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Is Cincinnati snowier than when we were kids? Depends on your age

Cindy Saalfeld, walks her dog, Frida Mae, in the snow on Thursday, Feb. 18, 2021, in East Price Hill. The National Weather Service issued a Winter Weather Advisory effective until 1 a.m. Friday.

Nostalgia has a funny way of making things seem like they were worse (or better) than they are today. When it comes to snow, your memory may be more right than you think.

Averaging out yearly snowfall and graphing that by decade shows wild swings in the amount of snowfall the Cincinnati area gets, according to data from the National Weather Service.

If your formative years were in the 1970s, you'll remember the city getting an extra 10 inches of show each year than a Cincinnatian growing up in the 1980s.

So if Indiana Jones was on your lunchbox, you saw about a third less snow on average than someone who was more likely to carry a lunchbox of the Fonz.

But the snowfall bounced right back in the 1990s.

Average yearly snowfall by decade in Cincinnati

The National Weather Service snowfall data reliably goes back to 1920s, which is the lowest decade on record for average yearly snowfall with 14.59 inches a year. The 1970s had the most with an average of almost 27 inches a year.

The blizzard of 1978 helped to bump up that average. During late 1977 and early 1978, the city saw 53.9 inches of snow fall, but for a few years before and after the blizzard snowfall totals were equally impressive.


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