Used with Permission.Farmers won't be going out in the fields in Dakota City (Humboldt County). Photo Courtesy of KCCI (uLocal) and Kelsey Olson. Meanwhile, the conventional reflectivity product in the upper left is not displaying is kind of detail.Later in the evening on May 1, looking across northern Iowa. Rain is located to the east of this line and snow to the west. CC and ZDR do a wonderful job of capturing the transition zone between the rain and snow (bracketed by the two black lines). The total of 10.0 inches at Le Mars was the highest snow accumulation on record in Iowa at any time in the month of May until it was bested by the storm of May 1-3, 2013. Used with Permission.Downed tree in Vincent (Webster County). Elko's reading may be a monthly record, as the NWS NOW data indicates that snow has not fallen there in June before. The high will be near 40. The background black and white image is precipitation. Photo Courtesy of KCCI (uLocal). Warm road temperatures across Iowa helped to initially melt the falling snow, but conditions quickly deteriorated across the regions where heavier snow fell. These values are still considered preliminary and may be subject to adjustment.Sorry, the location you searched for was not found. Some locations across the southern United States saw their first ever May snowfall and cities in Kansas and Missouri saw their highest snowfall totals in 106 years. Any snow, however, should not accumulate.In downtown Kansas City, there’s a chance of rain and snow before 9 a.m. and then it switches over to rain. Photo Courtesy of KCCI (uLocal) and Tyler Anderson.

Photo Courtesy of KCCI (uLocal). A severe snow and sleet storm swept the state late in the month. Embedded in the freezing layer is a pocket of all rain (white circle), while a small rain/snow shower lags behind the rest of the transition zone just to the east of Pocahontas.The rain/snow line inches ever closer to Des Moines, while light rain with embedded heavier rain showers precedes the snow. Photo Courtesy of KCCI (uLocal) and Linda Schrader. The wave shows up well on the conventional reflectivity product (white circle) as a herringbone structure in the image. Dashed yellow lines imply upward motion and solid lines are downward motion. In downtown Kansas City, there’s a chance of rain and snow before 9 a.m. and then it switches over to rain.

Yellow lines are upward vertical motion, or omega. Sporadic power outages also occurred as snow-coated tree branches broke and took out power lines.May snowfall and temperature records across Iowa fell like dominoes during this historic event. See Historical Weather Data for a Location and Date Photo Courtesy of KCCI (uLocal). has it ever snowed in june,july,august in the uk or usa? 1919 November 27-29 : Sleet/freezing rain across state with ice accumulations greater than 1 inch in many localities. Dashed green lines are temperatures below freezing, and the solid green lines are temperatures above freezing. Photo Courtesy of KCCI (uLocal). Photo Courtesy of Don Henderson and KCCI (uLocal). Photo taken in Indianola (Warren County). and allows for better precipitation estimates. Red lines are 500mb heights, yellow wind barbs are at 850mb, and the background color image is 300mb winds. Used with Permission.Snow filled Tulip in Pella (Marion County). Each screenshot below consists of a four panel image, with conventional reflectivity in the upper left, correlation coefficient (CC) in the upper right, differential reflectivity (ZDR) in the lower left, and specific differential phase (KDP) in the lower right. The dendritic growth zone, or the region where the largest snowflakes can be formed, is contained between the two blue lines (-10 and -20 C). ZDR determines whether the particles are round or oblate and whether they are oriented the horizontal or vertical. Used with Permission.During the snowstorm while driving outside of Humeston (Wayne County). The lowest temperature ever recorded in July in Wichita Falls was on July 5, 1924.