abajan wrote:tallywx wrote:...Strange things can happen, but within reason. Your call that this was snow is beyond reason, as proven by the atmospheric profile. Snow under these conditions would defy existing laws of physics and natural law.
Frogs, on the other hand, don't.
Haven't you ever watched Unsolved Mysteries? Btw, I didn't say that it was snow that fell. I said it may well have been.
Yes, but I tend to like to apply reason, logic, and science before consigning something to the unexplained. That's the difference between having a critical eye for the veracity of an observation versus formulating a just-so story with the backing of "stuff just happens sometimes."
Considering that parameters were not even close for snow to occur, considering that parameters were right for thunderstorms to occur, and considering that the freezing level was low enough for hail to fall from those thunderstorms, considering a region that has not witnessed snow or hail with any regularity and considering a heavy hail covering the ground can look like snow and be mistaken for such, why even acknowledge the possibility that it was something that defies physics when physical parameters support the other theory extremely well? That's just having an unreasonable eye for the irrational.