Yes, it does.
Yes, snowfall is 15-20 inches annually.
It is predicted that the Ohio Valley region, which includes parts of Kentucky, will have brutally cold temperatures and a lot of snowfall. Most of the snowfall is predicted to be heavy with the possibility of a blizzard.
Yes, blizzards are rare in Kentucky due to its relatively mild winters compared to northern states. However, it is not impossible for a blizzard to occur in Kentucky, especially during periods of intense cold air and heavy snowfall.
The earliest recorded snowfall in Lexington, Kentucky, typically occurs in late October. One of the notable instances was on October 29, 2002, when the area received measurable snow. Such early snowfalls are relatively rare but can happen due to the region's variable weather patterns.
Of course "a lot of snowfall" is a relative term. Three feet in three hours is a lot of snowfall in Kentucky or Chicago or Vail. In Vail it would always be welcomed. In Chicago or DC it would be a nightmare. In Kentucky it simply doen;t happen. Not that it doesn't snow, in January of 2009 a major ice storm resulted in 65 Kentucky deaths but this was abnormal. There were 500.000 homes without power some for as long as a week and under such conditions people make heating errors that result in carbon monoxide poisoning.
Average snowfall is about 30" annually.
Snowfall Trilogy was created in 2004.
The Japanese word for snowfall is kousetsu!
The average Yearly snowfall in Newfoundland is 200cm to 300cm
Average snowfall in Nogales AZ is 3.1".
The annual average snowfall in Fairfax, Virginia is around 22 inches. Snowfall amounts can vary from year to year, but this is the typical average for the area.
The line "And he will think about the first snowfall / And long walk home" is repeated in the poem "The First Snowfall" by James Russell Lowell.