Las Vegas Review-Journal

Cleanup underway as spring nor’easter moves on

- By Nick Perry and Lisa Rathke

GILFORD, N.H. — Snow showers lingered Friday as the cleanup began following a major spring storm that brought heavy snow, rain and high winds to the Northeast, left hundreds of thousands of homes and businesses without power, and contribute­d to at least two deaths.

Well over a foot of snow was reported in many parts of northern New England by Thursday evening. Some areas got closer to 2 feet.

“We don’t have any internet, so we’re kind of closed off from the world,” said Betty Tidd, 78, of Gilford, New Hampshire. She and her husband lost power early Thursday, but they’ve been staying comfortabl­e, thanks to their backup battery system and propane stove.

Tidd said they’ve been keeping busy by bird watching, reading, and playing games, but she hasn’t been able to send out the daily poem she’s been sharing with family and friends as part of National Poetry Month.

Stowe, Vermont, reported 20 inches of snow, the National Weather Service office in Burlington reported. The agency’s office in Gray, Maine, said it had 17.4 inches. The Concord Municipal Airport in New Hampshire was on the lower end, at 7.4 inches.

Low pressure meandering through the Gulf of Maine will mean continued snow showers over northern New York, New England, and the spine of the Appalachia­ns in West Virginia from Friday into Saturday, the weather service said.

A landslide following thundersto­rms at the Wheeling Mt. Zion cemetery in West Virginia toppled trees and gravestone­s. Volunteers who care for the cemetery said the caskets were not damaged.

Avalanches are possible in parts of the Green Mountains in Vermont and the Adirondack­s in New York, the weather service said.

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