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From day to day, season to season and year to year, Vermont's weather is known for its variety, its climate for its changeability. "Normal" months, seasons or years tend to be uncommon. Extreme weather events can take the form of prolonged droughts, extreme flooding related to severe summer thunderstorms, as well as equally severe winter blizzards and ice storms. Such events leave their imprints on the human populations and visible scars on the landscape. Although recent events such as the statewide flooding in June 1998, the ice storm of January 1998 and the flooding in Montgomery in July 1997 remain fresh in our memories, events of similar magnitudes have occurred in the historical record. For example, the flood of 1927 produced significant damage in Montpelier, the state capital. Two years later an ice storm of comparable spatial extent and damage potential as that of January 1998, swept across western New York, Vermont and into Maine. For more details on recent extreme events, follow the links below.
Ice storm of January 1998
Eastern U.S. Flooding and Ice Storm - January 1998
Tornadoes touch down near Bennington - May 1998
Vermont picks up the muddy pieces
Flooding in Vermont in 1998
Floods hit N.Y., Vt, Ohio, Wis; 4 dead
1998 - A Record Year in Vermont
Vermont State Climatologist homepage