Chattanooga Times Free Press

Rare weather event produces spontaneou­s snowballs

- BY KEITH RIDLER

BOISE, Idaho — Thousands of snowballs rolled in a flat central Idaho field look like the work of hundreds of ambitious kids — except there are no human tracks.

A rare weather event caused the spontaneou­s snowballs at the Nature Conservanc­y’s Silver Creek Preserve and surroundin­g fields near the tiny town of Picabo.

Preserve manager Sunny Healey spotted the spherical shapes up to 18 inches tall on Jan. 30 following an overnight windstorm. They created long lines in the snow as they moved.

“You could see the tracks that they made, and I thought that was really curious,” Healey said. “I had to stop a couple times. Then, along Highway 20, there were thousands of them.”

So-called snow rollers are so rare and fleeting that the precise weather conditions needed to form them are not defined, said Jay Breidenbac­h, a meteorolog­ist with the National Weather Service. Snow rollers up to 18 inches are especially rare.

“Those are some pretty big rollers,” Breidenbac­h said. “I’ve seen some small rollers, but never that big.”

In general, it takes an unusual combinatio­n of a couple of inches of snow with the right water density and temperatur­es near freezing, followed by strong winds, he said.

Rollers require some type of firmer base, such as a frozen layer of earlier snow, for the new powder to start rolling on. Plus, the wind must be strong and steady but not with powerful gusts that could damage the formations.

“It would probably blow them apart because they are fragile,” Breidenbac­h said.

 ?? SUNNY HEALEY/ THE NATURE CONSERVANC­Y VIA AP ?? A rare weather event that caused spontaneou­s snowballs at the conservanc­y’s Silver Creek Preserve near Picabo, Idaho, in January.
SUNNY HEALEY/ THE NATURE CONSERVANC­Y VIA AP A rare weather event that caused spontaneou­s snowballs at the conservanc­y’s Silver Creek Preserve near Picabo, Idaho, in January.

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