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White Christmas in south Texas (and New Orleans?) 21 years ago

Posted on 12/25/25 at 11:28 am
Posted by S
RIP Wayde
Member since Jan 2007
168968 posts
Posted on 12/25/25 at 11:28 am


Seen plenty of snow in La and elsewhere including this past January but nothing more surreal than getting blasted with legit snow Christmas Eve and waking up to 5 inches of snow in deep south Texas. Neighborhood snowball fights, snowmen everywhere. If im not mistaken New Orleans got some that night as well. The odds of snow (there’s been maybe a handful of snow events ever) let alone on Christmas are always so slim down there. Really cool memory.
Posted by trident
Member since Jul 2007
4842 posts
Posted on 12/25/25 at 11:39 am to
And then Katrina
Posted by lionward2014
New Orleans
Member since Jul 2015
13522 posts
Posted on 12/25/25 at 12:11 pm to
Seeing snow for the first time on Christmas morning was probably the coolest thing ever for middle school Lionward.
Posted by SuperSaint
Sorting Out OT BS Since '2007'
Member since Sep 2007
148444 posts
Posted on 12/25/25 at 12:15 pm to
I still have a nasty scar on my shin and no nerves left in that area from a drunken fall playing in the snow in the French quarters that Christmas me
Posted by jclem11
Chief Nihilist
Member since Nov 2011
9583 posts
Posted on 12/25/25 at 12:35 pm to
I was in high school in Corpus Christi and that was a wild Christmas!

Good memories.
Posted by LegendInMyMind
Member since Apr 2019
71870 posts
Posted on 12/25/25 at 1:17 pm to
All I know is that it is Christmas day in north AL and I'm standing here looking at a tree that is almost fully leafed out and others starting to leaf out. This feels more like Easter than Christmas.
Posted by S
RIP Wayde
Member since Jan 2007
168968 posts
Posted on 12/25/25 at 1:27 pm to


South Padre Island Christmas morning 2004



Park across from my mom’s house
This post was edited on 12/25/25 at 1:27 pm
Posted by TexasTiger08
Member since Oct 2006
29204 posts
Posted on 12/25/25 at 1:30 pm to
quote:

I was in high school in Corpus Christi and that was a wild Christmas!


What HS? I had graduated from King a couple years prior. Never in my life would I have imagined snow on Christmas Eve down here.
Posted by S
RIP Wayde
Member since Jan 2007
168968 posts
Posted on 12/25/25 at 1:32 pm to
It was amazing. First time i had ever driven in snow coming back from a friend’s that night and they were definitely not prepared on the roads.

Posted by Bestbank Tiger
Premium Member
Member since Jan 2005
79336 posts
Posted on 12/25/25 at 1:35 pm to
We got sneaux in New Orleans. Only a thin coating stuck to the ground.
Posted by facher08
Baton Rouge
Member since Aug 2011
5631 posts
Posted on 12/25/25 at 2:11 pm to
It was Christmas morning in Morgan City. The first time it had snowed down there since '89.
Posted by Pedro
Geaux Hawks
Member since Jul 2008
38393 posts
Posted on 12/25/25 at 2:19 pm to
Born and raised in the same house in Patterson until I graduated HS. I had just turned ten that year. I told my parents I wanted snow that year for Christmas. I kept bringing it up and they kept telling me “well I wouldn’t get your hopes up.” My older sister told my mom she was going to pray for it to snow because she knew how bad I wanted it. Lo and behold the next morning we got the smallest dusting of that and ice. It wasn’t much but for me it may as well have been Aspen. Only thing that’s topped it for Christmas memories was seeing my almost two year old get excited seeing her presents this morning.
This post was edited on 12/25/25 at 2:24 pm
Posted by sledgehammer
SWLA
Member since Oct 2020
6785 posts
Posted on 12/25/25 at 2:22 pm to
I was ten years old visiting my grandma and it was immaculate. The local news station put out a book of sent in photos and titled it the South Texas snow miracle or something like that.

ETA-I just remembered my cousins and I threw a snowball at a passing car. The car quickly halted, and we scurried inside scared to death he would come after us.
This post was edited on 12/25/25 at 2:31 pm
Posted by The Boat
Member since Oct 2008
175896 posts
Posted on 12/25/25 at 2:23 pm to
It snowed the last Christmas of real New Orleans. Katrina was 8 months later.
Posted by dyslexiateechur
Louisiana
Member since Jan 2009
35848 posts
Posted on 12/25/25 at 2:23 pm to
I was just talking about this. My babies were 3 and 1 and it was just magical.
Posted by RTM4
Pflugerville
Member since Apr 2018
2296 posts
Posted on 12/25/25 at 2:28 pm to
That shite was wild!!

I remember my wife talking to family in Bay City and they were having a white Christmas. It was nuts.
Posted by RTM4
Pflugerville
Member since Apr 2018
2296 posts
Posted on 12/25/25 at 2:28 pm to
That is insane!
Posted by S
RIP Wayde
Member since Jan 2007
168968 posts
Posted on 12/25/25 at 3:02 pm to
quote:

We need to look back to the week before Christmas in order to recap the details of this historic event. Signals from the numerical weather forecast models suggested a strong cold front and arctic air mass would move southward along the Rocky Mountains into Texas and eventually over the Lower Texas Coast. This cold front moved through Brownsville, Wednesday afternoon (12/22/2004). A second reinforcing surge of arctic air followed the initial front, dropping temperatures into the 30s and low 40s late Thursday (12/23/2004). Maximum temperatures on Friday (12/24/2004) were in the upper 30s to low 40s across the Rio Grande Valley. Widespread moderate rain covered much of the area with most locations reporting one half of an inch to nearly one inch of liquid precipitation (Figure 1, below). The cold rain began to taper off on Christmas Eve as temperatures began to fall below freezing.

As the event began to unfold, the meteorologists at NWS Brownsville refined the precipitation forecast to account for rainfall changing to sleet or a rain/snow mix, and eventually changing to all snow for the overnight hours between December 24th and 25th. The first in a series of winter weather warnings and advisories - Freeze Warnings - were issued by the National Weather Service at 230 AM December 23rd. Around noon on Christmas Eve, the Freeze Warnings were upgraded to Winter Weather Advisories, which were subsequently upgraded to Winter Storm Warnings later that evening for Heavy Snow, continuing until the morning of December 25th when the snowfall finally ended.

With the cold air trapped at the surface and wedged against the foothills of the Sierra Madre Oriental, an upper level low with Pacific moisture was moving east across Northern Mexico. The moisture and upward vertical motion generated by this upper level system caused snow to begin falling across Deep South Texas after 10 PM CST. The snow fall persisted through midnight (Figure 2) into Christmas morning and eventually ended around 4 AM on (12/25/2004) leaving behind the first White Christmas ever recording in the Lower Rio Grande Valley of Texas, and most likely the first White Christmas ever in extreme Northeast Mexico.


Basically a perfect storm





NWS report

Posted by bigberg2000
houston, from chalmette
Member since Sep 2005
70581 posts
Posted on 12/25/25 at 3:54 pm to
Yep. I have a great picture with the family at my grandpas house in Chalmette. It was out last Christmas there because of Katrina.
Posted by PowerTool
The dark side of the road
Member since Dec 2009
22910 posts
Posted on 12/25/25 at 4:00 pm to
the snow started falling during Midnight Mass in Houston.

The pastor had seen the weather report and cleverly worked snow into his homily.
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