Yes, it should have good grip though.
This can happen when the temperature of the air is close to freezing. If colder air is closer to the ground, snow will form. If warmer air is present, the snow will melt into rain before reaching the ground. This can result in a mix of rain and snow falling from the same storm system.
A rain drop if it is rain and a snow flake if it is snow.
12-24 hours before a rain or snow storm
A good estimate would be 6-7 feet, but of course it's not that simple. Warmer air can hold more moisture, so it's not as if all that rain could have been snow "if only it had been a little colder". Also, the dynamics of the storm system itself would have had to be quite different to get a lot of snow out of it instead of rain... in other words, even if 7 inches of snow fell in 1 storm, there is nowhere that is digging out from 7 feet of snow from the same storm. It just won't work like that.
Any storm that has lightning and thunder is a thunderstorm. It wouldn't matter if there was snow, rain or no precipitation falling, if there is lightning it is a thunderstorm
snow boot
No. Tornadoes occur during thunderstorms when the weather is warm. They often occur in a rain-free portion of a storm, but rain and often hail are generally nearby.
Stream discharge would increase if additional water enters it, such as from a rain storm or from melting snow.
Precipitation includes rain, snow, sleet, and hail. Rain is the most common type of precipitation and occurs when water droplets in the atmosphere combine and fall to the ground. Snow forms when water vapor freezes into ice crystals, sleet is a frozen mix of rain and snow, and hail forms when strong updrafts carry water droplets high into a storm cloud where they freeze and grow before falling to the ground.
No, snow is not the only type of precipitation that can fall during a winter storm. Other forms of winter precipitation include sleet, freezing rain, and rain, depending on temperature conditions and atmospheric dynamics. Each type of precipitation occurs under different conditions and can significantly affect travel and safety during a winter storm.
A snow boot is also known as a winter boot or cold-weather boot.
Precipitation, known more commonly as rain or snow, is caused by moisture gathering in the atmosphere, then falling under the force of gravity. As such, large amounts of rain and snow can be attributed to an excess of moisture in the atmospheric system.