I think the Fylde coast/Cumbria coast has to be one of the most snow free areas. Walney Island for example.
However, rarely, if a stalling front pushes against an easterly airflow, these regions can get an exceptional amount of snow - e.g. Feb 1996.
https://youtu.be/V73h4TOMCBw
Where I live isn’t the worst for snow, and we received an unexpected pasting on Wednesday, but the setup to deliver decent lying snow is quite difficult to achieve. We need a genuinely cold westerly, which rarely lasts for longer than 12 hours or so. I can’t imagine having a freezing westerly for lasting days on end - it just wouldn’t happen. Frustratingly for here we never get “big snow” events. The ones where the army would need to get called in, for example. The classic setups just don’t deliver here - due to localised topography. When the wind from the east/SE it is impossible for us to get meaningful frontal snow, which means our opportunities for big events is more limited.
For this reason, 1963 and 1947 weren’t very snowy here by all accounts.
I think the biggest snow maker here is a low pressure (with NW’ly winds), easing into a bitterly cold pool over the UK. Such a situation is vanishingly rare. Deep snow cover (more than 6 inches) in Manchester City Centre which lasts over a week must happen once every, say, 30-40 years.
It’s poignant to think I probably won’t see snow here like I did on Wednesday morning for another 5 years or so. This is why I desperately tried to make the most of it, but in a weird way this made me feel quite stressed.
Originally Posted by: Joe Bloggs