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Samaritan moments as Southern states get a taste of snow

Snow is an unexpected sight for many in the South, who are getting by with limited equipment and a dose of neighborliness. 

Ian Suhay (bottom) Kamani Simmons, and E.Z. Bodrick of Norfolk, Virginia help a neighbor get his car moving on one for the city's unplowed residential streets.

Lisa Suhay

February 17, 2015

It is a wintry mix of joy and frustration as the Northeast continues to lament the worst house guest ever 鈥 Old Man Winter 鈥 and many in the South are welcoming their first real taste of snow in a year or more.

鈥淭he Eastern Shore, Virginia and North Carolina got between five and 10 inches of snow, with periods of sleet in some areas,鈥 says Larry Brown of the聽聽in Wakefield, Virginia in a phone interview. 鈥淗ere, that鈥檚 an event.鈥

Mr. Brown, a native of Chicago, moved to the Wakefield area 12 years ago and is still impressed with how much Virginians love snow.

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鈥淚 think that in general, most people here are real snow lovers, although some are frightened by it,鈥 says Brown. 鈥淚t snowed for 20 minutes the other night and that was an event too. The 2010 storm the day after Christmas that brought about 10-inches to that area was the biggest snow that city had seen since the 1800s.鈥

Brown adds, 鈥淭he fact that any accumulation at all is so rare in Southern states the mere mention of it in a forecast makes some people very nervous here.鈥

However, today, kids in聽聽are enjoying their first snow day of the year, as their with less than eight inches.

That's enough to shut down the city, according to the Norfolk government鈥檚 call center, perhaps due to the fact that, according to its website, 鈥淐rews do not plow residential roads due to the size of our equipment and safety concerns.聽 As such, please exercise extreme caution when operating on these roads in snow and ice conditions.鈥

While main roads are plowed by the city, getting to them is a bit too tricky. Hence, much of the city is essentially immobilized by the white stuff.

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Unable to take to the roads, many Southerners took to Twitter instead to celebrate the rare snow event and the joy of helping others.

Marcella Hauser of Richmond, Virginia, a student at Old Dominion University in Norfolk and friends are busy with a snow scavenger hunt.

"It's a tradition my friends and I have had since Freshman year, but we really haven't been able to do it many times," Ms. Hauser says.

Meanwhile, in New England, Boston in particular, as more than seven feet of snow continues to grip the city where the territorial nature of some residents has been tried by those either聽听辞谤听聽has become an issue.

Although there have been numerous instances of good Samaritans helping people push snowbound vehicles and assist the elderly in the white-out, the thrill is definitely gone for many who would like nothing better than to never see another snowflake again.

In late January, after the first of what would become many major snow events in Boston,聽Philip Hillman II, a regional manager for a California-based vineyard, who was staying at the Charlesmark Hotel and chose to聽聽of the Boston Marathon as a gesture of goodwill that swiftly went viral on social media, perhaps fueled by聽Bostonians eager to see the finish line for winter.

Meanwhile, in some place in the South, people just want to make it out of their parking spaces on unplowed streets that appear to be doomed to remain impassible until the cities get a thaw.

鈥淚 fully expect kids in Virginia to be out of school the rest of the week,鈥 Brown says.聽聽鈥淧laces like Norfolk where they don鈥檛 plow residential areas probably won鈥檛 be able to get back to normal until the weekend.鈥

Brown says聽Wednesday聽will be the warmest day of the week for the Eastern Shore, Virginia and North Carolina.

He adds, 鈥淎nyone looking for a significant thaw that can affect unploughed streets will have to wait until聽Saturday聽at the earliest.鈥