. In Columbia County,
                            every town reported at least one
                            road closed due to flooding.

NEW YORK, North

  NYZ026>031-               Northern St. Lawrence  -  Northern
  034>035-087               Franklin - Eastern Clinton - South-
                            eastern St. Lawrence - Southern
                            Franklin - Western Clinton - Western
                            Essex - Eastern Essex - Southerwestern
                            St. Lawrence
                            01      2000EST
                                    2230EST

                            A storm system off the Carolinas on
                            Monday, February 28th moved to the
                            Gulf of Maine the afternoon and
                            evening of Tuesday, March 1st. Snow
                            developed across the area during the
                            night of Feb 28th, and was heavy at
                            times during March 1st before it
                            tapered off the night of March 1st.
                            Snowfall was generally between 8
                            and 10 inches, except in Clinton
                            county where snowfall was between
                            9 and 14 inches. Locally higher
                            amounts fell in the higher peaks of
                            the Adirondacks.

  NYZ028-034>035            Eastern Clinton - Western Essex -
                            Eastern Essex
                            11      1700EST
                            12      1700EST

                            An area of low pressure over the Ohio
                            valley on Friday, March 11th moved
                            east across southern New York and
                            reorganized south of Cape Cod early
                            Saturday, March 12th. The storm
                            system moved north through the Gulf
                            of Maine Saturday evening. Snow spread
                            across the area during the afternoon
                            of March 11th, and was steady later on
                            the night of March 11th into Saturday,
                            March 12th, before it tapered off
                            Saturday afternoon. General snow
                            accumulations were 3 to 5 inches.

NEW YORK, West

  NYZ001>003-               Niagara - Orleans - Monroe - Northern
  010>011-014               Erie - Genesee - Ontario
                            01      0320EST
                                    1400EST

                            An intensifying low over Indiana and
                            Ohio on February 28th lifted slowly
                            across Lake Erie. Snow overspread the
                            area during the late afternoon hours
                            of the 28th. It was generally light
                            at first, but became moderate to heavy
                            for a time across the Niagara Frontier
                            and northern Finger Lakes (including
                            Buffalo and Rochester) shortly after
                            midnight. The snow finally tapered
                            off during the morning and early
                            afternoon hours of March 1st.
                            Specific overnight snowfalls
                            included: 9" at Clarence and
                            Alabama; 8" at Medina and Victor;
                            and 7" at Spencerport and Lewiston.

  NYZ019>020-085            Chautauqua - Cattaraugus - Southern Erie
                            02      2015EST
                            03      1500EST

                            A northwest flow across Lake Eric
                            resulted in an intense lake effect
                            snow across the higher elevations
                            of the western southern tier of New
                            York during the evening of March 2nd
                            and continuing through the afternoon
                            of the 3rd. Specific snowfall reports
                            included: 14" at Perrysburg; 13" at
                            Cassadaga; 12" at Stockton; and 10"
                            at East Aurora.

  NYZ006                    Oswego
                            04     1750EST
                                   2300EST

                            A cold, westerly flow across Lake
                            Ontario established a narrow, intense
                            band of lake effect snow over Oswego
                            county. In Scriba ten inches of snow
                            fell while nine inches was reported
                            in Palermo and Volney.

  NYZ006                    Oswego
                            10     0530EST
                                   1800EST

                            A band of lake effect snow began
                            to develop late in the afternoon of
                            March 9th in a northwest flow across
                            Lake Ontario. The band of snow
                            continued through the night and
                            morning hours, but broke apart
                            during the afternoon hours under
                            the strong March sun. Snowfall
                            reports included: 10" at West
                            Monroe; 9" at Constantia; and
                            7" at Hannibal.

                                Number of         Estimated
                                 Persons            Damage

Location                    Killed   Injured   Property   Crops

MISSOURI, East
  Cole County
    Jefferson City            0         0

                            The ASOS at the Jefferson City airport
                            recorded a 58 mph wind gust.

MISSOURI, Lower

  Pemiscot County
    Hayti                        0      0       0.01K

MISSOURI, Northeast
                            NONE REPORTED.

MISSOURI, Northwest

  Bates County
    2 NNW Amsterdam           0         0

  Bates County
    1 N Amsterdam             0         0

  Bates County
    4 S Butler                0         0

  Cass County
    Raymore                   0         0

  Clay County
    Kearney                   0         0

  MOZ038                    Lafayette
                              0         0

                            A peak wind gust of 61 mph was measured
                            at Higginsville by the Cooperative
                            Observer. Wind gusts from 40 to 55 mph
                            were common elsewhere across much of
                            west central Missouri.

  Nodaway County
    5 E Maryville             0         0

                            Thunderstorm winds broke off 18 to 24
                            inch tree limbs.

  Nodaway County
    2 E Maryville             0         0        10K

                            One barn had roof blown off. One
                            building suffered minor damage. Trees
                            had some damage and a few power lines
                            were downed.

  Worth County
    Denver                    0         0         2K

                            Barn suffered some damage from strong
                            thunderstorm winds.

  Mercer County
    Princeton                 0         0

  Linn County
    6 N Purdin                0         0

                            Six to ten inch tree limbs down.

  Sullivan County
    1 W Browning              0         0

                            Six to ten inch tree limbs down.

MISSOURI, Southeast

  Ripley County
    Fairdealing to            0         0
    7 SE Doniphan
                            Dime to nickel-size hail was reported at
                            three places in eastern Ripley County.

  Butler County
    Poplar Bluff              0         0

  Scott County
    Scott City                0         0

                            One-inch hail occurred along Interstate
                            55.

  Cape Girardeau
  County
    4 SW Cape Girardeau       0         0         1K

                            The tin roof was ripped off a barn on
                            Highway 74, about 2 miles west of
                            Interstate 55. The roof was blown into
                            some power lines, which were knocked
                            down. At the nearby Cape Girardeau
                            airport, the peak wind gust recorded by
                            the automated observing system was 54
                            MPH.

  Cape Girardeau
  County
    Randles to                0         0
    5 W Cape Girardeau
                            Dime to quarter-size hail fell in
                            extreme southern Cape Girardeau County.
                            The report of quarter-size hail was from
                            Randles.

  Stoddard County
    Acorn Ridge to            0         0
    Dexter

  Butler County
    2 W Fisk                  0         0

  Scott County
    Oran                      0         0

  Stoddard County
    Advance                   0         0

  Scott County
    2.5 N Sikeston to         0         0
    Sikeston
                            One-inch hail fell just north of
                            Sikeston, while dime-size hail fell in
                            Sikeston.

  Mississippi County
    Charleston                0         0

                            A line of thunderstorms developed over
                            southeast Missouri, near a line from
                            Poplar Bluff to Cape Girardeau. As the
                            line moved east to the Mississippi
                            River, some storms along the line
                            produced large hail and an isolated
                            report of damaging winds. The most
                            severe storm along the line tracked
                            through northern Scott and southern Cape
                            Girardeau Counties, producing hail up to
                            golf ball size and minor wind damage.

MISSOURI, Southwest

  Vernon County
    Fair Haven                0         0

  Vernon County
    6 N Walker                0         0

  Cedar County
    El Dorado Spgs            0         0

  St. Clair County
    7 S Appleton City         0         0

  Cedar County
    Stockton                  0         0

  Polk County
    Fair Play                 0         0

  Cedar County
    Stockton                  0         0

  Polk County
    Half Way                  0         0

MONTANA, Central

  MTZ009>011-013-
  044>049

                              0         0

                            A deep low pressure system over central
                            Canada was responsible for a high wind
                            event along the Rocky Mountain Front and
                            adjacent plains on the 6th. Reported
                            wind speeds include: a gust to 73 mph at
                            East Glacier Park 11 SE; a gust to 54
                            mph at Harlem 16S and a gust to 46 mph
                            at Great Falls Airport. Additionally,
                            sustained winds of 40 mph were reported
                            for several hours at Oilmont 14E,
                            Fairfield 7NE, Cut Bank, Valier,
                            Blackleaf, Turner 6NW, Inverness 20N
                            and Loma 20N. The strong wind helped
                            spread a grass fire near Valier. Over
                            150 acres of grass burned from a fire
                            caused by exhaust from a vehicle.

  MTZ012-050-054
                              0         0

                            Heavy snow fell across a portion of
                            North Central Montana during the
                            afternoon and early evening of the 14th.
                            Reported snow fall amounts include: 11
                            inches at Neihart 7NW, 8 inches at
                            Millegan 14SE and 6 inches at Hobson
                            20SW. The heavy snow created slick and
                            hazardous driving surfaces and
                            contributed to over 40 motor vehicle
                            accidents.

  MTZ009-012>015-
  044-046>047-051-
  054>055

                              0         0

                            A Canadian cold front swept across a
                            broad area of North Central Montana on
                            the 17th bringing heavy snow and gusty
                            winds. Reported snow fall amounts
                            include: 14 inches at the Crystal Lake
                            SNOTEL site; 8 inches at Neihart 7S; 7
                            inches at Neihart, Gold Butte and
                            Conrad; 6 inches at Marias Pass 1 WNW,
                            Shonkin, Pony and Lewistown 25S and 5
                            inches at Bozeman 7SE and Chester.

  MTZ009>014-044-
  047>050

                              0         0

                            A vigorous spring storm brought heavy
                            snow to a wide area of North Central and
                            Southwest Montana on the 23rd. Reported
                            snow fall amounts include: 16 inches at
                            Holter Dam; 15 inches at Eden; 12 inches
                            at Shonkin 7S, Holter Dam 6S, Rogers
                            Pass, Heart Butte 6W; 10 inches at
                            Sunburst 6S, Gold Butte 7N; 8 inches at
                            Havre 25S, Hobson, Choteau, Stanford,
                            Millegan 14SE; 7 inches at Great Falls,
                            Cut Bank 25NW, Hogeland 2W, Babb,
                            Augusta 25NW, Neihart 7NNW, Great Falls
                            3SW; 6 inches at Grass Range and 5
                            inches at Martinsdale 3NNW and West
                            Yellowstone 9N.

MONTANA, East

  MTZ016>017-
  019>020-022>026-
  059>062

                              0         0

                            Strong winds affected much of northeast
                            Montana during the morning and afternoon
                            hours of the 6th. The strong winds were
                            associated with a cold front and upper
                            level disturbance that crossed the area.
                            Sustained wind speeds of 40 to 45 mph
                            were common. A few locations had wind
                            gusts in the 58 to 69 mph range. A few
                            of the stronger wind gusts included:

                            King Coulee Raws Site (Valley County):
                            69 mph

                            Bluff Creek Raws Site (Valley County):
                            58 mph

                            Poplar Raws Site (Roosevelt County):
                            58 mph

  MTZ017-017-022-059

                              0         0

                            An area of low pressure in Wyoming
                            brought heavy snow in narrow bands to a
                            portion of northeast Montana. The
                            heaviest snow fell in a 10 to 15 mile
                            band across northern Phillips county,
                            southwest Valley, and portions of
                            northern Garfield county. A few of the
                            heavier snow totals included:

                            3 miles south of Whitewater (Phillips
                            County): 6 inches

                            20 miles south/southwest of Glasgow
                            (Valley County): 12 inches

                            30 miles southwest of Glasgow (Valley
                            County): 6 inches

                            30 miles northeast of Jordan (Garfield
                            County): 6-8 inches

  MTZ016-059>060

                              0         0

                            An area of low pressure that developed
                            in Wyoming brought heavy snow to much of
                            Phillips County late in the evening of
                            the 22nd through the pre-dawn hours of
                            the 23rd. Additional light snow
                            continued to fall through the evening
                            hours of the 23rd. In addition,
                            northeast winds of 15 to 25 mph with
                            high gusts produced areas of blowing and
                            drifting snow. A few of the more
                            impressive snowfall totals included:

                            Zortman: 9 inches

                            35 miles south of Malta: 7 inches, with
                            drifts of 3 to 4 feet

                            Whitewater: 6 inches

                            Malta: 5 inches

MONTANA, South

  MTZ040-056-066>068

                              0         0

                            8 inches 4W Alpine Cole Creek Snotel; 8
                            inches 2S Red Lodge; 7 inches 13ENE
                            Wilsall South Fork of the Shields Snotel
                            in the Crazy Mountains; 7 inches 6S
                            Roscoe; 6 inches 5NW Alpine; 6 inches in
                            Mcleod; 6 inches in Clyde Park; 10
                            inches 5W Red Lodge

  MTZ029-031-063

                              0         0

                            8 inches in Judith Gap; 11 inches LOSE
                            Roundup; 7 inches IOS Roundup; 6 inches
                            15S Colstrip.

  MTZ029-031>032-
  034>038-040-042-
  056>058-067

                              0         0

                            An early Spring storm moved across South
                            Central Montana bringing heavy, wet snow
                            to portions of the Billings County
                            Warning Area. The following are some
                            totals from this storm:

                            8 inches 18NW Ryegate; 6 inches in
                            Forsyth, Huntley, Fort Smith, Roundup,
                            Broadview, Billings, and Birney; 9
                            inches in Crow Agency; 10 inches in
                            Rapelje; 8 inches 2E Ryegate, 8 inches
                            in Clyde Park, 8 inches 12E Ashland, 6
                            inches 10S Volborg, 9 inches 2S Red
                            Lodge, 6 inches 5SE Volborg, 6 inches
                            16W Alzada, 8 inches 60S Miles City, 8
                            inches at both Cole Creek and Burnt
                            Mountain Snotels

MONTANA, West

  MTZ006>007-043

                              0         0

                            Vigorous late winter storm blanketed the
                            valleys of West Central Montana with 5
                            to 12 inches of new snow, with as much
                            as much as 14 inches of new snow
                            reported at Georgetown Lake.

  MTZ002-004-006-
  006-043

                              0         0

                            Late winter storm brought 8 to 13 inches
                            of new snow over the mountains of
                            Northwest Montana with 4 to 8 inches in
                            the valleys. Widespread west winds at 15
                            to 25 mph also caused drifting of snow.
                            Schools were closed in the northern
                            Flathead valley due to heavy snowfall.
                            Trees also snapped under the load from
                            heavy snow. Some trees fell onto power
                            lines causing outages across the
                            northern Flathead valley as well.
                            Several vehicle rollovers were also
                            reported.

NEBRASKA, Central

  NEZ004>010-
  022>029-035>038-
  056>059-069>071-094

                              0         4        500K

                            A strong low pressure system moved
                            through Nebraska overnight with high
                            winds affecting the area behind the
                            passing cold front. Northwesterly winds
                            of 35-45 mph with gusts to 60 mph caused
                            low visibility due to blowing dust in
                            isolated areas. The low visibility
                            caused a multi-vehicle pile-up on
                            Interstate 80 about 6 miles west of
                            North Platte. The accident occurred at
                            2:05 pm and involved 5 semis and 3 cars.
                            Three semis and 2 cars were engulfed in
                            flames. The accident claimed 3 lives
                            (indirect fatalities) and injured 4
                            (indirect). West bound lanes on
                            Interstate 80 were closed for 4 hours
                            and cast bound lanes on Interstate 80
                            were closed for 10 hours.

  NEZ005>006-
  008>009-023>026-
  035>037-094

                              0         0

                            A strong low pressure system moved out
                            of Eastern Colorado and into the Central
                            Plains dumping significant snow. Keya
                            Paha County received 6-8 inches of snow,
                            Blaine County received 9-12 inches, and
                            Eastern Cherry County received 12-16
                            inches. Breezy winds also created areas
                            of blowing and drifting snow across
                            roadways. A semi-trailer and truck
                            rolled over in the Long Pine Hills due
                            to the slick road conditions. No one was
                            injuried in the accident. Other cars
                            lost control on snow covered roads but
                            there were no injuries.

  Logan County
    9 N Stapleton             0         0

  Custer County
    2 NW Arnold               0         0

  Lincoln County
    North Platte              0         0

  Custer County
    13 SW Anselmo             0         0

                            Hail covered the ground.

  Lincoln County
    6 NNE North Platte        0         0

  Custer County
    Anselmo                   0         0

                            Hail was 2 inches deep.

  Blaine County
    7 SSE Brewster            0         0

                            Hail covered the ground.

  Loup County
    15 W Taylor               0       0 5K

  Loup County
    Almeria                   0         0

  Loup County
    10 NW Almeria             0         0

  Frontier County
    13 SE Stockville          0         0

  Frontier County
    6 S Eustis                0       0 8K

  Holt County
    18 SW Amelia              0       0 3K

  Rock County
    14 ESE Rose               0         0

  Holt County
    17 WSW Chambers           0       0 3K

  Holt County
    5 SW Amelia               0         0

NEBRASKA, East

  Gage County
    1 E Adams                 0         0

  Johnson County
    2 W Sterling              0         0

  NEZ011>012-
  015>018-030>034-
  042>045-050>053

                              0         1

                            Intense low pressure over the Great
                            Lakes region combined with high pressure
                            building east out of the Rockies and
                            provided a prolonged high wind event
                            over northeast and cast central Nebraska
                            and portions of western Iowa. Sustained
                            winds of 30 to 40 mph with gusts of 55
                            to a little over 60 mph were common
                            throughout the area. The strong winds
                            caused sporadic tree and roof damage,
                            and there were several reports across
                            the area of trees uprooted and a few
                            semi trucks were overturned. One person
                            was injured in Decatur Nebraska
                            (northern Burt county) when a roof of a
                            building under construction blew on top
                            of his house causing substantial damage.

                            Some of the higher gusts measured by
                            AWOS or ASOS sites included ... 62 mph
                            in Fremont at 110 pm, 60 mph at Norfolk
                            at 247 pm, 59 mph in Albion at 1010 am,
                            59 mph at Columbus at 115 pm, 59 mph in
                            Tekamah at 119 pm, and 55 mph in Omaha
                            at 224 pm.

NEBRASKA, Extreme Northeast

  NEZ013>014
                              0         0        20K

                            Sustained winds of 40 to 45 mph with
                            gusts around 60 mph persisted from late
                            morning until late afternoon. The winds
                            caused tree damage with a few branches
                            and smaller tree debris broken off.
                            There was minor damage to buildings,
                            mostly to shingles and gutters.

NEBRASKA, Extreme Southwest

                            NONE REPORTED.

NEBRASKA, South Central

                            NOT RECEIVED.

NEBRASKA, West

  Scotts Bluff County
    3 NE Scottsbluff          0         0

                            Very weak tornado over open country.

NEVADA, North

  NVZ034
                              0         0

                            A winter storm brought 19 inches of snow
                            to the Dorsey Basin Snotel site in the
                            East Humboldt range and 15 inches to
                            Lamoille Canyon #3 Snotel.

NEVADA, South

                            NONE REPORTED.

NEVADA, West

  NVZ003
                              0         0

                            A winter storm moved through northeast
                            California and western Nevada on the
                            19th and 20th. Two to three feet of snow
                            fell in the higher elevations of the
                            Sierra, with 6 to 8 inches reported in
                            areas to the lee of the Sierra.

                            Storm total snowfall amounts:
                            Virginia City (6340 ft.)        8 inches
                            Carson City (5400 ft.)          6 inches

  NVZ002
                              0         0

                            A winter storm moved through northeast
                            California and western Nevada on the
                            19th and 20th. Two to three feet of snow
                            fell in the higher elevations of the
                            Sierra, with 6 to 8 inches reported in
                            areas to the lee of the Sierra.

                            Storm total snowfall amounts:

                            Mt. Rose Ski Resort (summit)   22 inches
                              (mid-mountain)               10 inches
                            5 ENE Incline Village
                              (7300 ft.)                   20 inches
                            1 NE Incline Village
                              (6500 ft.)                   15 inches
                            Spooner Summit                 12 inches

  NVZ001
                              0         0

                            Wind gust of 65 knots (75 mph) recorded
                            at the Walker Lake RAWS sensor.

  NVZ002
                              0         0

                            Wind gust of 55 knots (63 mph) recorded
                            at the Galena Creek RAWS sensor.

  NVZ003
                              0         0

                            Wind gust of 50 knots (58 mph) recorded
                            at DRI Sage building in Stead.

  NVZ002
                              0         0

                            The second winter storm in a week moved
                            through the Sierra Nevada and western
                            Nevada region. This storm, however, was
                            not as strong as the earlier one. From
                            late on the 21st through the 22nd up to
                            two feet of snow fell in the Sierra,
                            with rain falling western Nevada.

                            Storm total snowfall amounts:
                            Mt. Rose Ski Resort
                              (mid-mountain)      22 inches

NEW HAMPSHIRE, North and Central

  NHZ001>010-
  013>014

                              0         0

                            Low pressure developed off the southern
                            New England coast during the evening of
                            Monday, February 28, and intensified as
                            moved northeast into the Gulf of Maine
                            on Tuesday, March 1. Snow moved into New
                            Hampshire during the early morning hours
                            and dropped between 5 and 14 inches
                            across the entire state before ending
                            during the early morning hours of
                            March 2.

  NHZ001>010-
  013>014

                              0         0

                            Low pressure moved across southern New
                            England during the night of Monday,
                            March 7, and redeveloped off the New
                            England coast on Tuesday, March 8. Snow
                            spread into New Hampshire during the
                            early morning hours of Tuesday and
                            accumulated 5 to 12 inches before ending
                            during the morning on March 9.

  NHZ001>002-
  004>010-013>014

                              0         0

                            Low pressure moving out of the midwest
                            on Friday, March 11, redeveloped off the
                            New England coast Friday evening and
                            slowly moved through the Gulf of Maine
                            on Saturday, March 12. Snow accumulated
                            4 to 15 inches across most of the state
                            before ending during the early morning
                            hours of March 13.

NEW HAMPSHIRE, Southern

  NHZ011>012
                              0         0

                            Heavy snow and gusty winds affected
                            southwest New Hampshire and all of
                            southern New England, as low pressure
                            reformed off the mid Atlantic coast and
                            tracked southeast of the region.
                            Snowfall totals of 4 to 8 inches were
                            widely observed.

                            Some specific snowfall totals, as
                            reported by trained spotters, included 9
                            inches in Marlow, East Alstead, and
                            Keene; 8 inches in Peterborough; 7
                            inches in Rindge, Hinsdale, and
                            Greenfield; and 6 inches in Francestown,
                            Manchester, Hudson, and Nashua.

  NHZ011>012
                              0         0

                            Low pressure strengthened rapidly off
                            the Delaware coast and tracked southeast
                            of New England, bringing heavy snow to
                            southwest New Hampshire. Snowfall totals
                            of 4 to 8 inches were widely observed.

                            The snow and gusty winds made travel
                            difficult. Several roads around
                            Manchester were closed due to icy
                            conditions, and many spinouts were
                            reported throughout the region. Many
                            flights were delayed or canceled at
                            Manchester Airport.

                            Some specific snowfall totals, as
                            reported by trained spotters, included 9
                            inches in Manchester, 8 inches in Keene,
                            7 inches in Winchester and Hinsdale, and
                            6 inches in Stoddard, Bedford, Milford,
                            and Hillsborough.

  NHZ011>012
                              0         0

                            Low pressure south of Long Island
                            strengthened rapidly as it headed to the
                            Canadian Maritimes, and brought heavy
                            snow to southwest New Hampshire and much
                            of interior southern New England.
                            Snowfall totals of 6 to 12 inches were
                            widely observed in Cheshire and
                            Hillsborough Counties.

                            State police reported numerous vehicles
                            off roads around the region, especially
                            on Interstate 93. A number of flights at
                            Manchester Airport were delayed or
                            canceled as a result of the storm.

                            Some specific snowfall totals, as
                            reported by trained spotters, included
                            14 inches in Francestown; 13 inches in
                            Alstead; 12 inches in Dublin, Marlow,
                            Stoddard, Keene, Peterborough, and
                            Wilton; 10 inches in Swanzey and South
                            Weare; 8 inches in Hinsdale and Nashua;
                            and 6 inches in Hudson and Manchester.

NEW JERSEY, Northeast

  NJZ003-005>006-011
                              0         0

                            A weak high pressure ridge extended
                            southwest across the region from New
                            England as a low pressure system
                            intensified and moved northeast. This
                            strong low passed south of Long Island
                            Monday night and east of the New England
                            coast during Tuesday.

                            Light snow developed northeast across
                            the region between 1 and 3 pm Monday
                            afternoon. As the low rapidly
                            intensified and moved closer to the
                            region, narrow bands of heavy snow swept
                            northeast across the region. The last
                            band of heavy snow swept northeast
                            across the region between 5 am and 6:30
                            am Tuesday morning, March 1 st. Storm
                            Total Snowfall amounts ranged from 5
                            to 10 inches.

                            Here are selected snowfall totals for:

                            Bergen County - from 5.4 inches at River
                            Vale to 7.5 inches at Lodi.

                            Union County - from 6.3 inches at
                            Garwood to 7.6 inches at Elizabeth.

                            Essex County - from 6.0 inches at
                            Bloomfield to 9.5 inches at Newark
                            Airport.

                            Hudson County - from 5 .3 inches at
                            Bayonne to 8.0 inches at Harrison.

  NJZ003>006-011            Bergen - Eastern Passaic - Essex -
                            Hudson - Union
                            08          0

                            A strong arctic cold front intensified
                            as it swept southeast across the region.
                            This caused rain to change to snow,
                            temperatures to fall from the 40s into
                            the 20s, and northwest winds that gusted
                            between 40 and 55 mph. Near blizzard
                            conditions occurred for a short time.
                            Storm total snowfalls ranged from around
                            2 to 4 inches.

                            Wet and mild antecedent conditions were
                            followed by more than a 20 degree drop
                            in temperature in 3 hours with strong
                            gusty winds. This resulted in a "flash"
                            freeze across roads that resulted in
                            hundreds of vehicle accidents.

NEW JERSEY, South and Northwest

  NJZ001-007>010-
  012>020-027
                              0         0

  NJZ021>022-026
                              0         0

                            Heavy snow fell across northern and
                            southwestern New Jersey from the morning
                            of February 28th into the morning of the
                            1st. Across coastal Ocean County,
                            interior Atlantic County and Cumberland
                            County precipitation fell as snow, but
                            mixed with rain at times during the
                            daytime on February 28th. Temperatures
                            in these areas remained above freezing
                            until the evening of February 28th and
                            slowed the accumulations. Precipitation
                            fell as mainly rain in Cape May County
                            and coastal Atlantic County until the
                            rain changed to snow late in the evening
                            of February 28th. Snow began during the
                            morning of February 28th in the southern
                            half of the state and from around Noon
                            EST into the afternoon in the northern
                            half of the state. Heavier bands of
                            accumulating snow moved over the
                            southwestern and northern parts of the
                            state during the afternoon and evening
                            of February 28th. The snow ended across
                            the southern half of the state before
                            the sun rose on the 1st and ended during
                            the morning in the northern half of the
                            state. Accumulations averaged 4 to 8
                            inches, with some higher amounts in
                            Sussex and Warren Counties and lower
                            amounts in the southeastern part of the
                            state.

                            Many schools dismissed early on February
                            28th. Rutgers University cancelled all
                            its classes after 430 p.m. EST on
                            February 28th. Many after school
                            activities and classes as well as
                            municipal and school board meetings were
                            cancelled. Many minor accidents occurred.
                            In Burlington County, a 17-year-old boy,
                            a 17-year-old girl and their 41-year-old
                            bus driver were injured when two school
                            buses collided in Medford Township.

                            Specific accumulations included 9.6
                            inches in Barry Lakes (Sussex County),
                            9.1 inches in Belvidere (Warren County),
                            9.0 inches in Califon (Hunterdon County),
                            8.9 inches in Sparta (Sussex County),
                            8.6 inches in Stewartsville (Warren
                            County), 8.0 inches in Southampton
                            (Burlington County), Milton (morris
                            County) and Wrightstown (Burlington
                            County), 7.9 inches in West Windsor
                            (Mercer County), 7.8 inches in Marcella
                            (Morris County), 7.6 inches in Wertsville
                            (Hunterdon County), 7.5 inches in Butler
                            (Morris County) and Hackettstown (Warren
                            County), 7.2 inches in Pottersville
                            (Somerset County), 7.0 inches in
                            Lindenwold (Camden County) and Clarksboro
                            (Gloucester County), 6.8 inches in
                            Medford (Burlington County) and Metuchen
                            (Middlesex County), 6.7 inches in New
                            Brunswick (Middlesex County), Somerville
                            (Somerset County) and Cream Ridge
                            (Monmouth County), 6.3 inches in West
                            Windsor (Mercer County), 6.0 inches in
                            Pennsauken (Camden County), Whippany
                            (Morris County) and Flemington (Hunterdon
                            County), 5.8 inches in Manchester (Ocean
                            County), 5.5 inches in Verga (Gloucester
                            County) and Monroeville (Salem County),
                            5.0 inches in New Egypt (Ocean County),
                            4.4 inches in Hammonton (Atlantic
                            County), 3.8 inches in Seabrook
                            (Cumberland County), 1.3 inches at the
                            Atlantic City International Airport and
                            1.0 inch in Margate (Atlantic County)
                            and Brant Beach (Ocean County).

                            The wintry weather was caused by a true
                            northeaster. A low pressure system
                            developed in the Gulf of Mexico on
                            Sunday February 27th. It moved northeast
                            and already was a 995 millibar low
                            pressure system when it was near
                            Jacksonville, Florida at 7 p.m. EST on
                            February 27th. It moved northeast and
                            deepened to a 992 millibar low near
                            Charleston, South Carolina at 1 a.m. EST
                            on February 28th, a 990 millibar low
                            near Wilmington, North Carolina at 7
                            a.m. EST on February 28th, a 984
                            millibar low just east of Elizabeth City,
                            North Carolina at 1 p.m. EST on February
                            28th, a 980 millibar low about 150 miles
                            east of Fenwick Island, Delaware at 7
                            p.m. EST on February 28th and still a
                            980 millibar low about 250 miles east
                            of Long Beach Island, New Jersey at 1
                            a.m. EST on the 1st. The combination of
                            the low pressure system's storm track
                            being fairly offshore, the lack of a
                            surface high pressure system to its
                            north and marginal surface temperatures
                            for snow kept accumulations from being
                            heavier.

  NJZ014-024>026
                              0         0                   0

  NJZ014-024>026
                              0         0                   0

                            Moderate beach erosion and minor tidal
                            flooding occurred with the northeaster
                            along the New Jersey Coast. The most
                            intense onshore flow occurred from mid
                            morning on February 28th into the early
                            morning of the 1st. Minor tidal flooding
                            occurred with the overnight high tide.

                            The intense and offshore storm track the
                            low pressure system took gave the New
                            Jersey coast about a 12 hour period of
                            intense northeast winds (25 to 35 mph)
                            and this led to the minor tidal flooding
                            and beach erosion. In Monmouth County, 2
                            to 3 foot vertical cuts were common from
                            Asbury Park south. In Ocean County, in
                            Harvey Cedars, a 5 foot vertical by 10
                            foot horizontal cut occurred to 800 feet
                            of dune from Bergen to Cumberland
                            Avenues. Two to four foot vertical cuts
                            were common from Ship Bottom additional
                            south. In Beach Haven, there was a
                            complete loss of berm protection and an
                            8 foot loss of sand at the Merivale
                            Avenue street end. One house was now
                            exposed to the ocean. In Atlantic
                            County, two to four foot vertical cuts
                            occurred, except in Ventnor where the
                            vertical cut reached five feet at the
                            south end of the city. Walkways and
                            fences were also damaged. Some walkways
                            now ended at the water's edge. The
                            Ventnor Beach was just rebuilt in 2004.
                            In Cape May County, Ocean City was hit
                            the hardest with 3 to 4 foot vertical
                            cuts from the fishing to the amusement
                            pier and an 8 to 10 foot cut from 8th
                            Street to Seaspray Avenue with dune
                            fencing down in some areas. Elsewhere in
                            the county, vertical cuts averaged 1 to
                            3 feet. Sea Isle City reported loss of
                            dune fencing and rocks were exposed.

                            The overnight (February 28th) high tide
                            reached 6.78 feet above mean lower low
                            water at Sandy Hook (Monmouth County)
                            and 6.80 feet above mean lower low water
                            at Cape May (Cape May County). Minor
                            tidal flooding begins at 6.7 feet above
                            mean lower low water.

                            The minor tidal flooding and beach
                            erosion was caused by a northeaster. The
                            low pressure system developed in the
                            Gulf of Mexico on Sunday February 27th.
                            It moved northeast and was near
                            Jacksonville, Florida at 7 p.m. EST on
                            February 27th. It moved northeast and
                            deepened and was near Charleston, South
                            Carolina at 1 a.m. EST on February 28th,
                            just cast of Wilmington, North Carolina
                            at 7 a.m. EST on February 28th, just
                            east of Elizabeth City, North Carolina
                            at 1 p.m. EST on February 28th, and
                            deepened to a 980 millibar low about 150
                            miles east of Fenwick Island, Delaware
                            at 7 p.m. EST on February 28th. The low
                            remained about the same strength (980
                            millibar) as it passed about 250 miles
                            east of Long Beach Island, New Jersey
                            at 1 a.m. EST on the 1st. The lack of a
                            surface high pressure system to the
                            north of this system prevented the
                            pressure gradient and hence the winds,
                            heavy surf and tidal flooding from being
                            worse.

  NJZ001-007>010-
  120>027
                              0         0

                            The combination of a strong cold frontal
                            passage during the morning of the 8th
                            and a rapidly intensifying low pressure
                            system off the Middle Atlantic and New
                            England States brought snow and plunging
                            temperatures during the day on the 8th.
                            Actual accumulations averaged an inch or
                            two in the southern part of New Jersey
                            and 2 to 4 inches in the northern part
                            of the state. The snow combined with the
                            sharp drop in temperatures to bring
                            treacherous driving conditions on
                            untreated roadways during the afternoon
                            and evening and countless accidents
                            occurred, especially in the northern
                            half of the state.

                            Precipitation started as rain before
                            sunrise on the 8th. The cold front moved
                            through New Jersey between 7 a.m. and 10
                            a.m. EST (from northwest to southeast)
                            as a low pressure system on the front
                            was intensifying. Temperatures dropped
                            quickly behind this front both at the
                            surface and aloft. The rain changed to
                            snow between 8 a.m. (northwest areas
                            first) and Noon EST (southeast areas
                            last). About an hour after the
                            precipitation changed to snow,
                            temperatures dropped below freezing
                            as the snow continued to fall. The snow
                            ended during the mid and late afternoon
                            from west to east across the state. But,
                            its lingering effects lasted well into
                            the morning rush on the 9th as the wind
                            blew the snow back on the road.

                            Townships averaged about a dozen weather
                            related accidents, especially in the
                            northern half of the state. In Hunterdon
                            County, Interstate 78 was closed for
                            five miles because of more than twenty
                            accidents. About 75 accidents were
                            reported across northern New Jersey
                            on interstates 287, 78 and 80 and New
                            Jersey State Route 24. In Somerset
                            County, an accident on westbound
                            Interstate 78 that involved a tractor-
                            trailer and vehicle caused serious
                            injuries. In Monmouth County, a roadway
                            was closed in Holmdel Township after a
                            vehicle knocked down a pole. Problems in
                            Monmouth County persisted through the
                            next morning as multiple accidents in
                            the southbound lanes of New Jersey State
                            Route 18 in Colts Neck closed the road
                            for several hours. In Long Branch, nine
                            accidents occurred within 45 minutes.
                            Many after school activities and classes
                            were cancelled on the 8th. The regional
                            spelling bee in Monmouth County was
                            postponed.

                            Specific snow accumulations included 4.0
                            inches in Oakhurst (Monmouth County) and
                            Brick Township (Ocean County), 3.5 inches
                            in Manalapan (Monmouth County), 3.0
                            inches in Wantage (Sussex County), 2.8
                            inches in Marcella (Moms County) and
                            Stewartsville (Warren County), 2.5
                            inches in Florence (Burlington County)
                            and Skillman (Somerset County), 2.3
                            inches in Ewing (Mercer County), 2.0
                            inches in Metuchen (Middlesex County),
                            1.9 inches in Somerdale (Camden County),
                            1.5 inches in Tabernacle (Burlington
                            County) and East Amwell Township
                            (Hunterdon County), 1.4 inches in
                            Chatham (Morris County), 1.0 inch in
                            Seabrook (Cumberland County) and 0.3
                            inches at the Atlantic City
                            International Airport.

                            The snow was caused by the combination
                            of the cold frontal passage and the
                            rapidly intensifying low pressure system
                            that developed on the front during the
                            morning of the 8th. The low moved
                            northeast and was an already intense 986
                            mb near Danville, Virginia at 7 a.m. EST
                            on the 8th. From there it continued to
                            move northeast and deepened to a 978 mb
                            low just east of Long Beach Island, New
                            Jersey at 1 p.m. EST on the 8th, to a
                            970 mb low over Nantucket Island,
                            Massachusetts at 7 p.m. EST on the 8th
                            to a 964 mb low just southwest of
                            Yarmouth, Nova Scotia at 1 a.m. EST on
                            the 9th.

  NJZ001-007>010-012-
  014>023-025>027
                              0         0        25K

  NJZ013-024
                              0         0        10K

                            In addition to the snow, strong gusty
                            northwest winds developed during the
                            afternoon and evening of the 8th as a
                            low pressure system intensified off the
                            Middle Atlantic and New England States.
                            Wind gusts reached around 70 mph in Cape
                            May County. The strong winds caused
                            isolated power outages throughout New
                            Jersey and hampered snow removal crews
                            as it blew snow back onto already
                            cleared or salted roads. Peak wind gusts
                            included 72 mph in Strathmere (Cape May
                            County), 70 mph in Cape May (Cape May
                            County), 64 mph in Keansburg (Monmouth
                            County), 63 mph at High Point (the
                            highest point in New Jersey in Sussex
                            County), 57 mph in Sandy Hook (Monmouth
                            County) and Bamegat Light (Ocean County),
                            50 mph in Atlantic City (Atlantic
                            County), 49 mph in Wrightstown
                            (Burlington County), 45 mph in Millville
                            (Cumberland County) and 44 mph in
                            Trenton (Mercer County).

                            The strong winds were caused by a
                            rapidly intensifying low pressure system
                            that developed on the cold front during
                            the morning of the 8th. The low moved
                            northeast and was an already intense 986
                            mb near Danville, Virginia at 7 a.m. EST
                            on the 8th. From there it continued to
                            move northeast and deepened to a 978 mb
                            low just east of Long Beach Island, New
                            Jersey at 1 p.m. EST on the 8th, to a
                            970 mb low over Nantucket Island,
                            Massachusetts at 7 p.m. EST on the 8th
                            to a 964 mb low just southwest of
                            Yarmouth, Nova Scotia at 1 a.m. EST on
                            the 9th.

  NJZ001-007>008
                              0         0

                            Snow fell across northwest New Jersey
                            during the evening and overnight on the
                            11th and accumulated between two and
                            five inches in most areas with the
                            highest accumulations over the higher
                            terrain. Snow began in Sussex County
                            during the evening of the 11th and
                            spread into Morris and Warren Counties
                            by Midnight EST. The snow ended before
                            sunrise on the 12th. Untreated and less
                            traveled roads were treacherous. Specific
                            accumulations included 4.9 inches in
                            Marcella (Morris County), 2.5 inches in
                            Butler and Randolph (Morris County) and
                            2.0 inches in Wantage (Sussex County).
                            The snow was caused by an "Alberta type"
                            low pressure system that moved from
                            northern Minnesota on the morning of the
                            10th east into Lake Erie around sunrise
                            on the 11th. The low moved through
                            Northwest New Jersey during the evening
                            on the 11th and intensified as it moved
                            east reaching just south of Nantucket,
                            Massachusetts around sunrise on the
                            12th. Heavier snow fell farther to the
                            northeast.

  NJZ012
                              0         0         0

                            A brushfire with 30 to 40-foot-high
                            flames burned across 75 to 100 acres in
                            Raritan Center within Edison Township.
                            The fire could be seen from Rahway
                            (Union County) to East Brunswick (within
                            Middlesex County). The fire burned for
                            about six hours until firefighters
                            finished dousing the blaze. One dozen
                            municipalities, twenty-three fire
                            departments and one hundred and three
                            firefighters responded to the scene. The
                            brushfire began in an area with 10 to
                            12-foot-high reeds that were very dry.
                            Gusty northwest winds led to a longer
                            battle with the fire. The peak wind gust
                            at Newark International Airport for the
                            day was 30 mph and the average wind speed
                            of 16.1 mph was the fifth windiest day
                            of March 2005.

  NJZ001
                              0         0

                            A high pressure ridge that extended from
                            James Bay, Canada to the Middle Atlantic
                            coastal waters left enough cold air in
                            place near the surface to cause a wintry
                            mix of precipitation to occur during the
                            first half of the day on the 20th.
                            Precipitation moved in aloft preceding a
                            warm front and fell as mainly freezing
                            rain over the higher terrain of Sussex
                            County between 3 a.m. and 11 a.m. EST.
                            Ice accretions were less than one-tenth
                            of an inch. Some snow and sleet mixed in
                            with any accumulations less than one-
                            quarter of an inch. By 11 a.m. EST
                            enough warm air moved in at the surface
                            to change the precipitation over to
                            plain rain in all areas. Untreated
                            roadways were hazardous before the
                            change to plain rain.

  NJZ001
                              0         0

  NJZ007>010
                              0         0

                            A low pressure system exiting the United
                            States from the Delmarva Peninsula
                            brought rain and then snow to Warren and
                            Moms Counties and heavy snow to Sussex
                            County. Accumulations averaged 2 to 5
                            inches in most of Warren and Morris
                            Counties and 5 to 8 inches across the
                            higher terrain of Warren and Morris
                            Counties and in Sussex County. Farther
                            south, about an inch or two of snow fell
                            in Somerset and Hunterdon Counties.
                            Following the pattern of other winter
                            storms this season, the accumulating
                            snow hit the evening commute the hardest
                            which was described as a nightmare.
                            Precipitation in northwest New Jersey
                            (except in Sussex County) started as rain
                            during the morning of the 23rd and
                            changed to snow during the afternoon.
                            The change to snow worked its way from
                            the higher terrain downward. Across
                            Sussex County, precipitation fell mainly
                            as snow. In all areas the snow continued
                            through the night and ended just before
                            sunrise on the 24th.

                            Numerous and mostly minor accidents
                            occurred mainly during the evening
                            commute. One fatal accident occurred in
                            White Township (Warren County) when a
                            61-year-old woman died. She lost control
                            of her vehicle on County Route 519 and
                            slid sideways into an oncoming van. The
                            vehicle then struck a guardrail. The
                            driver and passenger of the van suffered
                            minor injuries. The evening commute was
                            progressively worse on the Pennsylvania
                            side of the Delaware River.

                            Accumulations included 7.7 inches in
                            Wantage (Sussex County), 6.8 inches in
                            Barry Lakes (Sussex County), 6.7 inches
                            in Marcella (Morris County), 5.5 inches
                            in Blairstown (Warren County), 5.0
                            inches in Rockaway (Morris County), 3.0
                            inches in Chatham (Morris County), 2.5
                            inches in Hackettstown (Warren County)
                            and Morristown (Moms County), 2.0 inches
                            in Pottersville (Somerset County), 1.9
                            inches in Belvidere (Warren County) and
                            1.0 inch in Flemington (Hunterdon
                            County).

                            The late winter storm was caused by a
                            low pressure system that formed in the
                            Southern Plains States on the 21st and
                            moved east and reached Memphis, Tennessee
                            early in the evening on the 22nd, in
                            central Kentucky around sunrise on the
                            23rd, just west of Norfolk at 1 p.m. EST
                            on the 23rd, just east of Wallops Island,
                            Virginia at 7 p.m. EST on the 23rd and
                            about 200 miles cast of Cape May, New
                            Jersey at 1 a.m. EST on the 24th.

  NJZ001
                              0         0

                            Pockets of freezing rain occurred across
                            Sussex County during the overnight of
                            March 27th. As rain moved into the
                            region on the evening of the 27th, some
                            surface temperatures cooled to or below
                            the freezing mark. Light freezing rain
                            fell through the night until temperatures
                            rose above freezing shortly after sunrise
                            on the 28th. Ice accretions were up to
                            two-tenths of an inch. Untreated roadways
                            and walkways were slippery.

                            The nearest surface high pressure system
                            at the onset of the rain was south of
                            Novas Scotia and could not lock in the
                            cold air near the surface. In addition,
                            the surface pressure difference (and thus
                            the wind) between the low pressure system
                            arriving from the Gulf Coast States and
                            the departing high pressure system
                            produced enough of a southeast wind to
                            scour away the cold air near the surface.

  Burlington County
   Countywide                 0         0

  Salem County
    Countywide                0         0

  Gloucester County
     Countywide               0         0

  Hunterdon County
    Countywide                0         0

  Sussex County
    Countywide                0         0

  Warren County
    Countywide                0         0

  Middlesex County
    Countywide                0         0

  Monmouth County
    Countywide                0         0

                            Heavy rain caused poor drainage flooding
                            and left the region vulnerable to any
                            additional heavy rain as the ground was
                            saturated. Rain began falling during the
                            late evening on the 27th, but fell at its
                            heaviest during the afternoon and evening
                            of the 28th as scattered thunderstorms
                            occurred. The rain ended by late that
                            evening. The evening commute was more
                            difficult as usual as there was much
                            ponding of water in poor drainage
                            locations. Storm totals averaged around
                            two inches.

                            On the 30th, the combination of runoff
                            and melting snow led to isolated low-
                            lying area flooding along the Delaware
                            River in Warren County. In Harmony
                            Township, river flooding reached homes
                            on Riversedge Lane and River Road. The
                            Delaware River at Ricgelsville crested
                            at 21.3 feet that morning. Flood stage
                            at that location is 22 feet.

                            Storm totals included 2.65 in Freehold
                            (Monmouth County), 2.58 inches in Sussex
                            (Sussex County), 2.14 inches in Andover
                            (Sussex County), 2.10 inches in Newton
                            (Sussex County), 2.06 inches in Califon
                            (Hunterdon County), 2.04 inches in
                            Belvidere (Warren County), 2.02 inches
                            in Riegclsville (Warren County), 1.95
                            inches in New Lisbon (Burlington County),
                            1.88 inches in Bloomsbury (Hunterdon
                            County), 1.75 inches in West Deptford
                            (Gloucester County), 1.74 inches in
                            Mount Laurel (Burlington County), 1.72
                            inches in Columbia (Warren County), 1.65
                            inches in Willingboro (Burlington County)
                            and 1.60 inches in Mount Holly
                            (Burlington County).

                            The heavy rain was caused by a low
                            pressure system that formed along the
                            Gulf Coast States. This low pressure
                            system was captured by its support aloft
                            and thus moved only slowly northeast as
                            it tapped abundant moisture from both
                            the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic
                            Ocean. The low pressure system moved
                            from western Alabama at 7 a.m. EST on
                            the 27th northeast to eastern Tennessee
                            at 7 p.m. EST on the 27th and eastern
                            Kentucky at 7 a.m. EST on the 28th. A
                            secondary low pressure system formed
                            over North Carolina during the morning
                            of the 28th. It would become the main
                            low pressure system as it moved northeast
                            to near Norfolk, Virginia at 1 p.m. EST
                            on the 28th, Chesapeake Bay at 7 p.m.
                            EST on the 28th, Delaware Bay at 1 a.m.
                            EST on the 29th and about 100 miles east
                            of Atlantic City at 7 a.m. EST on the
                            29th.

  NJZ018
                              0         0

                            The combination of heavy rain and
                            saturated ground from recent heavy rains
                            caused poor drainage and some river
                            flooding in Camden County. Rain began
                            falling during the late evening on the
                            27th, but fell at its heaviest during
                            the afternoon and evening of the 28th as
                            thunderstorms occurred. Storm totals
                            averaged between one and two inches.
                            The Cooper River at Haddonfield was above
                            its 2.8 foot flood stage from 529 p.m.
                            through 845 p.m. EST on the 28th. It
                            crested at 2.88 feet at 630 p.m. EST.
                            Storm totals included 1.91 inches in
                            Somerdale, 1.72 inches in Audubon, 1.66
                            inches in Pennsauken and 1.40 inches in
                            Cherry Hill.

                            The heavy rain was caused by a low
                            pressure system that formed along the
                            Gulf Coast States. This low pressure
                            system was captured by its support aloft
                            and thus moved only slowly northeast as
                            it tapped abundant moisture from both the
                            Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic Ocean.
                            The low pressure system moved from
                            western Alabama at 7 a.m. EST on the
                            27th northeast to eastern Tennessee at
                            7 p.m. EST on the 27th and eastern
                            Kentucky at 7 a.m. EST on the 28th. A
                            secondary low pressure system formed
                            over North Carolina during the morning
                            of the 28th. It would become the main
                            low pressure system as it moved northeast
                            to near Norfolk, Virginia at 1 p.m. EST
                            on the 28th, Chesapeake Bay at 7 p.m.
                            EST on the 28th, Delaware Bay at 1 a.m.
                            EST on the 29th and about 100 miles east
                            of Atlantic City at 7 a.m. EST on the
                            29th.

  NJZ015
                              0         0

                            The combination of heavy rain and
                            saturated ground from recent heavy rains
                            caused poor drainage and some creek
                            flooding in Mercer County. Rain began
                            falling during the late evening on the
                            27th, but fell at its heaviest during
                            the afternoon and evening of the 28th as
                            thunderstorms occurred. Storm totals
                            averaged between one and two inches.

                            The Assunpink Creek at Trenton was above
                            its 7 foot flood stage from 609 p.m.
                            through 1118 p.m. EST on the 28th. It
                            crested at 7.33 feet at 9 p.m. EST.
                            Storm totals included 2.00 inches in
                            Windsor, 1.72 inches in Hightstown, 1.66
                            inches in Washington's Crossing and 1.46
                            inches in Trenton.

                            The heavy rain was caused by a low
                            pressure system that formed along the
                            Gulf Coast States. This low pressure
                            system was captured by its support aloft
                            and thus moved only slowly northeast as
                            it tapped abundant moisture from both
                            the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic
                            Ocean. The low pressure system moved from
                            western Alabama at 7 a.m. EST on the
                            27th northeast to eastern Tennessee at
                            7 p.m. EST on the 27th and eastern
                            Kentucky at 7 a.m. EST on the 28th. A
                            secondary low pressure system formed
                            over North Carolina during the morning
                            of the 28th. It would become the main
                            low pressure system as it moved northeast
                            to near Norfolk, Virginia at 1 p.m. EST
                            on the 28th, Chesapeake Bay at 7 p.m. EST
                            on the 28th, Delaware Bay at 1 a.m. EST
                            on the 29th and about 100 miles east of
                            Atlantic City at 7 a.m. EST on the 29th.

  NJZ010
                              0         0

                            The combination of heavy rain and
                            saturated ground caused poor drainage
                            and some river flooding in Somerset
                            County. Rain began falling during the
                            late evening on the 27th, but fell at
                            its heaviest during the afternoon and
                            evening of the 28th as thunderstorms
                            occurred. Storm totals averaged around
                            two inches.

                            The Millstone River at Griggstown was
                            above its 10 foot flood stage from 730
                            p.m. EST on the 28th through 1045 a.m.
                            EST on the 30th. It crested at 12.3 feet
                            at 8 a.m. EST on the 29th. The North
                            Branch of the Raritan River at South
                            Branch was above its 7 foot flood stage
                            from 640 p.m. EST on the 28th through
                            733 a.m. EST on the 29th. It crested at
                            8.7 feet at Midnight EST on the 29th.

                            Storm totals included 2.40 inches in
                            Basking Ridge, 2.12 inches in Far Hills,
                            1.96 inches in North Plainfield, 1.90
                            inches in Somerville and 1.44 inches in
                            Belle Mead.

                            The heavy rain was caused by a low
                            pressure system that formed along the
                            Gulf Coast States. This low pressure
                            system was captured by its support aloft
                            and thus moved only slowly northeast as
                            it tapped abundant moisture from both the
                            Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic Ocean.
                            The low pressure system moved from
                            western Alabama at 7 a.m. EST on the 27th
                            northeast to eastern Tennessee at 7 p.m.
                            EST on the 27th and eastern Kentucky at
                            7 a.m. EST on the 28th. A secondary low
                            pressure system formed over North
                            Carolina during the morning of the 28th.
                            It would become the main low pressure
                            system as it moved northeast to near
                            Norfolk, Virginia at 1 p.m. EST on the
                            28th, Chesapeake Bay at 7 p.m. EST on
                            the 28th, Delaware Bay at 1 a.m. EST on
                            and about 100 miles cast of Atlantic
                            City at 7 a.m. EST on the 29th.

  NJZ016>019
                              0         0         0

                            The combination of runoff from the heavy
                            rain, the funneling of water into Delaware
                            Bay and higher than normal astronomical
                            tides coming off the full moon produced
                            minor tidal flooding at the times of high
                            tide early in the morning on the 29th.
                            The high tide in Burlington reached 9.94
                            feet above mean lower low water. Minor
                            tidal flooding begins at 9.0 feet above
                            mean lower low water. The high tide at
                            Philadelphia Pier 12 reached 8.35 feet
                            above mean lower low water. Minor tidal
                            flooding begins there at 8.2 feet above
                            mean lower low water. Less widespread
                            minor tidal flooding occurred with the
                            early morning high tides on the 30th and
                            31st.

                            The onshore flow was caused by a low
                            pressure system that formed along the
                            Gulf Coast States. This low pressure
                            system was captured by its support aloft
                            and thus moved only slowly northeast from
                            western Alabama on the morning of the
                            27th. It reformed over North Carolina
                            during the morning of the 28th and become
                            the main low pressure system as it moved
                            northeast to near Norfolk, Virginia
                            during the afternoon on the 28th,
                            through Chesapeake Bay the evening on
                            the 28th, across Delaware Bay around
                            Midnight EST on the 29th and about then
                            cast of Atlantic City by sunrise on the
                            29th. The counterclockwise circulation
                            around this low helped push water into
                            Delaware Bay and slow the runoff from
                            the nearby heavy rain and the snowmelt
                            from the upper parts of the Delaware
                            River.

  NJZ008
                              0         0

                            The combination of heavy rain and melting
                            snow produced poor drainage and river
                            flooding in Morris County that lasted
                            well into April. Rain began falling
                            during the late evening on the 27th, but
                            fell at its heaviest during the afternoon
                            and evening of the 28th as thunderstorms
                            occurred. Storm totals averaged around
                            three inches. Lincoln Park Borough was
                            one of the hardest hit municipalities
                            in the county as they received flooding
                            near the Pompton and Passaic River
                            confluence and the Beaver Brook. Several
                            roads were barricaded. In Denville, some
                            backyards were flooded by the Rockaway
                            River.

                            The Rockaway River above the Boonton
                            Reservoir was above its 5 foot flood
                            stage from 315 a.m. EST through 956 p.m.
                            EST on the 29th. It crested at 5.47 feet
                            at 10 a.m. EST. The Rockaway River below
                            the Boonton Reservoir was above its 5
                            foot flood stage from 307 a.m. EST on the
                            29th through 530 a.m. EST on the 31st.
                            It crested at 6.37 feet at 1045 a.m. EST
                            on the 29th. The Pequannock River at the
                            Macopin Intake Dam was above its 5.5 foot
                            flood stage from 445 a.m.EST on the 29th
                            through 2 a.m. EST on the 30th. It
                            crested at 5.59 feet at 1015 a.m. EST on
                            the 29th. The Passaic River at Pine Brook
                            was above its 19 foot flood stage from
                            1030 p.m. EST on the 29th through 515 p.m.
                            EST on April 1st. It crested at 19.41
                            feet at 645 p.m. EST on the 30th. Farther
                            downstream, the Passaic River at Two
                            Bridges was above its 9 foot flood stage
                            from 10 p.m. EST on the 29th through 4
                            p.m. EDT on April 9th. The March highest
                            crest was 10.26 feet at 3 a.m. EST on the
                            31st. Storm totals included 3.30 inches
                            in Milton, 2.88 inches in Pequannock,
                            2.70 inches in Boonton, 2.60 inches in
                            Lake Hopatcong and Morristown and 1.87
                            inches in Chatham.

                            The heavy rain was caused by a low
                            pressure system that formed along the
                            Gulf Coast States. This low pressure
                            system was captured by its support aloft
                            and thus moved only slowly northeast as
                            it tapped abundant moisture from both
                            the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic
                            Ocean. The low pressure system moved
                            from western Alabama at 7 a.m. EST on
                            the 27th northeast to eastern Tennessee
                            at 7 p.m. EST on the 27th and eastern
                            Kentucky at 7 a.m. EST on the 28th. A
                            secondary low pressure system formed
                            over North Carolina during the morning
                            of the 28th. It would become the main
                            low pressure system as it moved northeast
                            to near Norfolk, Virginia at 1 p.m. EST
                            on the 28th, Chesapeake Bay at 7 p.m.
                            EST on the 28th, Delaware Bay at 1 a.m.
                            EST on the 29th and about 100 miles east
                            of Atlantic City at 7 a.m. EST on the
                            29th.

NEW MEXICO, Central and North

  NMZ002>006-008-
  010>013
                              0         0

                            A storm which began with heavy snows
                            along the eastern slopes of the Sangre
                            de Cristo mountains and the Sandia
                            mountains pushed cold air through the
                            central valleys and covered the eastern
                            plains with cold readings. Amounts peaked
                            at near 17-19 inches at Chacon and Pecos
                            while 24-28 inches was measured near
                            Gascon. The Sandia Park area reported
                            15-22 inches. Snow eventually spread west
                            in the central valley with 4-8 inches
                            reported in Albuquerque metro area and
                            nearly 12 inches across the Jcmcz
                            Mountains and Los Alamos with 10 inches
                            reported cast and southeast of Cuba. The
                            storm dumped 4 to 9 inches across the
                            eastern plains as it finally moved east
                            out of the state, Mountain communities
                            northwest of Las Vegas had 48 hours
                            totals of 30-36 inches.

  NMZ016
                              0         0

                            High winds reported at Sierra Blanca
                            Airport 15 NE of Ruidoso.

  NMZ005-007
                              0         0

                            Heavy snow of 6-8 inches was reported
                            between Raton and Clayton with driving
                            winds.

NEW MEXICO, South Central and Southwest

NEW MEXICO, Southeast

  NMZ028
                              0         0         0         0

                            Winter weather affected parts of New
                            Mexico during the day on the 15th. Light
                            snow accumulations up to one inch were
                            reported across the northwestern half of
                            the Eddy County plains.

  NMZ029
                              0         0         0         0

                            More significant snowfall occurred over
                            northern Lea County on the 15th as a
                            winter storm affected portions of the
                            New Mexico plains. Between four and five
                            inch snow accumulations were reported
                            across northern Lea County from Caprock
                            to Crossroads.

  NMZ028-033
                              0         0        55K        0

                            A potent storm system moved east over
                            the Southern Plains on the 29th and
                            caused severe non-thunderstorm winds over
                            southeastern New Mexico. Numerous reports
                            of downed power lines and poles were
                            received along with reports of blown down
                            trees. The roof was blown off of a
                            trailer home near Hobbs. Wind gusts to
                            58 MPH were recorded at both the
                            Carlsbad and Hobbs airports.

NEW YORK, Central

  NYZ009-015>018-
  022>025-036>037-
  044>046-055>057-062
                              0         0        360K

                            A strong winter storm brought 8 to 14
                            inches of snow to all of central New
                            York. Isolated snow amounts were as much
                            as two feet. A Midwest storm slowly moved
                            east and combined with another storm
                            moving north along the east coast on
                            February 27th to bring copious moisture
                            to the region on February 28th. The snow
                            moved in from the south starting in the
                            afternoon and early evening on February
                            28th. The snow continued through the
                            night, heavy at times, before tapering
                            off to light snow and flurries late in
                            the morning on March 1st.

  NYZ056>057-062
                              0         0        30K

                            An intensifying storm moved north along
                            the east coast on March 23rd and 24th.
                            Light snow, possibly mixed with rain,
                            moved into the region midday on the 23rd.
                            The snow became heavy at times late in
                            the afternoon and continued into the
                            evening. Snowfall amounts were 6 to 8
                            inches with some amounts up to a foot
                            mainly at higher elevations. Water
                            equivalents of the snow were between
                            half an inch and an inch.

  Otsego County
    Gilbertsville             0         0         5K

                            A strong Atlantic coast storm brought
                            heavy rain with amounts between 1 and 3
                            inches. A few locations received more
                            than 3 inches. In addition, snowmelt was
                            causing high stream flows before the
                            rain started late on the 27th. The
                            flooding caused Mill Street to be closed
                            in Gilbertsville.

  Tioga County
    Countywide                0         0        50K

                            State Route 96 in Owego closed due to
                            flooding of the Owego Creek. Several
                            other roads were closed in Tioga Center
                            and Berkshire. Most roads were closed due
                            to flooding with one road in Berkshire
                            closed due to a mudslide. A strong
                            Atlantic coast storm brought around 2
                            inches of rain that fell on wet or
                            frozen saturated ground. In addition to
                            the rain adding to the runoff there was
                            snowmelt, which could of added another
                            inch or 2 of water equivalent. Streams
                            and creeks were already running high due
                            to snowmelt before the rain came starting
                            late on the 27th.

  NYZ055
                              0         0        20K

                            A strong Atlantic coast storm brought
                            heavy rain with amounts between 1 and 3
                            inches on the 28th. In addition, snowmelt
                            was causing elevated river flows before
                            the rain started late on the 27th. Water
                            equivalent of the snowmelt was a few more
                            inches. The Susquehanna River at Waverly,
                            NY / Sayre, PA rose above its flood stage
                            of 11 feet on the 28th, crested at 15.08
                            feet at 12 AM on the 30th, then fell
                            slowly but stayed over flood stage into
                            April. After the rainstorm, temperatures
                            were warm enough to cause additional
                            snowmelt.

  NYZ057
                              0         0        10K

                            A strong Atlantic coast storm brought
                            heavy rain with amounts between 1 and 3
                            inches on the 28th. In addition, snowmelt
                            was causing elevated river flows before
                            the rain started late on the 27th. Water
                            equivalent of the snowmelt was a few more
                            inches. The Beaver Kill at Cooks Falls
                            went above its flood stage of 10 feet the
                            evening of the 28th. The river crested at
                            10.42 feet at 5:15 AM on the 29th, before
                            falling back below flood stage late
                            morning on the 29th.

  NYZ045
                              0         0        10K

                            A strong Atlantic coast storm brought
                            heavy rain with amounts between 1 and 3
                            inches on the 28th. In addition, snowmelt
                            was causing elevated river flows before
                            the rain started late on the 27th. Water
                            equivalent of the snowmelt was a few more
                            inches. The Susquehanna River at
                            Bainbridge went above its flood stage of
                            13 feet late on the 28th, crested at 15.3
                            feet at 8 PM on the 29th, then fell below
                            flood stage on the 31 st. Additional
                            snowmelt after the rainstorm caused to
                            river to remain high.

  Sullivan County
    Bloomingburg              0         0        10K

                            Heavy rain washed out a road. A strong
                            Atlantic storm dropped 2 to 3 inches of
                            rain on an already saturated ground. Most
                            of the rain fell on the 28th. Also adding
                            to the runoff was several inches of water
                            equivalent from snowmelt.

  NYZ056
                              0         0        20K

                            A strong Atlantic coast storm brought
                            heavy rain with amounts between 1 and 3
                            inches on the 28th. In addition, snowmelt
                            was causing elevated river flows before
                            the rain started late on the 27th. Water
                            equivalent of the snowmelt was a few more
                            inches. The Susquehanna River at Conklin
                            went above its flood stage of 11 feet
                            early on the 29th, crested at 15.09 feet
                            at 2:30 PM on the 29th. The river stayed
                            above flood stage into April due to
                            additional snowmelt.

  NYZ056
                              0         0        20K

                            A strong Atlantic coast storm brought
                            heavy rain with amounts between 1 and 3
                            inches on the 28th. In addition, snowmelt
                            was causing elevated river flows before
                            the rain started late on the 27th. Water
                            equivalent of the snowmelt was a few more
                            inches. The Susquehanna River at Vestal
                            went above its flood stage of 18 feet
                            early on the 29th, crested at 20.80 feet
                            at 6:00 PM also on the 29th, then fell
                            back below flood stage on the 31st.
                            Additional snowmelt occurred after the
                            rainstorm keeping river levels high.

  NYZ045
                              0         0         5K

                            A strong Atlantic coast storm brought
                            heavy rain with amounts between 1 and 3
                            inches on the 28th. In addition snowmelt
                            before and after the rainstorm was
                            causing elevated river flows. Water
                            equivalent of the snowmelt was a few
                            more inches. The Susquehanna River at
                            Bainbridge went briefly below its flood
                            stage of 13 feet on the 31st before
                            rising back over flood stage.
                            Temperatures in the 50s on the 31st
                            caused added snowmelt rising the river.
                            Another slow moving storm from the Ohio
                            Valley brought 2 to 3 inches of rain
                            on April 2nd and 3rd. By the time the
                            river fell below flood stage most of the
                            snow had melted. This additional rain
                            and snowmelt caused the river to rise
                            rapidly to a crest of 20.47 feet at 4:15
                            AM on April 4th. This was the 6th highest
                            crest at Bainbridge for almost the last
                            100 years. The river fell below flood
                            stage the morning of April 6th.

  NYZ044
                              0         0         5K

                            The Tioughnioga River at Cortland rose
                            above its flood stage of 8 feet late on
                            March 31st. The rise was due to rain that
                            fell on March 28th and snowmelt during
                            the week leading up to the 31st. The
                            water equivalent of the snow amounted to
                            several inches. A slow moving storm from
                            the Ohio Valley brought 2 to 3 inches of
                            rain on April 2nd and 3rd. By the time
                            the river fell below flood stage most of
                            the snow had melted. This additional rain
                            and snowmelt caused the river to rise to
                            a crest of 14.07 feet at 2:00 PM EST on
                            April 3th. This was a record flood crest
                            at Cortland. The previous flood of record
                            was 13.82 feet in 1950.

  NYZ045
                              0         0         5K

                            The Chenango River at Sherbume rose above
                            its flood stage of 8 feet late on the
                            31st. The rise was due to rain that fell
                            on the 28th and snowmelt during the week
                            leading up to the 31st. The water
                            equivalent of the snow amounted to
                            several inches. A slow moving storm from
                            the Ohio Valley brought 2 to 3 inches of
                            rain on April 2nd and 3rd. By the time
                            the river fell below flood stage most
                            of the snow had melted. This additional
                            rain and snowmelt caused the river to
                            rise to a crest of 10.78 feet at 2:30 AM
                            on April 3th. This was the 2nd highest
                            flood crest at Sherbume.

NEW YORK, Coastal

  NYZ068>072-
  074>076-078>079-081
                              0         0

                            A weak high pressure ridge extended
                            southwest across the region from New
                            England as a low pressure system
                            intensified and moved northeast. This
                            strong low passed south of Long Island
                            Monday night and cast of the New England
                            coast during Tuesday.

                            Light snow developed northeast across
                            the region between 1 and 4 pm Monday
                            afternoon. As the low rapidly intensified
                            and moved closer to the region, narrow
                            bands of heavy snow swept northeast
                            across the region. The last band of
                            heavy snow swept northeast across the
                            region between 7:30 am and 8:30 am
                            Tuesday morning, March 1st. Storm Total
                            Snowfall amounts ranged from 5 to 9
                            inches.

                            Here are selected snowfall totals for:

                            Rockland County - from 7.2 inches at New
                            City to 8.0 inches at Sloatsburg.

                            Westchester County - from 5.0 inches at
                            Scarsdale to 8.0 inches at Yorktown
                            Heights.

                            Putnam County - from 6.5 inches at Lake
                            Peekskill to 8.5 inches at Lake Carmel.

                            New York (Manhattan) - 7.5 inches was
                            measured at the Central Park Zoo.

                            Richmond (Staten Island) - from 6.1
                            inches at Bulls Head to 6.5 inches at
                            New Dorf.

                            Kings (Brooklyn) - from 5.0 inches at
                            Graves End to 6.0 inches at Shecpshead
                            Bay.

                            Queens County - from 5.0 inches at JFK
                            Airport to 7.0 inches at LaGuardia
                            Airport.

                            Suffolk County - from 5.5 inches at the
                            NWS Office in Upton, Sag Harbor,
                            Patchogue, and Deer Park to 7.2 inches
                            in Smithtown.

                            At Islip Airport, 6.6 inches was
                            measured.

  NYZ069>081
                              0         0

  NYZ076
                              0         0

                            A strong arctic cold front intensified
                            as it swept southeast across the region.
                            This caused rain to change to snow,
                            temperatures to fall from the 40s into
                            the 20s, and northwest winds that gusted
                            between 40 and 55 mph. A peak isolated
                            wind gust to 58 mph was measured by the
                            Automated Surface Observing System at
                            JFK Airport. Near blizzard conditions
                            occurred for a short time. Storm total
                            snowfalls ranged from around 2 to 4
                            inches.

                            Wet and mild antecedent conditions were
                            followed by more than a 20 degree drop
                            in temperature in 3 hours with strong
                            gusty winds. This resulted in a "flash"
                            freeze across roads that resulted in
                            hundreds of vehicle accidents.

  NYZ078-080
                              0         0

                            A low pressure system developed southeast
                            of Long Island before sunrise on Saturday
                            March 12th. This low quickly intensified
                            as it moved northeast. It passed near
                            Nantucket during Saturday afternoon and
                            moved east of Cape Cod by Saturday
                            evening.

                            Light rain developed across the Atlantic
                            coastal waters just south of Long Island
                            between 1 am and 2 am. As the rainfall
                            intensity increased, it quickly changed
                            to heavy wet snow. The band of heavy snow
                            developed from western and central
                            Suffolk County north across New Haven
                            County CT. A few areas, mainly east of
                            Patchogue, experienced snowfall rates in
                            excess of 2 inches per hour.

                            Storm total snowfall amounts ranged from
                            around 5 to 8 inches. Here are selected
                            amounts of at least 6 inches:

                            Patchogue - 8 inches
                            Lake Ronkonkoma - 7.5 inches
                            Rocky Point - 6.8 inches
                            Mount Sinai - 6.7 inches
                            Sayville - 6.5 inches
                            Shoreham - 6.4 inches
                            Port Jefferson - 6.3 inches
                            Medford and North Patchogue - 6.0 inches

  NYZ067>068
                              0         0

                            As a ridge of high pressure extended
                            southeast across New England, a low
                            pressure system moved northeast along
                            a warm front. The low quickly passed
                            southeast of Long Island early
                            Thursday morning on March 24th.

                            Snow quickly developed and spread
                            northeast across the region during
                            Wednesday afternoon. It became heavy
                            during Wednesday evening. Storm total
                            snowfall amounts ranged from around
                            6 to 10 inches. In Orange County,
                            snowfall accumulations ranged from
                            6.0 inches at Cornwall-On-Hudson to
                            10.0 inches at Circleville.

NEW YORK, East

  NYZ066
                              0         0

  NYZ065
                              0         0

                            The average total snowfall across
                            Dutchess County was 9 inches.

  NYZ064
                              0         0

  NYZ063
                              0         0

                            Average total snowfall across Ulster
                            County was 11 inches.

  NYZ061
                              0         0

  NYZ060
                              0         0

                            Average total snowfall across
                            Columbia County was 10 inches.

  NYZ059
                              0         0

  NYZ058
                              0         0

                            Average total snowfall across
                            Greene County was 11 inches.

  NYZ052
                              0         0

  NYZ051
                              0         0

                            Average total snowfall across
                            Albany County was 13 inches.

  NYZ054
                              0         0

  NYZ053
                              0         0

                            Average total snowfall across
                            Rensselaer County was 11 inches.

  NYZ049
                              0         0

  NYZ048
                              0         0

                            Average total snowfall across
                            Schenectady County was 11 inches.
  NYZ047
                              0         0

                            Average total snowfall across
                            Schoharie County was 10 inches.

  NYZ082
                              0         0

  NYZ039
                              0         0

                            Average total snowfall across
                            Fulton County was 9 inches.

  NYZ040
                              0         0

                            Average total snowfall across
                            Montgomery County was 9 inches.

  NYZ041
                              0         0

  NYZ050
                              0         0

                            Average total snowfall across
                            Saratoga County was 12 inches.

  NYZ043
                              0         0

  NYZ084
                              0         0

                            Average total snowfall across
                            Washington County was 11 inches.

  NYZ033
                              0         0

                            Average total snowfall across
                            Hamilton County was 8 inches.

  NYZ032
                              0         0

  NYZ038
                              0         0

                            The average total snowfall across
                            Herkimer County was 8 inches.

  NYZ042
                              0         0

  NYZ083
                              0         0

                            The average total snowfall across
                            Warren County was 11 inches.

                            A surface low pressure was centered
                            along the mid-Atlantic Coast at the
                            beginning of March. This storm tracked
                            northeastward well off the eastern
                            seaboard, reaching southeast of Cape
                            Cod by midday on March 1. The storm
                            then moved into the Gulf of Maine
                            by late on March 1. At the same time,
                            another vertically stacked storm
                            moved slowly east from the Great
                            Lakes and interacted with the
                            low-level moisture from the surface
                            storm. The combination of the two
                            storms, along with a surface trough
                            anchored between them, resulted in a
                            significant snowstorm across much
                            of eastern New York and adjacent
                            western New England. Snowfall storm
                            totals across the region ranged
                            from 7 inches to a foot or more.
                            Officially, 11.7 inches of snow
                            fell at the National Weather Service
                            station in Albany. The heaviest
                            amount was reported in Bennington
                            County in Vermont, where 17.5 inches
                            of snow was reported in the Town
                            of Wadeford. Other than the usual
                            school and business closures, the
                            storm did not report any unusual
                            problems across the region.

  NYZ053
                              0         0

  NYZ054
                              0         0

                            The average snowfall across
                            Rensselaer County was 12 inches.

  NYZ043
                              0         0

  NYZ084
                              0         0

                            The average total snowfall across
                            Washington County was 9 inches.

                            A strong cold front moved across
                            eastern New York and adjacent western
                            New England on March 8th. As the
                            front slowed down across eastern New
                            England, a wave of low pressure
                            formed along it and eventually became
                            a closed storm system which
                            intensified as it moved into the
                            Canadian Maritimes. The front and
                            developing storm brought snow across
                            the region. A meso-scale band of
                            enhanced heavier snow and an upslope
                            wind component, resulted in heavy
                            snowfall across portions of the
                            Taconics and Berkshires. Gusty winds
                            also resulted in some blowing and
                            drifting of the snow, but not enough
                            to qualify as a blizzard. The
                            snowfall in these areas ranged from
                            7 inches to locally over a foot.
                            Seventeen inches was reported in
                            Averill Park, Rensselaer County, the
                            highest snowfall total. The snow and
                            blowing snow resulted minor traffic
                            accidents across the region.

  NYZ051
                              0         0

                            The average snowfall total across
                            Western Albany County was 8.0 inches.

  NYZ060
                              0         0

                            The average snowfall total across
                            Western Columbia County was 8.0 inches.

  NYZ065
                              0         0

                            The average snowfall total across
                            Western Dutchess County was 8.0 inches.

  NYZ059
                              0         0

  NYZ058
                              0         0

                            The average snowfall total across
                            Greene County was 9.0 inches.

  NYZ054
                              0         0

                            The average snowfall depth across
                            Eastern Rensselaer County was 7.0
                            inches.

  NYZ064
                              0         0

  NYZ063
                              0         0

                            The average snowfall depth across
                            Ulster County was 8.0 inches.

  NYZ041
                              0         0

                            The average snowfall total across
                            Northern Saratoga County: 10.0
                            inches. Highest snowfall amount
                            reported in Gansevoort, 12 inches.

  NYZ043
                              0         0

                            Average snowfall depth across
                            Northern Washington County: 10.0
                            inches. Highest snowfall amount in
                            Northern Washington County reported
                            in Cossayua, 12 inches.

                            The fourth coastal storm of the
                            month tracked from south of Long
                            Island to east of Cape Cod by early
                            March 24. This storm produced a
                            meso-scale band of heavy snow that
                            first fell to the south and west
                            of Albany. The band weakened as it
                            moved across the Greater Capital
                            District, but then strengthened as
                            it proceeded north in the Saratoga
                            region and Washington County. The
                            result was a significant snowfall
                            across portions of the Catskills,
                            Helderbergs, Saratoga region and
                            Taconics, while lesser amounts fell
                            across the remainder of the region.
                            A foot fell in two serperate spots,
                            Gansevoort, Saratoga County and
                            Cossayua, Washington County. No
                            unusual problems were reported with
                            this storm.

  Montgomery County
    Canajoharie               0         0

                            The Canajoharie Creek exceeded the
                            6.0-foot flood stage at the Canajoharie
                            Creek gage, cresting at 8.19 feet,
                            5:15PM on the 28th.

  Schoharie County
    Warnerville               0         0

                            The town of Warnerville was
                            impassable due to flooded roads.

  Saratoga County
    Bemis Hgts                0         0

                            Three roads closed, including Route
                            67 and Route 4, due to water coverage.

  Washington County
    Clarks Mills              0         0

                            County Route 113 closed due to
                            flooding.

  Schenectady County
    Glenville                 0         0

                            Droms Road closed between Swaggertown
                            Road and Charlton Road due to flooding.

  NYZ043
                              0         0

                            Metawee River over flood stage.

  NYZ043
                              0         0

                            The Metawee River exceeded the
                            7.0-foot flood stage at the
                            Granville gage, cresting at 7.20
                            feet at 9:15 PM on the 28th.

  NYZ064
                              0         0

                            Springtown Road flooded.

  NYZ059
                              0         0

                            In Cairo, 15 County Roads closed
                            due to flooding. Eighteen Fire
                            companies pumped out basements
                            throughout county.

  NYZ060
                              0         0

                            Every town in Columbia County
                            reported road closures due to
                            flooding.

  NYZ050
                              0         0

                            The Mohawk River exceeded the
                            188.0-foot flood stage at the
                            Crescent Dam gage, cresting at
                            188.26 feet, at 3:OOAM on the 29th.

  NYZ065
                              0         0

                            Due to tidal flooding as well as
                            locally heavy rain, the Hudson River
                            exceeded the 5.0-foot flood stage at
                            the Poughkeepsie gage, cresting at
                            5.05 feet, 2:30AM on the 29th.

  NYZ066
                              0         0

                            In the Town of Northeast, Mill Road
                            closed due to flooding.

  NYZ064
                              0         0

                            The Esopus Creek exceeded the
                            20.0-foot flood stage at the Mount
                            Marion gage, cresting at 20.54 feet,
                            8:OOAM on the 29th.

  NYZ040
                              0         0

                            The Schoharie Creek exceeded the
                            6.0-foot flood stage at the
                            Burtonsville gage, cresting at 6.13
                            feet at 7:OOPM on the 29th.

  NYZ065
                              0         0

                            Wappingers Creek exceeded the
                            8.0-foot flood stage at the
                            Wappingers Falls gage, cresting
                            at 8.09 feet, 4:30PM on the 29th.

  NYZ038
                              0         0

                            The Mohawk River exceeded the
                            403.0-foot flood stage at the Utica
                            gage, cresting at 403.4 feet, 6:OOPM
                            on the 30th.

                            A potent area of low pressure and
                            its associated frontal systems,
                            moved northeast across the Ohio
                            and Saint Lawrence Valleys on the
                            28th of March, bringing with it a
                            significant amount of moisture.
                            Since it took a more western track
                            than previous storms earlier in the
                            month, almost all of the precipitation
                            fell as rain. Rainfall totals,
                            averaging 1-2 inches, but locally as
                            high as 4 inches, accumulated across
                            portions of the eastern New York and
                            adjacent western New England. This
                            rainfall, combined with snow melt,
                            produced significant runoff,
                            resulting in widespread flooding
                            across the region between March 28th
                            through 31st. Many streams and rivers
                            reached or exceed bankful, including
                            the Mettawee, Housatonic and Mohawk
                            Rivers, as well as the Esopus,
                            Wappingers and Schoharie Creeks.
                            Numerous houses in Columbia and
                            Greene Counties sustained damage
                            when their basements became flooded,
                            and there were many reports of road
                            closures across a large number of
                            counties. One Mechanicville man was
                            transported to a local hospital after
                            being swept away by floodwaters of
                            the Anthony Kill. In Columbia County,
                            every town reported at least one
                            road closed due to flooding.

NEW YORK, North

  NYZ026>031-
  034>035-087
                              0         0        90K

                            A storm system off the Carolinas on
                            Monday, February 28th moved to the
                            Gulf of Maine the afternoon and
                            evening of Tuesday, March 1st. Snow
                            developed across the area during the
                            night of Feb 28th, and was heavy at
                            times during March 1st before it
                            tapered off the night of March 1st.
                            Snowfall was generally between 8
                            and 10 inches, except in Clinton
                            county where snowfall was between
                            9 and 14 inches. Locally higher
                            amounts fell in the higher peaks of
                            the Adirondacks.

  NYZ028-034>035
                              0         0        30K

                            An area of low pressure over the Ohio
                            valley on Friday, March 11th moved
                            east across southern New York and
                            reorganized south of Cape Cod early
                            Saturday, March 12th. The storm
                            system moved north through the Gulf
                            of Maine Saturday evening. Snow spread
                            across the area during the afternoon
                            of March 11th, and was steady later on
                            the night of March 11th into Saturday,
                            March 12th, before it tapered off
                            Saturday afternoon. General snow
                            accumulations were 3 to 5 inches.

NEW YORK, West

  NYZ001>003-
  010>011-014
                              0         0        60K

                            An intensifying low over Indiana and
                            Ohio on February 28th lifted slowly
                            across Lake Erie. Snow overspread the
                            area during the late afternoon hours
                            of the 28th. It was generally light
                            at first, but became moderate to heavy
                            for a time across the Niagara Frontier
                            and northern Finger Lakes (including
                            Buffalo and Rochester) shortly after
                            midnight. The snow finally tapered
                            off during the morning and early
                            afternoon hours of March 1st.
                            Specific overnight snowfalls
                            included: 9" at Clarence and
                            Alabama; 8" at Medina and Victor;
                            and 7" at Spencerport and Lewiston.

  NYZ019>020-085
                              0         0        45K

                            A northwest flow across Lake Eric
                            resulted in an intense lake effect
                            snow across the higher elevations
                            of the western southern tier of New
                            York during the evening of March 2nd
                            and continuing through the afternoon
                            of the 3rd. Specific snowfall reports
                            included: 14" at Perrysburg; 13" at
                            Cassadaga; 12" at Stockton; and 10"
                            at East Aurora.

  NYZ006
                              0         0        10K

                            A cold, westerly flow across Lake
                            Ontario established a narrow, intense
                            band of lake effect snow over Oswego
                            county. In Scriba ten inches of snow
                            fell while nine inches was reported
                            in Palermo and Volney.

  NYZ006
                              0         0        10K

                            A band of lake effect snow began
                            to develop late in the afternoon of
                            March 9th in a northwest flow across
                            Lake Ontario. The band of snow
                            continued through the night and
                            morning hours, but broke apart
                            during the afternoon hours under
                            the strong March sun. Snowfall
                            reports included: 10" at West
                            Monroe; 9" at Constantia; and
                            7" at Hannibal.

Location                    Character of Storm

MISSOURI, East
  Cole County
    Jefferson City          Thunderstorm Wind

                            The ASOS at the Jefferson City airport
                            recorded a 58 mph wind gust.

MISSOURI, Lower

  Pemiscot County
    Hayti                   Hail (0.75)

MISSOURI, Northeast
                            NONE REPORTED

MISSOURI, Northwest

  Bates County
    2 NNW Amsterdam         Hail (1.00)

  Bates County
    1 N Amsterdam           Hail (0.75)

  Bates County
    4 S Butler              Hail (1.75)

  Cass County
    Raymore                 Hail (0.75)

  Clay County
    Kearney                 Hail (0.88)

  MOZ038
                            High Wind (G53)

                            A peak wind gust of 61 mph was measured
                            at Higginsville by the Cooperative
                            Observer. Wind gusts from 40 to 55 mph
                            were common elsewhere across much of
                            west central Missouri.

  Nodaway County
    5 E Maryville           Thunderstorm Wind

                            Thunderstorm winds broke off 18 to 24
                            inch tree limbs.

  Nodaway County
    2 E Maryville           Thunderstorm Wind

                            One barn had roof blown off. One
                            building suffered minor damage. Trees
                            had some damage and a few power lines
                            were downed.

  Worth County
    Denver                  Thunderstorm Wind

                            Barn suffered some damage from strong
                            thunderstorm winds.

  Mercer County
    Princeton               Hail (0.88)

  Linn County
    6 N Purdin              Thunderstorm Wind

                            Six to ten inch tree limbs down.

  Sullivan County
    1 W Browning            Thunderstorm Wind

                            Six to ten inch tree limbs down.

MISSOURI, Southeast

  Ripley County
    Fairdealing to          Hail (0.88)
    7 SE Doniphan

                            Dime to nickel-size hail was reported at
                            three places in eastern Ripley County.

  Butler County
    Poplar Bluff            Hail (0.88)

  Scott County
    Scott City              Hail (1.00)

                            One-inch hail occurred along Interstate
                            55.

  Cape Girardeau
  County
    4 SW Cape Girardeau     Thunderstorm Wind (G50)

                            The tin roof was ripped off a barn on
                            Highway 74, about 2 miles west of
                            Interstate 55. The roof was blown into
                            some power lines, which were knocked
                            down. At the nearby Cape Girardeau
                            airport, the peak wind gust recorded by
                            the automated observing system was 54
                            MPH.

  Cape Girardeau
  County
    Randles to              Hail (1.00)
    5 W Cape Girardeau

                            Dime to quarter-size hail fell in
                            extreme southern Cape Girardeau County.
                            The report of quarter-size hail was from
                            Randles.

  Stoddard County
    Acorn Ridge to          Hail (0.88)
    Dexter

  Butler County
    2 W Fisk                Hail (0.75)

  Scott County
    Oran                    Hail (1.75)

  Stoddard County
    Advance                 Hail (0.88)

  Scott County
    2.5 N Sikeston to       Hail (1.00)
    Sikeston

                            One-inch hail fell just north of
                            Sikeston, while dime-size hail fell in
                            Sikeston.

  Mississippi County
    Charleston              Hail (0.75)

                            A line of thunderstorms developed over
                            southeast Missouri, near a line from
                            Poplar Bluff to Cape Girardeau. As the
                            line moved east to the Mississippi
                            River, some storms along the line
                            produced large hail and an isolated
                            report of damaging winds. The most
                            severe storm along the line tracked
                            through northern Scott and southern Cape
                            Girardeau Counties, producing hail up to
                            golf ball size and minor wind damage.

MISSOURI, Southwest

  Vernon County
    Fair Haven              Hail (1.00)

  Vernon County
    6 N Walker              Hail (1.75)

  Cedar County
    El Dorado Spgs          Hail (0.88)

  St. Clair County
    7 S Appleton City       Hail (0.75)

  Cedar County
    Stockton                Hail (0.88)

  Polk County
    Fair Play               Hail (1.00)

  Cedar County
    Stockton                Hail (0.88)

  Polk County
    Half Way                Hail (0.75)

MONTANA, Central

  MTZ009>011-013-
  044>049

                            High Wind (G63)

                            A deep low pressure system over central
                            Canada was responsible for a high wind
                            event along the Rocky Mountain Front and
                            adjacent plains on the 6th. Reported
                            wind speeds include: a gust to 73 mph at
                            East Glacier Park 11 SE; a gust to 54
                            mph at Harlem 16S and a gust to 46 mph
                            at Great Falls Airport. Additionally,
                            sustained winds of 40 mph were reported
                            for several hours at Oilmont 14E,
                            Fairfield 7NE, Cut Bank, Valier,
                            Blackleaf, Turner 6NW, Inverness 20N
                            and Loma 20N. The strong wind helped
                            spread a grass fire near Valier. Over
                            150 acres of grass burned from a fire
                            caused by exhaust from a vehicle.

  MTZ012-050-054
                            Heavy Snow

                            Heavy snow fell across a portion of
                            North Central Montana during the
                            afternoon and early evening of the 14th.
                            Reported snow fall amounts include: 11
                            inches at Neihart 7NW, 8 inches at
                            Millegan 14SE and 6 inches at Hobson
                            20SW. The heavy snow created slick and
                            hazardous driving surfaces and
                            contributed to over 40 motor vehicle
                            accidents.

  MTZ009-012>015-
  044-046>047-051-
  054>055

                            Winter Storm

                            A Canadian cold front swept across a
                            broad area of North Central Montana on
                            the 17th bringing heavy snow and gusty
                            winds. Reported snow fall amounts
                            include: 14 inches at the Crystal Lake
                            SNOTEL site; 8 inches at Neihart 7S; 7
                            inches at Neihart, Gold Butte and
                            Conrad; 6 inches at Marias Pass 1 WNW,
                            Shonkin, Pony and Lewistown 25S and 5
                            inches at Bozeman 7SE and Chester.

  MTZ009>014-044-
  047>050

                            Winter Storm

                            A vigorous spring storm brought heavy
                            snow to a wide area of North Central and
                            Southwest Montana on the 23rd. Reported
                            snow fall amounts include: 16 inches at
                            Holter Dam; 15 inches at Eden; 12 inches
                            at Shonkin 7S, Holter Dam 6S, Rogers
                            Pass, Heart Butte 6W; 10 inches at
                            Sunburst 6S, Gold Butte 7N; 8 inches at
                            Havre 25S, Hobson, Choteau, Stanford,
                            Millegan 14SE; 7 inches at Great Falls,
                            Cut Bank 25NW, Hogeland 2W, Babb,
                            Augusta 25NW, Neihart 7NNW, Great Falls
                            3SW; 6 inches at Grass Range and 5
                            inches at Martinsdale 3NNW and West
                            Yellowstone 9N.

MONTANA, East

  MTZ016>017-
  019>020-022>026-
  059>062

                            High Wind (G60)

                            Strong winds affected much of northeast
                            Montana during the morning and afternoon
                            hours of the 6th. The strong winds were
                            associated with a cold front and upper
                            level disturbance that crossed the area.
                            Sustained wind speeds of 40 to 45 mph
                            were common. A few locations had wind
                            gusts in the 58 to 69 mph range. A few
                            of the stronger wind gusts included:

                            King Coulee Raws Site (Valley County):
                            69 mph

                            Bluff Creek Raws Site (Valley County):
                            58 mph

                            Poplar Raws Site (Roosevelt County):
                            58 mph

  MTZ017-017-022-059

                            Heavy Snow

                            An area of low pressure in Wyoming
                            brought heavy snow in narrow bands to a
                            portion of northeast Montana. The
                            heaviest snow fell in a 10 to 15 mile
                            band across northern Phillips county,
                            southwest Valley, and portions of
                            northern Garfield county. A few of the
                            heavier snow totals included:

                            3 miles south of Whitewater (Phillips
                            County): 6 inches

                            20 miles south/southwest of Glasgow
                            (Valley County): 12 inches

                            30 miles southwest of Glasgow (Valley
                            County): 6 inches

                            30 miles northeast of Jordan (Garfield
                            County): 6-8 inches

  MTZ016-059>060

                            Heavy Snow

                            An area of low pressure that developed
                            in Wyoming brought heavy snow to much of
                            Phillips County late in the evening of
                            the 22nd through the pre-dawn hours of
                            the 23rd. Additional light snow
                            continued to fall through the evening
                            hours of the 23rd. In addition,
                            northeast winds of 15 to 25 mph with
                            high gusts produced areas of blowing and
                            drifting snow. A few of the more
                            impressive snowfall totals included:

                            Zortman: 9 inches

                            35 miles south of Malta: 7 inches, with
                            drifts of 3 to 4 feet

                            Whitewater: 6 inches

                            Malta: 5 inches

MONTANA, South

  MTZ040-056-066>068

                            Heavy Snow

                            8 inches 4W Alpine Cole Creek Snotel; 8
                            inches 2S Red Lodge; 7 inches 13ENE
                            Wilsall South Fork of the Shields Snotel
                            in the Crazy Mountains; 7 inches 6S
                            Roscoe; 6 inches 5NW Alpine; 6 inches in
                            Mcleod; 6 inches in Clyde Park; 10
                            inches 5W Red Lodge

  MTZ029-031-063

                            Heavy Snow

                            8 inches in Judith Gap; 11 inches LOSE
                            Roundup; 7 inches IOS Roundup; 6 inches
                            15S Colstrip.

  MTZ029-031>032-
  034>038-040-042-
  056>058-067

                            Heavy Snow

                            An early Spring storm moved across South
                            Central Montana bringing heavy, wet snow
                            to portions of the Billings County
                            Warning Area. The following are some
                            totals from this storm:

                            8 inches 18NW Ryegate; 6 inches in
                            Forsyth, Huntley, Fort Smith, Roundup,
                            Broadview, Billings, and Birney; 9
                            inches in Crow Agency; 10 inches in
                            Rapelje; 8 inches 2E Ryegate, 8 inches
                            in Clyde Park, 8 inches 12E Ashland, 6
                            inches 10S Volborg, 9 inches 2S Red
                            Lodge, 6 inches 5SE Volborg, 6 inches
                            16W Alzada, 8 inches 60S Miles City, 8
                            inches at both Cole Creek and Burnt
                            Mountain Snotels

MONTANA, West

  MTZ006>007-043

                            Heavy Snow

                            Vigorous late winter storm blanketed the
                            valleys of West Central Montana with 5
                            to 12 inches of new snow, with as much
                            as much as 14 inches of new snow
                            reported at Georgetown Lake.

  MTZ002-004-006-
  006-043

                            Winter Storm

                            Late winter storm brought 8 to 13 inches
                            of new snow over the mountains of
                            Northwest Montana with 4 to 8 inches in
                            the valleys. Widespread west winds at 15
                            to 25 mph also caused drifting of snow.
                            Schools were closed in the northern
                            Flathead valley due to heavy snowfall.
                            Trees also snapped under the load from
                            heavy snow. Some trees fell onto power
                            lines causing outages across the
                            northern Flathead valley as well.
                            Several vehicle rollovers were also
                            reported.

NEBRASKA, Central

  NEZ004>010-
  022>029-035>038-
  056>059-069>071-094

                            High Wind (G40)

                            A strong low pressure system moved
                            through Nebraska overnight with high
                            winds affecting the area behind the
                            passing cold front. Northwesterly winds
                            of 35-45 mph with gusts to 60 mph caused
                            low visibility due to blowing dust in
                            isolated areas. The low visibility
                            caused a multi-vehicle pile-up on
                            Interstate 80 about 6 miles west of
                            North Platte. The accident occurred at
                            2:05 pm and involved 5 semis and 3 cars.
                            Three semis and 2 cars were engulfed in
                            flames. The accident claimed 3 lives
                            (indirect fatalities) and injured 4
                            (indirect). West bound lanes on
                            Interstate 80 were closed for 4 hours
                            and cast bound lanes on Interstate 80
                            were closed for 10 hours.

  NEZ005>006-
  008>009-023>026-
  035>037-094

                            Winter Storm

                            A strong low pressure system moved out
                            of Eastern Colorado and into the Central
                            Plains dumping significant snow. Keya
                            Paha County received 6-8 inches of snow,
                            Blaine County received 9-12 inches, and
                            Eastern Cherry County received 12-16
                            inches. Breezy winds also created areas
                            of blowing and drifting snow across
                            roadways. A semi-trailer and truck
                            rolled over in the Long Pine Hills due
                            to the slick road conditions. No one was
                            injuried in the accident. Other cars
                            lost control on snow covered roads but
                            there were no injuries.

  Logan County
    9 N Stapleton           Hail (0.88)

  Custer County
    2 NW Arnold             Hail (1.00)

  Lincoln County
    North Platte            Hail (0.75)

  Custer County
    13 SW Anselmo           Hail (0.75)

                            Hail covered the ground.

  Lincoln County
    6 NNE North Platte      Hail (0.88)

  Custer County
    Anselmo                 Hail (0.88)

                            Hail was 2 inches deep.

  Blaine County
    7 SSE Brewster          Hail (0.88)

                            Hail covered the ground.

  Loup County
    15 W Taylor             Hail (1.25)

  Loup County
    Almeria                 Hail (0.75)

  Loup County
    10 NW Almeria           Hail (0.75)

  Frontier County
    13 SE Stockville        Hail (1.00)

  Frontier County
    6 S Eustis              Hail (1.75)

  Holt County
    18 SW Amelia            Hail (1.25)

  Rock County
    14 ESE Rose             Hail (0.88)

  Holt County
    17 WSW Chambers         Hail (1.25)

  Holt County
    5 SW Amelia             Hail (0.75)

NEBRASKA, East

  Gage County
    1 E Adams               Hail (0.75)

  Johnson County
    2 W Sterling            Hail (0.75)

  NEZ011>012-
  015>018-030>034-
  042>045-050>053

                            High Wind (G53)

                            Intense low pressure over the Great
                            Lakes region combined with high pressure
                            building east out of the Rockies and
                            provided a prolonged high wind event
                            over northeast and cast central Nebraska
                            and portions of western Iowa. Sustained
                            winds of 30 to 40 mph with gusts of 55
                            to a little over 60 mph were common
                            throughout the area. The strong winds
                            caused sporadic tree and roof damage,
                            and there were several reports across
                            the area of trees uprooted and a few
                            semi trucks were overturned. One person
                            was injured in Decatur Nebraska
                            (northern Burt county) when a roof of a
                            building under construction blew on top
                            of his house causing substantial damage.

                            Some of the higher gusts measured by
                            AWOS or ASOS sites included ... 62 mph
                            in Fremont at 110 pm, 60 mph at Norfolk
                            at 247 pm, 59 mph in Albion at 1010 am,
                            59 mph at Columbus at 115 pm, 59 mph in
                            Tekamah at 119 pm, and 55 mph in Omaha
                            at 224 pm.

NEBRASKA, Extreme Northeast

  NEZ013>014
                            High Wind (G53)

                            Sustained winds of 40 to 45 mph with
                            gusts around 60 mph persisted from late
                            morning until late afternoon. The winds
                            caused tree damage with a few branches
                            and smaller tree debris broken off.
                            There was minor damage to buildings,
                            mostly to shingles and gutters.

NEBRASKA, Extreme Southwest

                            NONE REPORTED.

NEBRASKA, South Central

                            NOT RECEIVED.

NEBRASKA, West

  Scotts Bluff County
    3 NE Scottsbluff        Tornado (F0)

                            Very weak tornado over open country.

NEVADA, North

  NVZ034
                            Heavy Snow

                            A winter storm brought 19 inches of snow
                            to the Dorsey Basin Snotel site in the
                            East Humboldt range and 15 inches to
                            Lamoille Canyon #3 Snotel.

NEVADA, South

                            NONE REPORTED.

NEVADA, West

  NVZ003
                            Heavy Snow

                            A winter storm moved through northeast
                            California and western Nevada on the
                            19th and 20th. Two to three feet of snow
                            fell in the higher elevations of the
                            Sierra, with 6 to 8 inches reported in
                            areas to the lee of the Sierra.

                            Storm total snowfall amounts:
                            Virginia City (6340 ft.)        8 inches
                            Carson City (5400 ft.)          6 inches

  NVZ002
                            Heavy Snow

                            A winter storm moved through northeast
                            California and western Nevada on the
                            19th and 20th. Two to three feet of snow
                            fell in the higher elevations of the
                            Sierra, with 6 to 8 inches reported in
                            areas to the lee of the Sierra.

                            Storm total snowfall amounts:

                            Mt. Rose Ski Resort (summit)   22 inches
                              (mid-mountain)               10 inches
                            5 ENE Incline Village
                              (7300 ft.)                   20 inches
                            1 NE Incline Village
                              (6500 ft.)                   15 inches
                            Spooner Summit                 12 inches

  NVZ001
                            High Wind (G56)

                            Wind gust of 65 knots (75 mph) recorded
                            at the Walker Lake RAWS sensor.

  NVZ002
                            High Wind (G55)

                            Wind gust of 55 knots (63 mph) recorded
                            at the Galena Creek RAWS sensor.

  NVZ003
                            High Wind (G50)

                            Wind gust of 50 knots (58 mph) recorded
                            at DRI Sage building in Stead.

  NVZ002
                            Heavy Snow

                            The second winter storm in a week moved
                            through the Sierra Nevada and western
                            Nevada region. This storm, however, was
                            not as strong as the earlier one. From
                            late on the 21st through the 22nd up to
                            two feet of snow fell in the Sierra,
                            with rain falling western Nevada.

                            Storm total snowfall amounts:
                            Mt. Rose Ski Resort
                              (mid-mountain)      22 inches

NEW HAMPSHIRE, North and Central

  NHZ001>010-
  013>014

                            Heavy Snow

                            Low pressure developed off the southern
                            New England coast during the evening of
                            Monday, February 28, and intensified as
                            moved northeast into the Gulf of Maine
                            on Tuesday, March 1. Snow moved into New
                            Hampshire during the early morning hours
                            and dropped between 5 and 14 inches
                            across the entire state before ending
                            during the early morning hours of
                            March 2.

  NHZ001>010-
  013>014

                            Heavy Snow

                            Low pressure moved across southern New
                            England during the night of Monday,
                            March 7, and redeveloped off the New
                            England coast on Tuesday, March 8. Snow
                            spread into New Hampshire during the
                            early morning hours of Tuesday and
                            accumulated 5 to 12 inches before ending
                            during the morning on March 9.

  NHZ001>002-
  004>010-013>014

                            Heavy Snow

                            Low pressure moving out of the midwest
                            on Friday, March 11, redeveloped off the
                            New England coast Friday evening and
                            slowly moved through the Gulf of Maine
                            on Saturday, March 12. Snow accumulated
                            4 to 15 inches across most of the state
                            before ending during the early morning
                            hours of March 13.

NEW HAMPSHIRE, Southern

  NHZ011>012
                            Winter Storm

                            Heavy snow and gusty winds affected
                            southwest New Hampshire and all of
                            southern New England, as low pressure
                            reformed off the mid Atlantic coast and
                            tracked southeast of the region.
                            Snowfall totals of 4 to 8 inches were
                            widely observed.

                            Some specific snowfall totals, as
                            reported by trained spotters, included 9
                            inches in Marlow, East Alstead, and
                            Keene; 8 inches in Peterborough; 7
                            inches in Rindge, Hinsdale, and
                            Greenfield; and 6 inches in Francestown,
                            Manchester, Hudson, and Nashua.

  NHZ011>012
                            Heavy Snow

                            Low pressure strengthened rapidly off
                            the Delaware coast and tracked southeast
                            of New England, bringing heavy snow to
                            southwest New Hampshire. Snowfall totals
                            of 4 to 8 inches were widely observed.

                            The snow and gusty winds made travel
                            difficult. Several roads around
                            Manchester were closed due to icy
                            conditions, and many spinouts were
                            reported throughout the region. Many
                            flights were delayed or canceled at
                            Manchester Airport.

                            Some specific snowfall totals, as
                            reported by trained spotters, included 9
                            inches in Manchester, 8 inches in Keene,
                            7 inches in Winchester and Hinsdale, and
                            6 inches in Stoddard, Bedford, Milford,
                            and Hillsborough.

  NHZ011>012
                            Heavy Snow

                            Low pressure south of Long Island
                            strengthened rapidly as it headed to the
                            Canadian Maritimes, and brought heavy
                            snow to southwest New Hampshire and much
                            of interior southern New England.
                            Snowfall totals of 6 to 12 inches were
                            widely observed in Cheshire and
                            Hillsborough Counties.

                            State police reported numerous vehicles
                            off roads around the region, especially
                            on Interstate 93. A number of flights at
                            Manchester Airport were delayed or
                            canceled as a result of the storm.

                            Some specific snowfall totals, as
                            reported by trained spotters, included
                            14 inches in Francestown; 13 inches in
                            Alstead; 12 inches in Dublin, Marlow,
                            Stoddard, Keene, Peterborough, and
                            Wilton; 10 inches in Swanzey and South
                            Weare; 8 inches in Hinsdale and Nashua;
                            and 6 inches in Hudson and Manchester.

NEW JERSEY, Northeast

  NJZ003-005>006-011
                            Heavy Snow

                            A weak high pressure ridge extended
                            southwest across the region from New
                            England as a low pressure system
                            intensified and moved northeast. This
                            strong low passed south of Long Island
                            Monday night and east of the New England
                            coast during Tuesday.

                            Light snow developed northeast across
                            the region between 1 and 3 pm Monday
                            afternoon. As the low rapidly
                            intensified and moved closer to the
                            region, narrow bands of heavy snow swept
                            northeast across the region. The last
                            band of heavy snow swept northeast
                            across the region between 5 am and 6:30
                            am Tuesday morning, March 1 st. Storm
                            Total Snowfall amounts ranged from 5
                            to 10 inches.

                            Here are selected snowfall totals for:

                            Bergen County - from 5.4 inches at River
                            Vale to 7.5 inches at Lodi.

                            Union County - from 6.3 inches at
                            Garwood to 7.6 inches at Elizabeth.

                            Essex County - from 6.0 inches at
                            Bloomfield to 9.5 inches at Newark
                            Airport.

                            Hudson County - from 5 .3 inches at
                            Bayonne to 8.0 inches at Harrison.

  NJZ003>006-011            Bergen - Eastern Passaic - Essex -
                            Hudson - Union
                            08

                            A strong arctic cold front intensified
                            as it swept southeast across the region.
                            This caused rain to change to snow,
                            temperatures to fall from the 40s into
                            the 20s, and northwest winds that gusted
                            between 40 and 55 mph. Near blizzard
                            conditions occurred for a short time.
                            Storm total snowfalls ranged from around
                            2 to 4 inches.

                            Wet and mild antecedent conditions were
                            followed by more than a 20 degree drop
                            in temperature in 3 hours with strong
                            gusty winds. This resulted in a "flash"
                            freeze across roads that resulted in
                            hundreds of vehicle accidents.

NEW JERSEY, South and Northwest

  NJZ001-007>010-
  012>020-027
                            Heavy Snow

  NJZ021>022-026
                            Winter Weather/Mix

                            Heavy snow fell across northern and
                            southwestern New Jersey from the morning
                            of February 28th into the morning of the
                            1st. Across coastal Ocean County,
                            interior Atlantic County and Cumberland
                            County precipitation fell as snow, but
                            mixed with rain at times during the
                            daytime on February 28th. Temperatures
                            in these areas remained above freezing
                            until the evening of February 28th and
                            slowed the accumulations. Precipitation
                            fell as mainly rain in Cape May County
                            and coastal Atlantic County until the
                            rain changed to snow late in the evening
                            of February 28th. Snow began during the
                            morning of February 28th in the southern
                            half of the state and from around Noon
                            EST into the afternoon in the northern
                            half of the state. Heavier bands of
                            accumulating snow moved over the
                            southwestern and northern parts of the
                            state during the afternoon and evening
                            of February 28th. The snow ended across
                            the southern half of the state before
                            the sun rose on the 1st and ended during
                            the morning in the northern half of the
                            state. Accumulations averaged 4 to 8
                            inches, with some higher amounts in
                            Sussex and Warren Counties and lower
                            amounts in the southeastern part of the
                            state.

                            Many schools dismissed early on February
                            28th. Rutgers University cancelled all
                            its classes after 430 p.m. EST on
                            February 28th. Many after school
                            activities and classes as well as
                            municipal and school board meetings were
                            cancelled. Many minor accidents occurred.
                            In Burlington County, a 17-year-old boy,
                            a 17-year-old girl and their 41-year-old
                            bus driver were injured when two school
                            buses collided in Medford Township.

                            Specific accumulations included 9.6
                            inches in Barry Lakes (Sussex County),
                            9.1 inches in Belvidere (Warren County),
                            9.0 inches in Califon (Hunterdon County),
                            8.9 inches in Sparta (Sussex County),
                            8.6 inches in Stewartsville (Warren
                            County), 8.0 inches in Southampton
                            (Burlington County), Milton (morris
                            County) and Wrightstown (Burlington
                            County), 7.9 inches in West Windsor
                            (Mercer County), 7.8 inches in Marcella
                            (Morris County), 7.6 inches in Wertsville
                            (Hunterdon County), 7.5 inches in Butler
                            (Morris County) and Hackettstown (Warren
                            County), 7.2 inches in Pottersville
                            (Somerset County), 7.0 inches in
                            Lindenwold (Camden County) and Clarksboro
                            (Gloucester County), 6.8 inches in
                            Medford (Burlington County) and Metuchen
                            (Middlesex County), 6.7 inches in New
                            Brunswick (Middlesex County), Somerville
                            (Somerset County) and Cream Ridge
                            (Monmouth County), 6.3 inches in West
                            Windsor (Mercer County), 6.0 inches in
                            Pennsauken (Camden County), Whippany
                            (Morris County) and Flemington (Hunterdon
                            County), 5.8 inches in Manchester (Ocean
                            County), 5.5 inches in Verga (Gloucester
                            County) and Monroeville (Salem County),
                            5.0 inches in New Egypt (Ocean County),
                            4.4 inches in Hammonton (Atlantic
                            County), 3.8 inches in Seabrook
                            (Cumberland County), 1.3 inches at the
                            Atlantic City International Airport and
                            1.0 inch in Margate (Atlantic County)
                            and Brant Beach (Ocean County).

                            The wintry weather was caused by a true
                            northeaster. A low pressure system
                            developed in the Gulf of Mexico on
                            Sunday February 27th. It moved northeast
                            and already was a 995 millibar low
                            pressure system when it was near
                            Jacksonville, Florida at 7 p.m. EST on
                            February 27th. It moved northeast and
                            deepened to a 992 millibar low near
                            Charleston, South Carolina at 1 a.m. EST
                            on February 28th, a 990 millibar low
                            near Wilmington, North Carolina at 7
                            a.m. EST on February 28th, a 984
                            millibar low just east of Elizabeth City,
                            North Carolina at 1 p.m. EST on February
                            28th, a 980 millibar low about 150 miles
                            east of Fenwick Island, Delaware at 7
                            p.m. EST on February 28th and still a
                            980 millibar low about 250 miles east
                            of Long Beach Island, New Jersey at 1
                            a.m. EST on the 1st. The combination of
                            the low pressure system's storm track
                            being fairly offshore, the lack of a
                            surface high pressure system to its
                            north and marginal surface temperatures
                            for snow kept accumulations from being
                            heavier.

  NJZ014-024>026
                            Astronomical High Tide

  NJZ014-024>026
                            Heavy Surf/High Surf

                            Moderate beach erosion and minor tidal
                            flooding occurred with the northeaster
                            along the New Jersey Coast. The most
                            intense onshore flow occurred from mid
                            morning on February 28th into the early
                            morning of the 1st. Minor tidal flooding
                            occurred with the overnight high tide.

                            The intense and offshore storm track the
                            low pressure system took gave the New
                            Jersey coast about a 12 hour period of
                            intense northeast winds (25 to 35 mph)
                            and this led to the minor tidal flooding
                            and beach erosion. In Monmouth County, 2
                            to 3 foot vertical cuts were common from
                            Asbury Park south. In Ocean County, in
                            Harvey Cedars, a 5 foot vertical by 10
                            foot horizontal cut occurred to 800 feet
                            of dune from Bergen to Cumberland
                            Avenues. Two to four foot vertical cuts
                            were common from Ship Bottom additional
                            south. In Beach Haven, there was a
                            complete loss of berm protection and an
                            8 foot loss of sand at the Merivale
                            Avenue street end. One house was now
                            exposed to the ocean. In Atlantic
                            County, two to four foot vertical cuts
                            occurred, except in Ventnor where the
                            vertical cut reached five feet at the
                            south end of the city. Walkways and
                            fences were also damaged. Some walkways
                            now ended at the water's edge. The
                            Ventnor Beach was just rebuilt in 2004.
                            In Cape May County, Ocean City was hit
                            the hardest with 3 to 4 foot vertical
                            cuts from the fishing to the amusement
                            pier and an 8 to 10 foot cut from 8th
                            Street to Seaspray Avenue with dune
                            fencing down in some areas. Elsewhere in
                            the county, vertical cuts averaged 1 to
                            3 feet. Sea Isle City reported loss of
                            dune fencing and rocks were exposed.

                            The overnight (February 28th) high tide
                            reached 6.78 feet above mean lower low
                            water at Sandy Hook (Monmouth County)
                            and 6.80 feet above mean lower low water
                            at Cape May (Cape May County). Minor
                            tidal flooding begins at 6.7 feet above
                            mean lower low water.

                            The minor tidal flooding and beach
                            erosion was caused by a northeaster. The
                            low pressure system developed in the
                            Gulf of Mexico on Sunday February 27th.
                            It moved northeast and was near
                            Jacksonville, Florida at 7 p.m. EST on
                            February 27th. It moved northeast and
                            deepened and was near Charleston, South
                            Carolina at 1 a.m. EST on February 28th,
                            just cast of Wilmington, North Carolina
                            at 7 a.m. EST on February 28th, just
                            east of Elizabeth City, North Carolina
                            at 1 p.m. EST on February 28th, and
                            deepened to a 980 millibar low about 150
                            miles east of Fenwick Island, Delaware
                            at 7 p.m. EST on February 28th. The low
                            remained about the same strength (980
                            millibar) as it passed about 250 miles
                            east of Long Beach Island, New Jersey
                            at 1 a.m. EST on the 1st. The lack of a
                            surface high pressure system to the
                            north of this system prevented the
                            pressure gradient and hence the winds,
                            heavy surf and tidal flooding from being
                            worse.

  NJZ001-007>010-
  120>027
                            Winter Weather/Mix

                            The combination of a strong cold frontal
                            passage during the morning of the 8th
                            and a rapidly intensifying low pressure
                            system off the Middle Atlantic and New
                            England States brought snow and plunging
                            temperatures during the day on the 8th.
                            Actual accumulations averaged an inch or
                            two in the southern part of New Jersey
                            and 2 to 4 inches in the northern part
                            of the state. The snow combined with the
                            sharp drop in temperatures to bring
                            treacherous driving conditions on
                            untreated roadways during the afternoon
                            and evening and countless accidents
                            occurred, especially in the northern
                            half of the state.

                            Precipitation started as rain before
                            sunrise on the 8th. The cold front moved
                            through New Jersey between 7 a.m. and 10
                            a.m. EST (from northwest to southeast)
                            as a low pressure system on the front
                            was intensifying. Temperatures dropped
                            quickly behind this front both at the
                            surface and aloft. The rain changed to
                            snow between 8 a.m. (northwest areas
                            first) and Noon EST (southeast areas
                            last). About an hour after the
                            precipitation changed to snow,
                            temperatures dropped below freezing
                            as the snow continued to fall. The snow
                            ended during the mid and late afternoon
                            from west to east across the state. But,
                            its lingering effects lasted well into
                            the morning rush on the 9th as the wind
                            blew the snow back on the road.

                            Townships averaged about a dozen weather
                            related accidents, especially in the
                            northern half of the state. In Hunterdon
                            County, Interstate 78 was closed for
                            five miles because of more than twenty
                            accidents. About 75 accidents were
                            reported across northern New Jersey
                            on interstates 287, 78 and 80 and New
                            Jersey State Route 24. In Somerset
                            County, an accident on westbound
                            Interstate 78 that involved a tractor-
                            trailer and vehicle caused serious
                            injuries. In Monmouth County, a roadway
                            was closed in Holmdel Township after a
                            vehicle knocked down a pole. Problems in
                            Monmouth County persisted through the
                            next morning as multiple accidents in
                            the southbound lanes of New Jersey State
                            Route 18 in Colts Neck closed the road
                            for several hours. In Long Branch, nine
                            accidents occurred within 45 minutes.
                            Many after school activities and classes
                            were cancelled on the 8th. The regional
                            spelling bee in Monmouth County was
                            postponed.

                            Specific snow accumulations included 4.0
                            inches in Oakhurst (Monmouth County) and
                            Brick Township (Ocean County), 3.5 inches
                            in Manalapan (Monmouth County), 3.0
                            inches in Wantage (Sussex County), 2.8
                            inches in Marcella (Moms County) and
                            Stewartsville (Warren County), 2.5
                            inches in Florence (Burlington County)
                            and Skillman (Somerset County), 2.3
                            inches in Ewing (Mercer County), 2.0
                            inches in Metuchen (Middlesex County),
                            1.9 inches in Somerdale (Camden County),
                            1.5 inches in Tabernacle (Burlington
                            County) and East Amwell Township
                            (Hunterdon County), 1.4 inches in
                            Chatham (Morris County), 1.0 inch in
                            Seabrook (Cumberland County) and 0.3
                            inches at the Atlantic City
                            International Airport.

                            The snow was caused by the combination
                            of the cold frontal passage and the
                            rapidly intensifying low pressure system
                            that developed on the front during the
                            morning of the 8th. The low moved
                            northeast and was an already intense 986
                            mb near Danville, Virginia at 7 a.m. EST
                            on the 8th. From there it continued to
                            move northeast and deepened to a 978 mb
                            low just east of Long Beach Island, New
                            Jersey at 1 p.m. EST on the 8th, to a
                            970 mb low over Nantucket Island,
                            Massachusetts at 7 p.m. EST on the 8th
                            to a 964 mb low just southwest of
                            Yarmouth, Nova Scotia at 1 a.m. EST on
                            the 9th.

  NJZ001-007>010-012-
  014>023-025>027
                            Strong Wind

  NJZ013-024
                            High Wind (G63)

                            In addition to the snow, strong gusty
                            northwest winds developed during the
                            afternoon and evening of the 8th as a
                            low pressure system intensified off the
                            Middle Atlantic and New England States.
                            Wind gusts reached around 70 mph in Cape
                            May County. The strong winds caused
                            isolated power outages throughout New
                            Jersey and hampered snow removal crews
                            as it blew snow back onto already
                            cleared or salted roads. Peak wind gusts
                            included 72 mph in Strathmere (Cape May
                            County), 70 mph in Cape May (Cape May
                            County), 64 mph in Keansburg (Monmouth
                            County), 63 mph at High Point (the
                            highest point in New Jersey in Sussex
                            County), 57 mph in Sandy Hook (Monmouth
                            County) and Bamegat Light (Ocean County),
                            50 mph in Atlantic City (Atlantic
                            County), 49 mph in Wrightstown
                            (Burlington County), 45 mph in Millville
                            (Cumberland County) and 44 mph in
                            Trenton (Mercer County).

                            The strong winds were caused by a
                            rapidly intensifying low pressure system
                            that developed on the cold front during
                            the morning of the 8th. The low moved
                            northeast and was an already intense 986
                            mb near Danville, Virginia at 7 a.m. EST
                            on the 8th. From there it continued to
                            move northeast and deepened to a 978 mb
                            low just east of Long Beach Island, New
                            Jersey at 1 p.m. EST on the 8th, to a
                            970 mb low over Nantucket Island,
                            Massachusetts at 7 p.m. EST on the 8th
                            to a 964 mb low just southwest of
                            Yarmouth, Nova Scotia at 1 a.m. EST on
                            the 9th.

  NJZ001-007>008
                            Winter Weather/Mix

                            Snow fell across northwest New Jersey
                            during the evening and overnight on the
                            11th and accumulated between two and
                            five inches in most areas with the
                            highest accumulations over the higher
                            terrain. Snow began in Sussex County
                            during the evening of the 11th and
                            spread into Morris and Warren Counties
                            by Midnight EST. The snow ended before
                            sunrise on the 12th. Untreated and less
                            traveled roads were treacherous. Specific
                            accumulations included 4.9 inches in
                            Marcella (Morris County), 2.5 inches in
                            Butler and Randolph (Morris County) and
                            2.0 inches in Wantage (Sussex County).
                            The snow was caused by an "Alberta type"
                            low pressure system that moved from
                            northern Minnesota on the morning of the
                            10th east into Lake Erie around sunrise
                            on the 11th. The low moved through
                            Northwest New Jersey during the evening
                            on the 11th and intensified as it moved
                            east reaching just south of Nantucket,
                            Massachusetts around sunrise on the
                            12th. Heavier snow fell farther to the
                            northeast.

  NJZ012
                            Wildfire

                            A brushfire with 30 to 40-foot-high
                            flames burned across 75 to 100 acres in
                            Raritan Center within Edison Township.
                            The fire could be seen from Rahway
                            (Union County) to East Brunswick (within
                            Middlesex County). The fire burned for
                            about six hours until firefighters
                            finished dousing the blaze. One dozen
                            municipalities, twenty-three fire
                            departments and one hundred and three
                            firefighters responded to the scene. The
                            brushfire began in an area with 10 to
                            12-foot-high reeds that were very dry.
                            Gusty northwest winds led to a longer
                            battle with the fire. The peak wind gust
                            at Newark International Airport for the
                            day was 30 mph and the average wind speed
                            of 16.1 mph was the fifth windiest day
                            of March 2005.

  NJZ001
                            Winter Weather/Mix

                            A high pressure ridge that extended from
                            James Bay, Canada to the Middle Atlantic
                            coastal waters left enough cold air in
                            place near the surface to cause a wintry
                            mix of precipitation to occur during the
                            first half of the day on the 20th.
                            Precipitation moved in aloft preceding a
                            warm front and fell as mainly freezing
                            rain over the higher terrain of Sussex
                            County between 3 a.m. and 11 a.m. EST.
                            Ice accretions were less than one-tenth
                            of an inch. Some snow and sleet mixed in
                            with any accumulations less than one-
                            quarter of an inch. By 11 a.m. EST
                            enough warm air moved in at the surface
                            to change the precipitation over to
                            plain rain in all areas. Untreated
                            roadways were hazardous before the
                            change to plain rain.

  NJZ001
                            Winter Storm

  NJZ007>010
                            Winter Weather/Mix

                            A low pressure system exiting the United
                            States from the Delmarva Peninsula
                            brought rain and then snow to Warren and
                            Moms Counties and heavy snow to Sussex
                            County. Accumulations averaged 2 to 5
                            inches in most of Warren and Morris
                            Counties and 5 to 8 inches across the
                            higher terrain of Warren and Morris
                            Counties and in Sussex County. Farther
                            south, about an inch or two of snow fell
                            in Somerset and Hunterdon Counties.
                            Following the pattern of other winter
                            storms this season, the accumulating
                            snow hit the evening commute the hardest
                            which was described as a nightmare.
                            Precipitation in northwest New Jersey
                            (except in Sussex County) started as rain
                            during the morning of the 23rd and
                            changed to snow during the afternoon.
                            The change to snow worked its way from
                            the higher terrain downward. Across
                            Sussex County, precipitation fell mainly
                            as snow. In all areas the snow continued
                            through the night and ended just before
                            sunrise on the 24th.

                            Numerous and mostly minor accidents
                            occurred mainly during the evening
                            commute. One fatal accident occurred in
                            White Township (Warren County) when a
                            61-year-old woman died. She lost control
                            of her vehicle on County Route 519 and
                            slid sideways into an oncoming van. The
                            vehicle then struck a guardrail. The
                            driver and passenger of the van suffered
                            minor injuries. The evening commute was
                            progressively worse on the Pennsylvania
                            side of the Delaware River.

                            Accumulations included 7.7 inches in
                            Wantage (Sussex County), 6.8 inches in
                            Barry Lakes (Sussex County), 6.7 inches
                            in Marcella (Morris County), 5.5 inches
                            in Blairstown (Warren County), 5.0
                            inches in Rockaway (Morris County), 3.0
                            inches in Chatham (Morris County), 2.5
                            inches in Hackettstown (Warren County)
                            and Morristown (Moms County), 2.0 inches
                            in Pottersville (Somerset County), 1.9
                            inches in Belvidere (Warren County) and
                            1.0 inch in Flemington (Hunterdon
                            County).

                            The late winter storm was caused by a
                            low pressure system that formed in the
                            Southern Plains States on the 21st and
                            moved east and reached Memphis, Tennessee
                            early in the evening on the 22nd, in
                            central Kentucky around sunrise on the
                            23rd, just west of Norfolk at 1 p.m. EST
                            on the 23rd, just east of Wallops Island,
                            Virginia at 7 p.m. EST on the 23rd and
                            about 200 miles cast of Cape May, New
                            Jersey at 1 a.m. EST on the 24th.

  NJZ001
                            Winter Weather/Mix

                            Pockets of freezing rain occurred across
                            Sussex County during the overnight of
                            March 27th. As rain moved into the
                            region on the evening of the 27th, some
                            surface temperatures cooled to or below
                            the freezing mark. Light freezing rain
                            fell through the night until temperatures
                            rose above freezing shortly after sunrise
                            on the 28th. Ice accretions were up to
                            two-tenths of an inch. Untreated roadways
                            and walkways were slippery.

                            The nearest surface high pressure system
                            at the onset of the rain was south of
                            Novas Scotia and could not lock in the
                            cold air near the surface. In addition,
                            the surface pressure difference (and thus
                            the wind) between the low pressure system
                            arriving from the Gulf Coast States and
                            the departing high pressure system
                            produced enough of a southeast wind to
                            scour away the cold air near the surface.

  Burlington County
   Countywide               Heavy Rain

  Salem County
    Countywide              Heavy Rain

  Gloucester County
     Countywide             Heavy Rain

  Hunterdon County
    Countywide              Heavy Rain

  Sussex County
    Countywide              Heavy Rain

  Warren County
    Countywide              Heavy Rain

  Middlesex County
    Countywide              Heavy Rain

  Monmouth County
    Countywide              Heavy Rain

                            Heavy rain caused poor drainage flooding
                            and left the region vulnerable to any
                            additional heavy rain as the ground was
                            saturated. Rain began falling during the
                            late evening on the 27th, but fell at its
                            heaviest during the afternoon and evening
                            of the 28th as scattered thunderstorms
                            occurred. The rain ended by late that
                            evening. The evening commute was more
                            difficult as usual as there was much
                            ponding of water in poor drainage
                            locations. Storm totals averaged around
                            two inches.

                            On the 30th, the combination of runoff
                            and melting snow led to isolated low-
                            lying area flooding along the Delaware
                            River in Warren County. In Harmony
                            Township, river flooding reached homes
                            on Riversedge Lane and River Road. The
                            Delaware River at Ricgelsville crested
                            at 21.3 feet that morning. Flood stage
                            at that location is 22 feet.

                            Storm totals included 2.65 in Freehold
                            (Monmouth County), 2.58 inches in Sussex
                            (Sussex County), 2.14 inches in Andover
                            (Sussex County), 2.10 inches in Newton
                            (Sussex County), 2.06 inches in Califon
                            (Hunterdon County), 2.04 inches in
                            Belvidere (Warren County), 2.02 inches
                            in Riegclsville (Warren County), 1.95
                            inches in New Lisbon (Burlington County),
                            1.88 inches in Bloomsbury (Hunterdon
                            County), 1.75 inches in West Deptford
                            (Gloucester County), 1.74 inches in
                            Mount Laurel (Burlington County), 1.72
                            inches in Columbia (Warren County), 1.65
                            inches in Willingboro (Burlington County)
                            and 1.60 inches in Mount Holly
                            (Burlington County).

                            The heavy rain was caused by a low
                            pressure system that formed along the
                            Gulf Coast States. This low pressure
                            system was captured by its support aloft
                            and thus moved only slowly northeast as
                            it tapped abundant moisture from both
                            the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic
                            Ocean. The low pressure system moved
                            from western Alabama at 7 a.m. EST on
                            the 27th northeast to eastern Tennessee
                            at 7 p.m. EST on the 27th and eastern
                            Kentucky at 7 a.m. EST on the 28th. A
                            secondary low pressure system formed
                            over North Carolina during the morning
                            of the 28th. It would become the main
                            low pressure system as it moved northeast
                            to near Norfolk, Virginia at 1 p.m. EST
                            on the 28th, Chesapeake Bay at 7 p.m.
                            EST on the 28th, Delaware Bay at 1 a.m.
                            EST on the 29th and about 100 miles east
                            of Atlantic City at 7 a.m. EST on the
                            29th.

  NJZ018
                            Flood

                            The combination of heavy rain and
                            saturated ground from recent heavy rains
                            caused poor drainage and some river
                            flooding in Camden County. Rain began
                            falling during the late evening on the
                            27th, but fell at its heaviest during
                            the afternoon and evening of the 28th as
                            thunderstorms occurred. Storm totals
                            averaged between one and two inches.
                            The Cooper River at Haddonfield was above
                            its 2.8 foot flood stage from 529 p.m.
                            through 845 p.m. EST on the 28th. It
                            crested at 2.88 feet at 630 p.m. EST.
                            Storm totals included 1.91 inches in
                            Somerdale, 1.72 inches in Audubon, 1.66
                            inches in Pennsauken and 1.40 inches in
                            Cherry Hill.

                            The heavy rain was caused by a low
                            pressure system that formed along the
                            Gulf Coast States. This low pressure
                            system was captured by its support aloft
                            and thus moved only slowly northeast as
                            it tapped abundant moisture from both the
                            Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic Ocean.
                            The low pressure system moved from
                            western Alabama at 7 a.m. EST on the
                            27th northeast to eastern Tennessee at
                            7 p.m. EST on the 27th and eastern
                            Kentucky at 7 a.m. EST on the 28th. A
                            secondary low pressure system formed
                            over North Carolina during the morning
                            of the 28th. It would become the main
                            low pressure system as it moved northeast
                            to near Norfolk, Virginia at 1 p.m. EST
                            on the 28th, Chesapeake Bay at 7 p.m.
                            EST on the 28th, Delaware Bay at 1 a.m.
                            EST on the 29th and about 100 miles east
                            of Atlantic City at 7 a.m. EST on the
                            29th.

  NJZ015
                            Flood

                            The combination of heavy rain and
                            saturated ground from recent heavy rains
                            caused poor drainage and some creek
                            flooding in Mercer County. Rain began
                            falling during the late evening on the
                            27th, but fell at its heaviest during
                            the afternoon and evening of the 28th as
                            thunderstorms occurred. Storm totals
                            averaged between one and two inches.

                            The Assunpink Creek at Trenton was above
                            its 7 foot flood stage from 609 p.m.
                            through 1118 p.m. EST on the 28th. It
                            crested at 7.33 feet at 9 p.m. EST.
                            Storm totals included 2.00 inches in
                            Windsor, 1.72 inches in Hightstown, 1.66
                            inches in Washington's Crossing and 1.46
                            inches in Trenton.

                            The heavy rain was caused by a low
                            pressure system that formed along the
                            Gulf Coast States. This low pressure
                            system was captured by its support aloft
                            and thus moved only slowly northeast as
                            it tapped abundant moisture from both
                            the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic
                            Ocean. The low pressure system moved from
                            western Alabama at 7 a.m. EST on the
                            27th northeast to eastern Tennessee at
                            7 p.m. EST on the 27th and eastern
                            Kentucky at 7 a.m. EST on the 28th. A
                            secondary low pressure system formed
                            over North Carolina during the morning
                            of the 28th. It would become the main
                            low pressure system as it moved northeast
                            to near Norfolk, Virginia at 1 p.m. EST
                            on the 28th, Chesapeake Bay at 7 p.m. EST
                            on the 28th, Delaware Bay at 1 a.m. EST
                            on the 29th and about 100 miles east of
                            Atlantic City at 7 a.m. EST on the 29th.

  NJZ010
                            Flood

                            The combination of heavy rain and
                            saturated ground caused poor drainage
                            and some river flooding in Somerset
                            County. Rain began falling during the
                            late evening on the 27th, but fell at
                            its heaviest during the afternoon and
                            evening of the 28th as thunderstorms
                            occurred. Storm totals averaged around
                            two inches.

                            The Millstone River at Griggstown was
                            above its 10 foot flood stage from 730
                            p.m. EST on the 28th through 1045 a.m.
                            EST on the 30th. It crested at 12.3 feet
                            at 8 a.m. EST on the 29th. The North
                            Branch of the Raritan River at South
                            Branch was above its 7 foot flood stage
                            from 640 p.m. EST on the 28th through
                            733 a.m. EST on the 29th. It crested at
                            8.7 feet at Midnight EST on the 29th.

                            Storm totals included 2.40 inches in
                            Basking Ridge, 2.12 inches in Far Hills,
                            1.96 inches in North Plainfield, 1.90
                            inches in Somerville and 1.44 inches in
                            Belle Mead.

                            The heavy rain was caused by a low
                            pressure system that formed along the
                            Gulf Coast States. This low pressure
                            system was captured by its support aloft
                            and thus moved only slowly northeast as
                            it tapped abundant moisture from both the
                            Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic Ocean.
                            The low pressure system moved from
                            western Alabama at 7 a.m. EST on the 27th
                            northeast to eastern Tennessee at 7 p.m.
                            EST on the 27th and eastern Kentucky at
                            7 a.m. EST on the 28th. A secondary low
                            pressure system formed over North
                            Carolina during the morning of the 28th.
                            It would become the main low pressure
                            system as it moved northeast to near
                            Norfolk, Virginia at 1 p.m. EST on the
                            28th, Chesapeake Bay at 7 p.m. EST on
                            the 28th, Delaware Bay at 1 a.m. EST on
                            and about 100 miles cast of Atlantic
                            City at 7 a.m. EST on the 29th.

  NJZ016>019
                            Astronomical High Tide

                            The combination of runoff from the heavy
                            rain, the funneling of water into Delaware
                            Bay and higher than normal astronomical
                            tides coming off the full moon produced
                            minor tidal flooding at the times of high
                            tide early in the morning on the 29th.
                            The high tide in Burlington reached 9.94
                            feet above mean lower low water. Minor
                            tidal flooding begins at 9.0 feet above
                            mean lower low water. The high tide at
                            Philadelphia Pier 12 reached 8.35 feet
                            above mean lower low water. Minor tidal
                            flooding begins there at 8.2 feet above
                            mean lower low water. Less widespread
                            minor tidal flooding occurred with the
                            early morning high tides on the 30th and
                            31st.

                            The onshore flow was caused by a low
                            pressure system that formed along the
                            Gulf Coast States. This low pressure
                            system was captured by its support aloft
                            and thus moved only slowly northeast from
                            western Alabama on the morning of the
                            27th. It reformed over North Carolina
                            during the morning of the 28th and become
                            the main low pressure system as it moved
                            northeast to near Norfolk, Virginia
                            during the afternoon on the 28th,
                            through Chesapeake Bay the evening on
                            the 28th, across Delaware Bay around
                            Midnight EST on the 29th and about then
                            cast of Atlantic City by sunrise on the
                            29th. The counterclockwise circulation
                            around this low helped push water into
                            Delaware Bay and slow the runoff from
                            the nearby heavy rain and the snowmelt
                            from the upper parts of the Delaware
                            River.

  NJZ008
                            Flood

                            The combination of heavy rain and melting
                            snow produced poor drainage and river
                            flooding in Morris County that lasted
                            well into April. Rain began falling
                            during the late evening on the 27th, but
                            fell at its heaviest during the afternoon
                            and evening of the 28th as thunderstorms
                            occurred. Storm totals averaged around
                            three inches. Lincoln Park Borough was
                            one of the hardest hit municipalities
                            in the county as they received flooding
                            near the Pompton and Passaic River
                            confluence and the Beaver Brook. Several
                            roads were barricaded. In Denville, some
                            backyards were flooded by the Rockaway
                            River.

                            The Rockaway River above the Boonton
                            Reservoir was above its 5 foot flood
                            stage from 315 a.m. EST through 956 p.m.
                            EST on the 29th. It crested at 5.47 feet
                            at 10 a.m. EST. The Rockaway River below
                            the Boonton Reservoir was above its 5
                            foot flood stage from 307 a.m. EST on the
                            29th through 530 a.m. EST on the 31st.
                            It crested at 6.37 feet at 1045 a.m. EST
                            on the 29th. The Pequannock River at the
                            Macopin Intake Dam was above its 5.5 foot
                            flood stage from 445 a.m.EST on the 29th
                            through 2 a.m. EST on the 30th. It
                            crested at 5.59 feet at 1015 a.m. EST on
                            the 29th. The Passaic River at Pine Brook
                            was above its 19 foot flood stage from
                            1030 p.m. EST on the 29th through 515 p.m.
                            EST on April 1st. It crested at 19.41
                            feet at 645 p.m. EST on the 30th. Farther
                            downstream, the Passaic River at Two
                            Bridges was above its 9 foot flood stage
                            from 10 p.m. EST on the 29th through 4
                            p.m. EDT on April 9th. The March highest
                            crest was 10.26 feet at 3 a.m. EST on the
                            31st. Storm totals included 3.30 inches
                            in Milton, 2.88 inches in Pequannock,
                            2.70 inches in Boonton, 2.60 inches in
                            Lake Hopatcong and Morristown and 1.87
                            inches in Chatham.

                            The heavy rain was caused by a low
                            pressure system that formed along the
                            Gulf Coast States. This low pressure
                            system was captured by its support aloft
                            and thus moved only slowly northeast as
                            it tapped abundant moisture from both
                            the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic
                            Ocean. The low pressure system moved
                            from western Alabama at 7 a.m. EST on
                            the 27th northeast to eastern Tennessee
                            at 7 p.m. EST on the 27th and eastern
                            Kentucky at 7 a.m. EST on the 28th. A
                            secondary low pressure system formed
                            over North Carolina during the morning
                            of the 28th. It would become the main
                            low pressure system as it moved northeast
                            to near Norfolk, Virginia at 1 p.m. EST
                            on the 28th, Chesapeake Bay at 7 p.m.
                            EST on the 28th, Delaware Bay at 1 a.m.
                            EST on the 29th and about 100 miles east
                            of Atlantic City at 7 a.m. EST on the
                            29th.

NEW MEXICO, Central and North

  NMZ002>006-008-
  010>013
                            Heavy Snow

                            A storm which began with heavy snows
                            along the eastern slopes of the Sangre
                            de Cristo mountains and the Sandia
                            mountains pushed cold air through the
                            central valleys and covered the eastern
                            plains with cold readings. Amounts peaked
                            at near 17-19 inches at Chacon and Pecos
                            while 24-28 inches was measured near
                            Gascon. The Sandia Park area reported
                            15-22 inches. Snow eventually spread west
                            in the central valley with 4-8 inches
                            reported in Albuquerque metro area and
                            nearly 12 inches across the Jcmcz
                            Mountains and Los Alamos with 10 inches
                            reported cast and southeast of Cuba. The
                            storm dumped 4 to 9 inches across the
                            eastern plains as it finally moved east
                            out of the state, Mountain communities
                            northwest of Las Vegas had 48 hours
                            totals of 30-36 inches.

  NMZ016
                            High Wind (G57)

                            High winds reported at Sierra Blanca
                            Airport 15 NE of Ruidoso.

  NMZ005-007
                            Heavy Snow

                            Heavy snow of 6-8 inches was reported
                            between Raton and Clayton with driving
                            winds.

NEW MEXICO, South Central and Southwest

NEW MEXICO, Southeast

  NMZ028
                            Winter Weather/Mix

                            Winter weather affected parts of New
                            Mexico during the day on the 15th. Light
                            snow accumulations up to one inch were
                            reported across the northwestern half of
                            the Eddy County plains.

  NMZ029
                            Winter Storm

                            More significant snowfall occurred over
                            northern Lea County on the 15th as a
                            winter storm affected portions of the
                            New Mexico plains. Between four and five
                            inch snow accumulations were reported
                            across northern Lea County from Caprock
                            to Crossroads.

  NMZ028-033
                            High Wind (G50)

                            A potent storm system moved east over
                            the Southern Plains on the 29th and
                            caused severe non-thunderstorm winds over
                            southeastern New Mexico. Numerous reports
                            of downed power lines and poles were
                            received along with reports of blown down
                            trees. The roof was blown off of a
                            trailer home near Hobbs. Wind gusts to
                            58 MPH were recorded at both the
                            Carlsbad and Hobbs airports.

NEW YORK, Central

  NYZ009-015>018-
  022>025-036>037-
  044>046-055>057-062
                            Heavy Snow

                            A strong winter storm brought 8 to 14
                            inches of snow to all of central New
                            York. Isolated snow amounts were as much
                            as two feet. A Midwest storm slowly moved
                            east and combined with another storm
                            moving north along the east coast on
                            February 27th to bring copious moisture
                            to the region on February 28th. The snow
                            moved in from the south starting in the
                            afternoon and early evening on February
                            28th. The snow continued through the
                            night, heavy at times, before tapering
                            off to light snow and flurries late in
                            the morning on March 1st.

  NYZ056>057-062
                            Heavy Snow

                            An intensifying storm moved north along
                            the east coast on March 23rd and 24th.
                            Light snow, possibly mixed with rain,
                            moved into the region midday on the 23rd.
                            The snow became heavy at times late in
                            the afternoon and continued into the
                            evening. Snowfall amounts were 6 to 8
                            inches with some amounts up to a foot
                            mainly at higher elevations. Water
                            equivalents of the snow were between
                            half an inch and an inch.

  Otsego County
    Gilbertsville           Flash Flood

                            A strong Atlantic coast storm brought
                            heavy rain with amounts between 1 and 3
                            inches. A few locations received more
                            than 3 inches. In addition, snowmelt was
                            causing high stream flows before the
                            rain started late on the 27th. The
                            flooding caused Mill Street to be closed
                            in Gilbertsville.

  Tioga County
    Countywide              Flash Flood

                            State Route 96 in Owego closed due to
                            flooding of the Owego Creek. Several
                            other roads were closed in Tioga Center
                            and Berkshire. Most roads were closed due
                            to flooding with one road in Berkshire
                            closed due to a mudslide. A strong
                            Atlantic coast storm brought around 2
                            inches of rain that fell on wet or
                            frozen saturated ground. In addition to
                            the rain adding to the runoff there was
                            snowmelt, which could of added another
                            inch or 2 of water equivalent. Streams
                            and creeks were already running high due
                            to snowmelt before the rain came starting
                            late on the 27th.

  NYZ055
                            Flood

                            A strong Atlantic coast storm brought
                            heavy rain with amounts between 1 and 3
                            inches on the 28th. In addition, snowmelt
                            was causing elevated river flows before
                            the rain started late on the 27th. Water
                            equivalent of the snowmelt was a few more
                            inches. The Susquehanna River at Waverly,
                            NY / Sayre, PA rose above its flood stage
                            of 11 feet on the 28th, crested at 15.08
                            feet at 12 AM on the 30th, then fell
                            slowly but stayed over flood stage into
                            April. After the rainstorm, temperatures
                            were warm enough to cause additional
                            snowmelt.

  NYZ057
                            Flood

                            A strong Atlantic coast storm brought
                            heavy rain with amounts between 1 and 3
                            inches on the 28th. In addition, snowmelt
                            was causing elevated river flows before
                            the rain started late on the 27th. Water
                            equivalent of the snowmelt was a few more
                            inches. The Beaver Kill at Cooks Falls
                            went above its flood stage of 10 feet the
                            evening of the 28th. The river crested at
                            10.42 feet at 5:15 AM on the 29th, before
                            falling back below flood stage late
                            morning on the 29th.

  NYZ045
                            Flood

                            A strong Atlantic coast storm brought
                            heavy rain with amounts between 1 and 3
                            inches on the 28th. In addition, snowmelt
                            was causing elevated river flows before
                            the rain started late on the 27th. Water
                            equivalent of the snowmelt was a few more
                            inches. The Susquehanna River at
                            Bainbridge went above its flood stage of
                            13 feet late on the 28th, crested at 15.3
                            feet at 8 PM on the 29th, then fell below
                            flood stage on the 31 st. Additional
                            snowmelt after the rainstorm caused to
                            river to remain high.

  Sullivan County
    Bloomingburg            Flash Flood

                            Heavy rain washed out a road. A strong
                            Atlantic storm dropped 2 to 3 inches of
                            rain on an already saturated ground. Most
                            of the rain fell on the 28th. Also adding
                            to the runoff was several inches of water
                            equivalent from snowmelt.

  NYZ056
                            Flood

                            A strong Atlantic coast storm brought
                            heavy rain with amounts between 1 and 3
                            inches on the 28th. In addition, snowmelt
                            was causing elevated river flows before
                            the rain started late on the 27th. Water
                            equivalent of the snowmelt was a few more
                            inches. The Susquehanna River at Conklin
                            went above its flood stage of 11 feet
                            early on the 29th, crested at 15.09 feet
                            at 2:30 PM on the 29th. The river stayed
                            above flood stage into April due to
                            additional snowmelt.

  NYZ056
                            Flood

                            A strong Atlantic coast storm brought
                            heavy rain with amounts between 1 and 3
                            inches on the 28th. In addition, snowmelt
                            was causing elevated river flows before
                            the rain started late on the 27th. Water
                            equivalent of the snowmelt was a few more
                            inches. The Susquehanna River at Vestal
                            went above its flood stage of 18 feet
                            early on the 29th, crested at 20.80 feet
                            at 6:00 PM also on the 29th, then fell
                            back below flood stage on the 31st.
                            Additional snowmelt occurred after the
                            rainstorm keeping river levels high.

  NYZ045
                            Flood

                            A strong Atlantic coast storm brought
                            heavy rain with amounts between 1 and 3
                            inches on the 28th. In addition snowmelt
                            before and after the rainstorm was
                            causing elevated river flows. Water
                            equivalent of the snowmelt was a few
                            more inches. The Susquehanna River at
                            Bainbridge went briefly below its flood
                            stage of 13 feet on the 31st before
                            rising back over flood stage.
                            Temperatures in the 50s on the 31st
                            caused added snowmelt rising the river.
                            Another slow moving storm from the Ohio
                            Valley brought 2 to 3 inches of rain
                            on April 2nd and 3rd. By the time the
                            river fell below flood stage most of the
                            snow had melted. This additional rain
                            and snowmelt caused the river to rise
                            rapidly to a crest of 20.47 feet at 4:15
                            AM on April 4th. This was the 6th highest
                            crest at Bainbridge for almost the last
                            100 years. The river fell below flood
                            stage the morning of April 6th.

  NYZ044
                            Flood

                            The Tioughnioga River at Cortland rose
                            above its flood stage of 8 feet late on
                            March 31st. The rise was due to rain that
                            fell on March 28th and snowmelt during
                            the week leading up to the 31st. The
                            water equivalent of the snow amounted to
                            several inches. A slow moving storm from
                            the Ohio Valley brought 2 to 3 inches of
                            rain on April 2nd and 3rd. By the time
                            the river fell below flood stage most of
                            the snow had melted. This additional rain
                            and snowmelt caused the river to rise to
                            a crest of 14.07 feet at 2:00 PM EST on
                            April 3th. This was a record flood crest
                            at Cortland. The previous flood of record
                            was 13.82 feet in 1950.

  NYZ045
                            Flood

                            The Chenango River at Sherbume rose above
                            its flood stage of 8 feet late on the
                            31st. The rise was due to rain that fell
                            on the 28th and snowmelt during the week
                            leading up to the 31st. The water
                            equivalent of the snow amounted to
                            several inches. A slow moving storm from
                            the Ohio Valley brought 2 to 3 inches of
                            rain on April 2nd and 3rd. By the time
                            the river fell below flood stage most
                            of the snow had melted. This additional
                            rain and snowmelt caused the river to
                            rise to a crest of 10.78 feet at 2:30 AM
                            on April 3th. This was the 2nd highest
                            flood crest at Sherbume.

NEW YORK, Coastal

  NYZ068>072-
  074>076-078>079-081
                            Heavy Snow

                            A weak high pressure ridge extended
                            southwest across the region from New
                            England as a low pressure system
                            intensified and moved northeast. This
                            strong low passed south of Long Island
                            Monday night and cast of the New England
                            coast during Tuesday.

                            Light snow developed northeast across
                            the region between 1 and 4 pm Monday
                            afternoon. As the low rapidly intensified
                            and moved closer to the region, narrow
                            bands of heavy snow swept northeast
                            across the region. The last band of
                            heavy snow swept northeast across the
                            region between 7:30 am and 8:30 am
                            Tuesday morning, March 1st. Storm Total
                            Snowfall amounts ranged from 5 to 9
                            inches.

                            Here are selected snowfall totals for:

                            Rockland County - from 7.2 inches at New
                            City to 8.0 inches at Sloatsburg.

                            Westchester County - from 5.0 inches at
                            Scarsdale to 8.0 inches at Yorktown
                            Heights.

                            Putnam County - from 6.5 inches at Lake
                            Peekskill to 8.5 inches at Lake Carmel.

                            New York (Manhattan) - 7.5 inches was
                            measured at the Central Park Zoo.

                            Richmond (Staten Island) - from 6.1
                            inches at Bulls Head to 6.5 inches at
                            New Dorf.

                            Kings (Brooklyn) - from 5.0 inches at
                            Graves End to 6.0 inches at Shecpshead
                            Bay.

                            Queens County - from 5.0 inches at JFK
                            Airport to 7.0 inches at LaGuardia
                            Airport.

                            Suffolk County - from 5.5 inches at the
                            NWS Office in Upton, Sag Harbor,
                            Patchogue, and Deer Park to 7.2 inches
                            in Smithtown.

                            At Islip Airport, 6.6 inches was
                            measured.

  NYZ069>081
                            Winter Weather/Mix

  NYZ076
                            High Wind (G50)

                            A strong arctic cold front intensified
                            as it swept southeast across the region.
                            This caused rain to change to snow,
                            temperatures to fall from the 40s into
                            the 20s, and northwest winds that gusted
                            between 40 and 55 mph. A peak isolated
                            wind gust to 58 mph was measured by the
                            Automated Surface Observing System at
                            JFK Airport. Near blizzard conditions
                            occurred for a short time. Storm total
                            snowfalls ranged from around 2 to 4
                            inches.

                            Wet and mild antecedent conditions were
                            followed by more than a 20 degree drop
                            in temperature in 3 hours with strong
                            gusty winds. This resulted in a "flash"
                            freeze across roads that resulted in
                            hundreds of vehicle accidents.

  NYZ078-080
                            Heavy Snow

                            A low pressure system developed southeast
                            of Long Island before sunrise on Saturday
                            March 12th. This low quickly intensified
                            as it moved northeast. It passed near
                            Nantucket during Saturday afternoon and
                            moved east of Cape Cod by Saturday
                            evening.

                            Light rain developed across the Atlantic
                            coastal waters just south of Long Island
                            between 1 am and 2 am. As the rainfall
                            intensity increased, it quickly changed
                            to heavy wet snow. The band of heavy snow
                            developed from western and central
                            Suffolk County north across New Haven
                            County CT. A few areas, mainly east of
                            Patchogue, experienced snowfall rates in
                            excess of 2 inches per hour.

                            Storm total snowfall amounts ranged from
                            around 5 to 8 inches. Here are selected
                            amounts of at least 6 inches:

                            Patchogue - 8 inches
                            Lake Ronkonkoma - 7.5 inches
                            Rocky Point - 6.8 inches
                            Mount Sinai - 6.7 inches
                            Sayville - 6.5 inches
                            Shoreham - 6.4 inches
                            Port Jefferson - 6.3 inches
                            Medford and North Patchogue - 6.0 inches

  NYZ067>068
                            Heavy Snow

                            As a ridge of high pressure extended
                            southeast across New England, a low
                            pressure system moved northeast along
                            a warm front. The low quickly passed
                            southeast of Long Island early
                            Thursday morning on March 24th.

                            Snow quickly developed and spread
                            northeast across the region during
                            Wednesday afternoon. It became heavy
                            during Wednesday evening. Storm total
                            snowfall amounts ranged from around
                            6 to 10 inches. In Orange County,
                            snowfall accumulations ranged from
                            6.0 inches at Cornwall-On-Hudson to
                            10.0 inches at Circleville.

NEW YORK, East

  NYZ066
                            Heavy Snow

  NYZ065
                            Heavy Snow

                            The average total snowfall across
                            Dutchess County was 9 inches.

  NYZ064
                            Heavy Snow

  NYZ063
                            Heavy Snow

                            Average total snowfall across Ulster
                            County was 11 inches.

  NYZ061
                            Heavy Snow

  NYZ060
                            Heavy Snow

                            Average total snowfall across
                            Columbia County was 10 inches.

  NYZ059
                            Heavy Snow

  NYZ058
                            Heavy Snow

                            Average total snowfall across
                            Greene County was 11 inches.

  NYZ052
                            Heavy Snow

  NYZ051
                            Heavy Snow

                            Average total snowfall across
                            Albany County was 13 inches.

  NYZ054
                            Heavy Snow

  NYZ053
                            Heavy Snow

                            Average total snowfall across
                            Rensselaer County was 11 inches.

  NYZ049
                            Heavy Snow

  NYZ048
                            Heavy Snow

                            Average total snowfall across
                            Schenectady County was 11 inches.

  NYZ047
                            Heavy Snow

                            Average total snowfall across
                            Schoharie County was 10 inches.

  NYZ082
                            Heavy Snow

  NYZ039
                            Heavy Snow

                            Average total snowfall across
                            Fulton County was 9 inches.

  NYZ040
                            Heavy Snow

                            Average total snowfall across
                            Montgomery County was 9 inches.

  NYZ041
                            Heavy Snow

  NYZ050
                            Heavy Snow

                            Average total snowfall across
                            Saratoga County was 12 inches.

  NYZ043
                            Heavy Snow

  NYZ084
                            Heavy Snow

                            Average total snowfall across
                            Washington County was 11 inches.

  NYZ033
                            Heavy Snow

                            Average total snowfall across
                            Hamilton County was 8 inches.

  NYZ032
                            Heavy Snow

  NYZ038
                            Heavy Snow

                            The average total snowfall across
                            Herkimer County was 8 inches.

  NYZ042
                            Heavy Snow

  NYZ083
                            Heavy Snow

                            The average total snowfall across
                            Warren County was 11 inches.

                            A surface low pressure was centered
                            along the mid-Atlantic Coast at the
                            beginning of March. This storm tracked
                            northeastward well off the eastern
                            seaboard, reaching southeast of Cape
                            Cod by midday on March 1. The storm
                            then moved into the Gulf of Maine
                            by late on March 1. At the same time,
                            another vertically stacked storm
                            moved slowly east from the Great
                            Lakes and interacted with the
                            low-level moisture from the surface
                            storm. The combination of the two
                            storms, along with a surface trough
                            anchored between them, resulted in a
                            significant snowstorm across much
                            of eastern New York and adjacent
                            western New England. Snowfall storm
                            totals across the region ranged
                            from 7 inches to a foot or more.
                            Officially, 11.7 inches of snow
                            fell at the National Weather Service
                            station in Albany. The heaviest
                            amount was reported in Bennington
                            County in Vermont, where 17.5 inches
                            of snow was reported in the Town
                            of Wadeford. Other than the usual
                            school and business closures, the
                            storm did not report any unusual
                            problems across the region.

  NYZ053
                            Heavy Snow

  NYZ054
                            Heavy Snow

                            The average snowfall across
                            Rensselaer County was 12 inches.

  NYZ043
                            Heavy Snow

  NYZ084
                            Heavy Snow

                            The average total snowfall across
                            Washington County was 9 inches.

                            A strong cold front moved across
                            eastern New York and adjacent western
                            New England on March 8th. As the
                            front slowed down across eastern New
                            England, a wave of low pressure
                            formed along it and eventually became
                            a closed storm system which
                            intensified as it moved into the
                            Canadian Maritimes. The front and
                            developing storm brought snow across
                            the region. A meso-scale band of
                            enhanced heavier snow and an upslope
                            wind component, resulted in heavy
                            snowfall across portions of the
                            Taconics and Berkshires. Gusty winds
                            also resulted in some blowing and
                            drifting of the snow, but not enough
                            to qualify as a blizzard. The
                            snowfall in these areas ranged from
                            7 inches to locally over a foot.
                            Seventeen inches was reported in
                            Averill Park, Rensselaer County, the
                            highest snowfall total. The snow and
                            blowing snow resulted minor traffic
                            accidents across the region.

  NYZ051
                            Winter Storm

                            The average snowfall total across
                            Western Albany County was 8.0 inches.

  NYZ060
                            Winter Storm

                            The average snowfall total across
                            Western Columbia County was 8.0 inches.

  NYZ065
                            Heavy Snow

                            The average snowfall total across
                            Western Dutchess County was 8.0 inches.

  NYZ059
                            Winter Storm

  NYZ058
                            Winter Storm

                            The average snowfall total across
                            Greene County was 9.0 inches.

  NYZ054
                            Winter Storm

                            The average snowfall depth across
                            Eastern Rensselaer County was 7.0
                            inches.

  NYZ064
                            Winter Storm

  NYZ063
                            Heavy Snow

                            The average snowfall depth across
                            Ulster County was 8.0 inches.

  NYZ041
                            Winter Storm

                            The average snowfall total across
                            Northern Saratoga County: 10.0
                            inches. Highest snowfall amount
                            reported in Gansevoort, 12 inches.

  NYZ043
                            Winter Storm

                            Average snowfall depth across
                            Northern Washington County: 10.0
                            inches. Highest snowfall amount in
                            Northern Washington County reported
                            in Cossayua, 12 inches.

                            The fourth coastal storm of the
                            month tracked from south of Long
                            Island to east of Cape Cod by early
                            March 24. This storm produced a
                            meso-scale band of heavy snow that
                            first fell to the south and west
                            of Albany. The band weakened as it
                            moved across the Greater Capital
                            District, but then strengthened as
                            it proceeded north in the Saratoga
                            region and Washington County. The
                            result was a significant snowfall
                            across portions of the Catskills,
                            Helderbergs, Saratoga region and
                            Taconics, while lesser amounts fell
                            across the remainder of the region.
                            A foot fell in two serperate spots,
                            Gansevoort, Saratoga County and
                            Cossayua, Washington County. No
                            unusual problems were reported with
                            this storm.

  Montgomery County
    Canajoharie             Flash Flood

                            The Canajoharie Creek exceeded the
                            6.0-foot flood stage at the Canajoharie
                            Creek gage, cresting at 8.19 feet,
                            5:15PM on the 28th.

  Schoharie County
    Warnerville             Flash Flood

                            The town of Warnerville was
                            impassable due to flooded roads.

  Saratoga County
    Bemis Hgts              Flash Flood

                            Three roads closed, including Route
                            67 and Route 4, due to water coverage.

  Washington County
    Clarks Mills            Flash Flood

                            County Route 113 closed due to
                            flooding.

  Schenectady County
    Glenville               Flash Flood

                            Droms Road closed between Swaggertown
                            Road and Charlton Road due to flooding.

  NYZ043
                            Flood

                            Metawee River over flood stage.

  NYZ043
                            Flood

                            The Metawee River exceeded the
                            7.0-foot flood stage at the
                            Granville gage, cresting at 7.20
                            feet at 9:15 PM on the 28th.

  NYZ064
                            Flood

                            Springtown Road flooded.

  NYZ059
                            Flood

                            In Cairo, 15 County Roads closed
                            due to flooding. Eighteen Fire
                            companies pumped out basements
                            throughout county.

  NYZ060
                            Flood

                            Every town in Columbia County
                            reported road closures due to
                            flooding.

  NYZ050
                            Flood

                            The Mohawk River exceeded the
                            188.0-foot flood stage at the
                            Crescent Dam gage, cresting at
                            188.26 feet, at 3:OOAM on the 29th.

  NYZ065
                            Flood

                            Due to tidal flooding as well as
                            locally heavy rain, the Hudson River
                            exceeded the 5.0-foot flood stage at
                            the Poughkeepsie gage, cresting at
                            5.05 feet, 2:30AM on the 29th.

  NYZ066
                            Flood

                            In the Town of Northeast, Mill Road
                            closed due to flooding.

  NYZ064
                            Flood

                            The Esopus Creek exceeded the
                            20.0-foot flood stage at the Mount
                            Marion gage, cresting at 20.54 feet,
                            8:OOAM on the 29th.

  NYZ040
                            Flood

                            The Schoharie Creek exceeded the
                            6.0-foot flood stage at the
                            Burtonsville gage, cresting at 6.13
                            feet at 7:OOPM on the 29th.

  NYZ065
                            Flood

                            Wappingers Creek exceeded the
                            8.0-foot flood stage at the
                            Wappingers Falls gage, cresting
                            at 8.09 feet, 4:30PM on the 29th.

  NYZ038
                            Flood

                            The Mohawk River exceeded the
                            403.0-foot flood stage at the Utica
                            gage, cresting at 403.4 feet, 6:OOPM
                            on the 30th.

                            A potent area of low pressure and
                            its associated frontal systems,
                            moved northeast across the Ohio
                            and Saint Lawrence Valleys on the
                            28th of March, bringing with it a
                            significant amount of moisture.
                            Since it took a more western track
                            than previous storms earlier in the
                            month, almost all of the precipitation
                            fell as rain. Rainfall totals,
                            averaging 1-2 inches, but locally as
                            high as 4 inches, accumulated across
                            portions of the eastern New York and
                            adjacent western New England. This
                            rainfall, combined with snow melt,
                            produced significant runoff,
                            resulting in widespread flooding
                            across the region between March 28th
                            through 31st. Many streams and rivers
                            reached or exceed bankful, including
                            the Mettawee, Housatonic and Mohawk
                            Rivers, as well as the Esopus,
                            Wappingers and Schoharie Creeks.
                            Numerous houses in Columbia and
                            Greene Counties sustained damage
                            when their basements became flooded,
                            and there were many reports of road
                            closures across a large number of
                            counties. One Mechanicville man was
                            transported to a local hospital after
                            being swept away by floodwaters of
                            the Anthony Kill. In Columbia County,
                            every town reported at least one
                            road closed due to flooding.

NEW YORK, North

  NYZ026>031-
  034>035-087
                            Winter Storm

                            A storm system off the Carolinas on
                            Monday, February 28th moved to the
                            Gulf of Maine the afternoon and
                            evening of Tuesday, March 1st. Snow
                            developed across the area during the
                            night of Feb 28th, and was heavy at
                            times during March 1st before it
                            tapered off the night of March 1st.
                            Snowfall was generally between 8
                            and 10 inches, except in Clinton
                            county where snowfall was between
                            9 and 14 inches. Locally higher
                            amounts fell in the higher peaks of
                            the Adirondacks.

  NYZ028-034>035
                            Winter Weather/Mix

                            An area of low pressure over the Ohio
                            valley on Friday, March 11th moved
                            east across southern New York and
                            reorganized south of Cape Cod early
                            Saturday, March 12th. The storm
                            system moved north through the Gulf
                            of Maine Saturday evening. Snow spread
                            across the area during the afternoon
                            of March 11th, and was steady later on
                            the night of March 11th into Saturday,
                            March 12th, before it tapered off
                            Saturday afternoon. General snow
                            accumulations were 3 to 5 inches.


NEW YORK, West

  NYZ001>003-
  010>011-014
                            Heavy Snow

                            An intensifying low over Indiana and
                            Ohio on February 28th lifted slowly
                            across Lake Erie. Snow overspread the
                            area during the late afternoon hours
                            of the 28th. It was generally light
                            at first, but became moderate to heavy
                            for a time across the Niagara Frontier
                            and northern Finger Lakes (including
                            Buffalo and Rochester) shortly after
                            midnight. The snow finally tapered
                            off during the morning and early
                            afternoon hours of March 1st.
                            Specific overnight snowfalls
                            included: 9" at Clarence and
                            Alabama; 8" at Medina and Victor;
                            and 7" at Spencerport and Lewiston.

  NYZ019>020-085
                            Heavy Snow

                            A northwest flow across Lake Eric
                            resulted in an intense lake effect
                            snow across the higher elevations
                            of the western southern tier of New
                            York during the evening of March 2nd
                            and continuing through the afternoon
                            of the 3rd. Specific snowfall reports
                            included: 14" at Perrysburg; 13" at
                            Cassadaga; 12" at Stockton; and 10"
                            at East Aurora.

  NYZ006
                            Heavy Snow

                            A cold, westerly flow across Lake
                            Ontario established a narrow, intense
                            band of lake effect snow over Oswego
                            county. In Scriba ten inches of snow
                            fell while nine inches was reported
                            in Palermo and Volney.

  NYZ006
                            Heavy Snow

                            A band of lake effect snow began
                            to develop late in the afternoon of
                            March 9th in a northwest flow across
                            Lake Ontario. The band of snow
                            continued through the night and
                            morning hours, but broke apart
                            during the afternoon hours under
                            the strong March sun. Snowfall
                            reports included: 10" at West
                            Monroe; 9" at Constantia; and
                            7" at Hannibal.
COPYRIGHT 2005 World Meteorological Organization
COPYRIGHT 2008 Gale, Cengage Learning
 

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