it is ok to sled in 5-inch snow but you must be carefull that you don't slip.
4-5 inches. You need enough so that once you press it down with the sled, you still can't see any grass poking up through the snow.
snow that's five inches deep
5 inches.
1" of rain is roughly 10" of snow, depending on conditions. So, 5" inches of rain would be 50" of snow or 4' 2".
You would get about 1.2 inches of water for every foot of snow that melts.The average snow-to-water yield is 10 inches to 1 inch, but this varies considerably. Only 5 inches of "wet snow" will yield an inch of meltwater, but it takes 15 inches of dry powder.
4-5 inches. You need enough so that once you press it down with the sled, you still can't see any grass poking up through the snow.
snow that's five inches deep
it has 5 inches of snow
It has 5 inches of snow
5 inches.
5 INCHES
1" of rain is roughly 10" of snow, depending on conditions. So, 5" inches of rain would be 50" of snow or 4' 2".
By unit of length and distance and conversion ,we can say that 1 cm=0.39370079 inch 25 cm=9.842 inches
You would get about 1.2 inches of water for every foot of snow that melts.The average snow-to-water yield is 10 inches to 1 inch, but this varies considerably. Only 5 inches of "wet snow" will yield an inch of meltwater, but it takes 15 inches of dry powder.
This means that 6 inches of snow will fall. Since snow compacts as it sits on the ground, especially when it is deep and fine/dry (as opposed to a heavier wet snow), a 6 inch snowfall could compact to 4 or 5 inches right away.
The fluffiness of the snow can vary how deep it is compared to an inch of rain. On average, however, ten inches of snow is an inch of rain, so .04 inches of rain is similar to .4 inches of snow.
5-10 inches a year