By Wally Kennedy
wkennedy@joplinglobe.com
Joplin gardeners were heading for the covers Thursday, not because they were trying to get warm in the cold but because their plants needed protection from record-cold temperatures and the possibility of a spring snowstorm.
Snow in April? That’s right.
The National Weather Service station in Springfield issued a snow advisory Thursday afternoon for the Joplin area.
Most areas were expected to get a dusting of snow Thursday night, but there was the possibility of up to 2 inches in some places.
Gayl Navarro, with Ozark Nursery on North Main Street Road, said workers were covering plants to shield them from the snow and temperatures that could drop below freezing.
“It’s better to use cloth because it breathes,” she said. “Plastic will burn the plants when it freezes. We recommend people use old bedsheets to cover their flowers at home.”
The flowers and plants that weren’t covered were carried inside the nursery, Navarro said.
“We’re packing it inside the building,” she said. “The Japanese maples, which are expensive, are hanging out inside with us.”
Gino Izzi, a meteorologist with the weather service in Springfield, said there was a good chance the Joplin area could see a snowfall overnight Thursday.
“There is a narrow but intense band of snow that is sliding from Nebraska into Southeast Kansas and Southwest Missouri tonight (Thursday),” he said. “Most areas will get just a dusting, but a 20-mile-wide band will get 1 to 2 inches of snow that will stick.”
The lows tonight and Saturday night are predicted to fall into the upper teens and low 20s. If that happens, the temperatures could set record lows for this time of year.
“You had better cover your plants because the frost could get them,” Izzi said.
He said snow that accumulates in April is “certainly uncommon,” but it is not out of the realm of possibility. Records show that the heaviest snowfall in Joplin during the month of April occurred on April 12, 1957, when 4 inches fell.
Meteorologists in Springfield were watching the advancing storm Thursday afternoon.
“It’s really impressive,” Izzi said. “There’s visibility of a quarter of a mile and 3 1/2 inches of snow on the ground right now in Lincoln County, Kan.” Lincoln County is in north-central Kansas.
The snow was produced by an upper-level disturbance or wave in the atmosphere.
“It’s riding the jet stream into our area,” Izzi said. “The disturbance is invisible at the surface, but it makes its presence known.”
Back to normal
Temperatures are predicted to return to near normal on Monday.
Lead Stories
April showers might freeze flowers
- Lead Stories
-
-
‘Fire all over’: Four suffer minor injuries in apartment blaze
Her phone started ringing, followed by a noise of uncertain origin outside her apartment. That’s how the sleep of 28-year-old Sylvia Moran was dispelled in the nick of time Monday morning. Moran got up, looked out a window and saw smoke.
-
Heat repeat: Year's third heat wave to continue through week
For the third time this summer, a wave of hot weather has washed across the Joplin metro area, causing heat indexes to soar into the triple digits.
- United Way groups note campaign status The Carthage Area United Way is more than two-thirds of the way toward reaching its campaign goal of $310,000 for the year, volunteers were told Thursday.
- Jerry Ray Clemens
- Agency shows off mobile home as possible alternative in buyouts MIAMI, Okla. — To help alleviate the housing problems facing some of the Tar Creek residents who are taking part in a federal buyout, officials staged an open house Thursday displaying a Federal Emergency Management Agency mobile home.
-
Local fairs attract crowds, competitors
For many area residents, the county fair is a pleasant diversion for an afternoon or evening, to admire the animals, eat a hot dog or take the kids to the carnival.
-
April showers might freeze flowers
Joplin gardeners were heading for the covers Thursday, not because they were trying to get warm in the cold but because their plants needed protection from record-cold temperatures and the possibility of a spring snowstorm.
- Counties examine roles of shelters Joplin officials are still assessing Memorial Hall’s role as an emergency shelter, while a Newton County official said the network of shelters there fared well during the ice storm this month.
-
Keeping education affordable
Autumn Peters, of Monett, has attended classes at Kent State University in Ohio and Pittsburg State University in Kansas.
-
Owner of Guest Houses defends track record
The owner of the Anderson Guest House, where a fire in November claimed 11 lives, defended his track record Tuesday and said the media have portrayed him unfairly.
- More Lead Stories Headlines
-







