Jay Reynolds
Senior Member.
Dr. Who?Oo-arr... Thee be a crusty old salt. Step into my Tardis...
I don't know where we'd be without you.
Dr. Who?Oo-arr... Thee be a crusty old salt. Step into my Tardis...
I don't know where we'd be without you.
"Dry" snow, when melted, has 10 inches liquid water for every 1 inch of snow. "Wet" snow can have 10-30 or more inches of meltwater for every inch of snow.
Yes, what he said!This is incorrect and maybe it's important to clear it up...
In the original post:
This should read:
Snow can be rated as "wet" or "dry" by measuring the amount of liquid water produced when the snow melts. "Wet" snow, when melted, has 1 inch liquid water for every 10 inches of snow. "Dry" snow can have 10-30 or more inches of snow for every inch of meltwater.