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Winter Storm — Montgomery, Kentucky

2025-01-05 to 2025-01-06 · Montgomery, Kentucky

Event narrative

A winter storm brought heavy snow and significant ice to Montgomery County on January 5th and 6th. Heavy snow began mid-morning on the 5th, falling heavily at times into the afternoon. At 1500EST, an NWS employee reported 5.6 inches of snow along Spruce Valley Lane. Other reports from later in the afternoon included 5.0 inches at Jeffersonville at 1615EST. The precipitation began to transition by late afternoon, with an NWS employee south of Oggs Station reporting that 5 inches of snow had fallen and was changing to sleet at 1630EST. On January 6th, the precipitation fell primarily as freezing rain. An NWS employee reported 0.45 inches of flat ice accretion along Spruce Valley Lane at 0630EST. Later, at 1205EST, another report from south of Oggs Station, noted as being north of the heavier icing axis, measured 0.36 inches of ice accretion. A final storm total snowfall of 6.6 inches was reported from this same location at 1600EST.

Wider weather episode

The first significant winter storm of 2025 brought a mix of heavy snow and significant icing to eastern Kentucky on January 5th and 6th. A deep surface low tracked across southern Kentucky, spreading precipitation across the region. Snow began across the western counties of the forecast area as early as 0900 EST on January 5th, with snowfall rates up to one inch per hour quickly covering roadways. By 1000 EST, warmer air aloft began to change the snow over to freezing rain in southern counties, with this transition spreading north and east through the day. Through the evening and overnight hours of January 5th into the 6th, a prolonged period of freezing rain occurred, with the heaviest icing focused along the US-460 corridor. The highest icing amounts were observed across Menifee and Morgan counties where 0.50 to 0.75 inches of flat ice accretion were reported. Accumulating snow was observed across all of eastern Kentucky, with the highest amounts generally northeast of US-421, where 3 to 7 inches were common. The combination of snow and significant ice led to widespread impacts. Thousands of customers lost power, particularly in a narrow corridor through Menifee, Morgan, and Johnson counties, with some outages lasting nearly a week. Numerous trees were also damaged or downed by the weight of the ice.


Source: NOAA Storm Events Database, event_id 1278341. Narrative written by the NWS forecast office that issued the report.