Los Angeles Times

Another novel sight in Vegas: Snow

Locals delight in what weather experts call an unusual amount of snowfall for the area.

- By David Montero

LAS VEGAS — They weren’t exactly deploying the snowplows onto the Las Vegas Strip and they weren’t shoveling out the entrances to the casinos, either.

But, still, it snowed in Las Vegas on Sunday night.

For a city that was built in the sand and boasts giant replicas of a pyramid, the Eiffel Tower and virtually the entire borough of Manhattan, it was met with wonderment and surprise in a place not easily bowled over.

“Um, what the…..” tweeted the Nevada Highway Patrol above a 10-second video of snow falling lightly beneath the orange glow of a street lamp.

Then came the National Weather Service in Las Vegas about two hours later.

“IT HAPPENED!” the weather service tweeted. “@LASairport switched over to snow 4 minutes ago! Las Vegas can officially report at least a Trace of snow for 2/17/2019!”

An avalanche of tweets, Instagram and Facebook posts followed. The National Weather Service in Seattle noticed and quickly commission­ed a poll asking people how they felt about Las Vegas getting snow:

“We just couldn’t help but share a little of our snow with our friends at @NWSVegas!”

It wasn’t long before social media posts with pictures and videos of the falling snow spurred people to head out and experience it in the real world.

Steve and Jackie DeLeon grabbed sleds that had been gathering dust in the garage for 10 years and drove out to a park in the west part of town. Their two children, 8-yearold Catalina and 15-year-old Daytona, trudged up a hill covered in white and settled into the sleds.

The snow was coming down in big flakes. It was past 9 p.m. and the temperatur­e was 32 degrees. The Michigan natives, who have lived in Las Vegas for 15 years, said this didn’t compare with what they experience­d in Saginaw. But it would do. “We couldn’t pass up this opportunit­y,” Jackie DeLeon said. “This just doesn’t happen too often.”

The two kids screamed as the sled took off down the slick hill, gathering speed until it shot past the sidewalk at the base and came to a stop. They picked it up and began walking up the hill again next to the track left by the sled — which had exposed some grass.

Not far away, a man stood on the pitcher’s mound of a snow-covered baseball field and fired a small snowball toward home plate.

Throughout the valley, parked cars slowly began to develop snow beards on front bumpers. Trees glistened with snow. Gamblers who had come in from the snow chatted with dealers about it between hands and dice rolls. The lights at the new baseball stadium for a minor league team, the Aviators, lighted up a soft cascade of snow falling onto the field.

The roadways around the city and along Interstate 15 were mostly wet and the Nevada Highway Patrol urged people to drive carefully and look out for black ice. By Monday morning, a section of I-15 was closed for a few hours between St. Rose Parkway and the unincorpor­ated town of Primm because of multiple accidents related to ice, the Nevada Highway Patrol reported.

National Weather Service meteorolog­ist Chris Outler said it was uncommon for the snowfall to be as widespread as it was in the Las Vegas valley.

In the community of Summerlin, which borders Red Rock Canyon National Conservati­on Area, the weather service said some parts got up to 2.5 inches and the scenic drive was closed until late Monday morning.

Mt. Charleston, which is about 45 minutes from the Las Vegas Strip, got more than 3.5 inches of snow and the ski resort — which is within the Las Vegas city limits — had all 26 of its trails open.

Clark County spokesman Dan Kulin said snowplows had been sent to clear roads at Mt. Charleston. Yes, there are snowplows in Clark County. Four, to be exact.

In the south end of the city, near the M Resort Spa and Casino, 1 to 2 inches were reported. McCarran Internatio­nal Airport, the Las Vegas Strip and downtown Fremont Street reported traces of sticking snow.

Gabriella Muno, spokeswoma­n at the airport, said no flights were delayed or halted because of the weather.

The snow was not unpreceden­ted. In 2008, the airport got more than 3 inches. That dump caused delays to flights because of low visibility and stranded some travelers overnight.

But snowfall totals like those in 2008 are unusual for Las Vegas.

This month, snow has fallen on Las Vegas already — though not with the totals seen Sunday night. And multiple snow days in February are not common. Since 1939, February has seen more than three snowfall days only twice — the last time in 1949.

The latest that snow ever fell in Las Vegas in a winter was March 3, 1976, Outler said.

Sunday’s snowfall was produced by a large cold air mass that has gripped Western states in the last few weeks. Seattle has been getting hit with snow repeatedly this month, and Lake Tahoe is within striking distance of record snowfall totals.

Snow has even managed to hit parts of Hawaii unaccustom­ed to seeing it. The Polipoli Spring State Recreation Area got a rare snowfall on Maui — believed to be the first snow in about a century, according to the Maui News. The peaks of Mauna Kea and Mauna Loa — both over 13,000 feet — get snow regularly.

Las Vegas may not be done with snow either. Outler said there was a good chance of more snow on Thursday.

 ?? Bizuayehu Tesfaye Las Vegas Review-Journal ?? VISITORS snap photos at Red Rock Canyon on Monday. The Las Vegas area may see more snow Thursday.
Bizuayehu Tesfaye Las Vegas Review-Journal VISITORS snap photos at Red Rock Canyon on Monday. The Las Vegas area may see more snow Thursday.

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