Yes, it definitely snows in London, England. In 1963 the Thames froze over and the city had snowfall of up to 14 inches with drifts of up to 6 feet. In January 2003 London had its heaviest snowfall in over 10 years, with accumulation of about an inch (2cm).
In-fact today (2nd February 2009) there is a giant blanket of snow over London and the rest of England. It is so bad that the famous London Underground is shut in various different places and the Big red Buses are also not running. It is apparently the worst snow in England for 18 years! It is about 3 to 4 inches out there and my view out of the window is blocked by snowfall! There are the occasionally mini snowstorm with look great but surely must hurt to be in!
AnswerThe above are extreme examples. Snow is not the norm in any part of the UK, except possibly mountainous areas.It is not rare for snow, I'm Canadian but all over the news there is tones of stuff about Scotland having over 2-3 feet of snow
Improved AnswerI beg your pardon, but snow is very common in the UK, especially Scotland, Northern Ireland and parts of Northern England. In fact, there is snow outside in London right now - 17th December 2010.The image in the related link was taken last winter in January. So yes, it DOES snow in London and it stays there for a while because our salt gritters aren't very good at doing their jobs.
Improved AnswerI beg your pardon ;-) 'last winter in January' cited above is actually 2010 and yes now dec 2010 again London's frozen. In the last few decades, not considering the couple of extreme examples cited above, did London ever get snow twice like this in the same year or south England for that matter? I bet it never happened. So I don't think it's normal for south England to have so much snow and no wonder the salt gritters aren't any good because they never thought they ever needed to handle this much.Yes, there is snow that falls in Glencoe, Scotland in the month of December.
It is guaranteed that it will snow somewhere. Whether or not you will get snow depends on where you live.
feb the 5th
Any time from November to April. But the heaviest is around February/March time. +++ Snow to any significant depth and duration is fairly unusual in Southern England, though only an inch is enough to cause problems where it becomes packed to ice by traffic and pedestrians.
In December 2003, NYC experienced a total snow accumulation of 19.8 inches. This was above the average snowfall for the month of December in the city.
21/1209 xoxox
About 50 per cent of the time, yes.
It doesn't snow in London until much, much later in the year.
It's a bit late to ask this question.
There is no snow forecast for London today
acording to last years snow isues in the eastcoast, we will not get that much snow as this year but it will snow in 2010 december:))
There's less Snow in London,Well there's actually barely and unlikely for it too snow,However sometimes it can be a lucky winter with some snow.
Yes. Snow is not unusual in all parts of Illinois in December.
Yes, there is snow that falls in Glencoe, Scotland in the month of December.
No.
It is guaranteed that it will snow somewhere. Whether or not you will get snow depends on where you live.
yes. the tour dates are: December - 13 London, UK, The O2 London December - 14 London, UK, The O2 London December - 16 Dublin, IE, The O2 Dublin December - 17 Dublin, IE, The O2 Dublin December - 19 London, UK, The O2 London December - 20 London, UK, The O2 London December - 22 Birmingham, UK, LG Arena December - 23 Birmingham, UK, LG Arena December - 27 Manchester, UK, Manchester Evening News December - 28 Manchester, UK, Manchester Evening News