According to NCDC, Homer averages 57.8" annually.
It varies from 200" to over 400" just inland.
Snow does not fall in tropical rainforests, though there are such things as mid-latitude rainforests (for example on the southeast coast of Alaska) where some snow will fall in the winter.
Annual snowfall: 75"
Alaska
In northern Alaska and at higher elevations, it can snow almost the entire year. Elsewhere, it depends....snow starts in most other places by October, and by November it has typically snowed everywhere.
there is no rain. its snow
Most of Alaska gets much more snow than most of Antarctica.
Annual average is about 11"
Annual average is about 11"
Only high in the mountains and on glaciers does it remain snow covered.
29-32 inches
It varies from 200" to over 400" just inland.
None. It only gets snow and frozen precipitation.
Tropical rainforests never get snow. Mid-latitude rain forests, such as in southeastern Alaska, get many feet annually.
No, in fact many places in the 'Lower 48' get more snow than Alaska.
At nearby Cape Romanzof, average snowfall is 68".
No.