Weather
Snow Returns To New Jersey: Here's Where
Parts of New Jersey saw an accumulation of over two inches. Elsewhere? Not so much.
NORTH JERSEY - While it was nothing compared to the snowpocalypse storm of 2011 which provided a white Halloween robbed communities of power for more than a week and broke the hearts of youngsters across the Garden State, a mild dusting of snow found its way to parts of New Jersey Friday morning.
According to the National Weather Service, High Point State Park in Sussex County had over 2.4 inches of accumulation on the ground.
What a view! The scene at 1800' elevation at High Point, NJ this morning, where 2.4 inches of snow have fallen. Less than a mile away at 1000' elevation, no accumulation was reported, so a very strong elevation dependency this morning! Photo courtesy of Sean Robert. #NJwx pic.twitter.com/DGxBBTvVXq
— NWS Mount Holly (@NWS_MountHolly) October 30, 2020
Elsewhere in northern New Jersey the weather was less white and more wet. While patches of heavy flakes rained down in parts of Sussex, Warren, Passaic and Morris counties what little white coverage existed stuck to grassy areas unless the elevation was extreme.
Find out what's happening in Hopatcong-Spartafor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Here are some other photos and videos:
First snowfall in Landing, NJ! #OctoberSnow #snow pic.twitter.com/r85JvKKSl2
— Maureen Castriotta (@mcastriotta) October 30, 2020
First snow of the season in Jefferson NJ pic.twitter.com/ZQ67YTJ8mL
— Andrew kitchen (@Andrewkitchen09) October 30, 2020
Thanks for reading! Learn more about posting announcements or events to your local Patch site. Have a news tip you'd like to share? Or maybe you have a press release you would like to submit or a correction you'd like to request? Send an email to russ.crespolini@patch.com
Find out what's happening in Hopatcong-Spartafor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Subscribe to your local Patch newsletter. You can also have them delivered to your phone screen by downloading, or by visiting the Google Play store.
Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.
