CONCORD, N.H. — Northern New Englanders who feared — or hoped — they’d be in for a long, snowy winter after the first flakes fell in October got another helping Thursday.
Many schools were closed in New Hampshire and Maine, and multiple accidents were reported in southern Vermont as much of the region saw its first significant snowfall since an unusually early October storm dropped close to 2 feet in some places.
As of 7 p.m., the only snowfall totals posted on the website for the National Weather Service’s Caribou, Maine, office were for locations in Aroostook County.
The listing showed that Soldier Pond had the highest accumulation at 4 inches. Reporting 2½ inches were Allagash, Fort Fairfield and Van Buren, while Caribou and Fort Kent had 2 inches each.
The snow was a welcome sight to snowplow driver Joe Messer, who had thought the October storm was going to be the start of a busy plowing season.
“I was tickled to death. We’ve been waiting for a storm or two so we could make some money,” said Messer, who works for RHM Construction in Bradford and handles plowing for two dozen residential customers and several businesses.
Thursday’s storm was much easier to deal with than the October storm because the ground is now frozen and the plows aren’t tearing it up like they did two months ago, he said. And the consistency was easier, as well, though that was expected to change as snow turned to freezing rain later.
“It’s pretty light stuff, so it’s been easygoing,” he said.
The snow also was a welcome relief for skiers, snowmobilers and other outdoors enthusiasts.
“Fresh powder for Martin Luther King Jr. weekend is exactly what the doctor ordered,” said Craig Clemmer, spokesman for the Mount Washington Resort, which includes the Bretton Woods downhill and cross-country ski areas.
Most northern New England ski areas have snow machines to get snow on some trails, but having a significant storm is important for the “backyard syndrome” so people see snow and get in the winter mindset, said Greg Sweetser, executive director of Ski Maine. The storm also arrived in time for the three-day Martin Luther King Jr. holiday weekend, an important weekend for both downhill and cross-country ski areas.
“People have enjoyed not having to shovel snow so far this winter,” Sweetser said. “But on the other hand, people really are ready.”
With the lack of snow so far this season, none of Vermont’s snowmobile trails had opened by the start of this week, and only a few trails were open in New Hampshire and Maine.
Bob Meyers, executive director of the Maine Snowmobile Association, said the situation was so bleak that the association was asking people through its Facebook page to do snow dances in hopes of conjuring up a storm.
“Everybody’s been anxious,” Meyers said. “There’s a huge pent-up demand.”
In Holderness, N.H., the storm was both good and bad news for the Squam Lakes Association, which is holding its annual WinterFest on Saturday.
The free festival includes several snow-dependent events such as snowshoe demonstrations and cross-country skiing, but also plenty of activities that require clear ice, such as skating, pond hockey and winter mini-golf, which involves hitting tennis balls with putters into holes drilled into the ice.
“We’re hoping to have the ice clear, and that’s going to be a challenge,” said recreation director Brett Durham.
As the storm increased in intensity, the Maine Turnpike Authority reduced speed limits on the highway from Kittery to Gray to 45 mph. Police in southern Vermont said road conditions there had deteriorated rapidly by late morning, causing numerous accidents. In one case, a truck carrying bottled water rolled over on Route 4 in Mendon, Vt.. The force of the water hitting the roof ripped off the roof, spilling the bottles onto the road.
Authorities applied sand to the road, which became even more icy because of the spilled water. No one was hurt.
In Troy, N.H., the police chief was injured when he got out of his cruiser to investigate a crash and ended up pinned between two vehicles. State police say Troy Police Chief Howard Sheats was struck by a car that lost control on the snowy road, and likely would have suffered more serious injuries if another motorist who saw the car sliding toward him had not honked his horn to alert him.
Snowy conditions played a part in two minor accidents in Pittsfield, Maine.
A single-vehicle accident along U.S. Route 2 at 1:20 p.m. caused minor damage to a red 1995 Jeep Cherokee, said Pittsfield police Sgt. Tim Roussin.
“He slid off the road and hit one of those road signs and put a ding in his truck,” said Roussin.
Another accident on Peltoma Avenue caused minor damage to two vehicles. One car rear-ended another, said Roussin, who believed both people involved were able to drive away.
In midcoast Maine, motorists slipped and slid on the roads but without too many dire consequences, according to public safety officials. Wet snow from the the fast-moving storm quickly mounted through the morning and early afternoon.
“There’s been a few accidents. Cars off the road. But nothing too serious,” said Greg Stearns of the Belfast Police Department.
Associated Press Writer Clarke Canfield in Portland and BDN writers Abigail Curtis and Alex Barber contributed to this report.



I love the snow. I like the cold. I hate the clean up. I despise the plow driver who blocks my driveway.
Don’t forget about the sidewalk plow! Blocks the driveway at least 4 times per storm.
Snow is coming!!! RUN to store and buy milk, bread and tolet paper!!!!
I don’t need to all ready have enough
Snow is coming!!! RUN to the town office and register your snowsleds!!! SUMMER SUCKS LET IT SNOW!!!!
I would love to see 12-18 inches. It is Maine after all, not Tampa FL.
If I had a sled perhaps I would agree with you. I would rather limit the deaths and enjoy driving on dry roads. as well as keep the cost of cleanup to a minimum. You like snow that much?? Why don’t you pitch in a little extra when it comes time to plow everyday?
I think that every other house in my area has a truck with a plow on it. People here do help out their neighbors quite often. I can’t help with the plowing because I don’t own one. Snowblower. it’s alot easier to deal with the Snow here. No streets to get clogged up and very little traffic.
No sweat. Just another part of living here in Maine.
Soo, do you not understand that the GIANT TRUCKS PLOWING are a LIL bit different then your neighbor’s plow?I’m not talking about your driveway. I’m talking about Financially PITCHING IN. Do you have any idea how much the local/state/ government’s spend on snow removal? I saw a report in the last couple of days stating that for ONE storm last year NYC spent six million dollars on SNOW REMOVAL. In other words. terribly sorry people that bank on BAD weather. there are many more people who prefer GOOD weather.
It doesn’t matter were you live. if snow is being removed someone is paying for it. Oops, sorry, except your neighborhood.
Come on, i’m sure you have an ATV your still riding.
By the way,
GO ONE BETTER
GO SKI-DOO!!!
Ya I do and it’s a Polaris too,2009 800 Sportsman HO, I used to have a 94 XLT that had over 13,000 miles on the motor, never touched. My buddy and I were riding to Shin Pond when his 2002 Ski Doo blew up and I towed him the rest of the way to the pond. (about 15 miles) The old girl made it to 17,000 when she finally lost a crank bearing. Also have a 97 Ultra with over 15,000 on it and the motors has never been touched , still runs like a rocket ship, although in semi-retirement for the last couple years. Like my handle sez POLARIS RULES!!!!!
P.S I ride with all brands and they’re always following my tail light.
SUMMER SUCKS LET IT SNOW!!!!!
My first sled was a 1970 Rupp Yankee. I was about 10 and the dang throttle froze. I was smart enough to shut it off but my mistake was immediately restarting it. Took off without me, jumped Main street at the airport in Caribou and ran right up a building. My brother and his friend had gone ahead, all they saw was a sled flying through the air and landing perfectly before it ran up the old metal arctic building across from the airport and landed on it’s back. Frame was bent all to pieces.. Scared the bajeezum outta me.
My brother still sleds but I haven’t for years. Of course they follow you. all you have anymore are trails.. lol.. I can’t stand all the restrictions on sleds now. I lived just down the hill from the airport. That was the starting place for us for years. Now, god forbid you go off the trails
What,,,, no motoski????
I had a 69 and 74 motoski.
Now they were the bomb…LOL
What? No eggs?
The hardest 2 words for the BDN to say CLIMATE CHANGE
SEE
http://www.wunderground.com/blog/JeffMasters/comment.html?entrynum=2012
Dr. Jeff Masters’ WunderBlog
U.S. weather in 2011: unprecedented rains and wet/dry extremes
Posted by: JeffMasters, 3:07 PM GMT on January 11, 2012
I suspect if I look back through the years, records for warm, cold, wet and dry have been broken time and time again. Often going in opposite directions from year to year.
I don’t deny that climate change exists. However, I believe it to be naturally occurring. I do believe that humanity has perhaps sped it up but look back a few million years. It happens over and over again.
A few inches is “heavy snow”? Maine is getting so wimpy.
Everything closes before a snowflake hits the ground, pretty soon when the weatherman tells us it is possible a snowstorm could come in 5 days, everyone will clean out the store, everyone will shut down and hide
Yep. Where I moved from, any snow reports triggered sales of bread, eggs, and milk. You’d think people only ever ate French toast. The shelves would be bare before the first flake hit the pavement. I guess food shopping was the way the locals practiced disaster preparedness.
So you are an implant, I knew it…:)
A lot of schools where open today and they did not dismiss students early either.
For two days I heard nothing but build up about this storm. It boiled down to about 3 inches. Who cares.
I’m waiting for the first attempt to get FEMA money. Isn’t that the direction we’re headed? Forget natural disaster. “I didn’t make any money because there wasn’t any snow” will be the next big thing. And what really scares me is that a lot of people will say they think they are entitled to assistance.
I’m wondering when we reach the point of any business asking the government for help if they are in trouble. Got news for ya, build your business around the weather your gonna get bit sometimes.
Wait that’s it!!!! Entrepreneur’s”s will go after anyone who has dirtied the environment. ADDING TO, not causing global warming. They will claim that it’s manufacturing’s fault that there is no snow and demand compensation. I HAVE NO DOUBT THAT DAY IS COMING.
Just four years ago we had record breaking snowfall in parts of if not the entire state. Trust me, there will be plenty of snow in our future. Right now, i’m just like 95 percent of the population that doesn’t make their living from snow, happy for the easy driving and the low expense our GOVERNMENT has paid for snow removal so far this winter.
The GOV takes pretty good care or the farmers and fisherman, why not subsidize the snow businesses?
I really hope your joking. Your right the GOV does subsidize farmers. However, certainly not all of them. I had 3 uncles that farmed for years. Eventually they ere driven out. What did they do??? they went on with their lives and found other means to support themselves.
If their truly is a NATURAL disaster I have no problem with helping these people out. LACK of snow when your business depends on snow is not a disaster. It was a business choice. That ‘person was aware that if there is no snow then they get no business. Not even remotely in the same category.
By the way, I don’t agree with any subsidies. Not due to poor performance. FIND ANOTHER LINE OF WORK. THAT IS PROFITABLE.
By all means, follow your dreams. just don’t expect the government to bail you out if it isn’t profitable. My god people are any of us responsible for anything anymore????
NORTHERN NEW ENGLAND?????? Seems to me that there is still another “400 miles” North of Concord, N.H.—Seems if you live in Northern Maine, we live in another country. I hope that you keep all of the snow in “NORTHERN NEW ENGLAND”!!!!
They / you can send it all right up here to the County, PLEASE!!!!!!
3 inches snow…..then freezing rain…a pain in the butt for anyone that takes care of public roads
I have to ask…
Did Mardens stay open???LOL….
Is that a dodge that went off the road into the median????
Figures..