Extreme Temperatures
Thousands snowed in after winter storm dumps as much as 6 FEET of snow in Lake Arrowhead, California
Many residents were trapped by the deep layer of snow and ice for upwards of 24 hours.
Some called it the biggest storm in decades with communities getting up to 6 feet of snow.
Snow plows were slowly working to clear the main roads Sunday morning while working their way to residential areas, forcing some residents to get creative and wade through the deep layer of snow with skies.
"This is the most magnificent storm in the 31 years that I've been here," said Ginny Dunn. "I have never seen North Bay this snowy and untraveled."

The aftermath of an avalanche near the Vallecito Reservoir in Colorado, where two backcountry skiers were killed this weekend.
The skiers, both men, were reported missing just after 9 p.m. on Saturday and their bodies were found under several feet of snow by 4 a.m. on Sunday, the Colorado Search & Rescue Association said in a statement. They were south of the Vallecito Reservoir, a recreation area about 20 miles northeast of Durango, Colo., that is part of the San Juan National Forest and is close to the border between Colorado and New Mexico.
The two skiers, whose identities had not been released by Sunday night, left for the outing at about 7 a.m. on Saturday and were expected to return at noon the same day.
The La Plata County Sheriff's Office located a truck that the skiers had been driving on the southern end of the lake, and ground and helicopter crews continued the search, the statement from the rescue group said.
Well, it is for the wind. Wyoming, for those unaware, is a very windy place to live. Locals have more or less just learned to live with it but, for those who don't live here, actual proof of the Wyoming wind can be pretty astonishing.
That's why one Casper woman decided to get some video evidence of just how crazy the wind in Wyoming really is.
A winter storm with an atmospheric river that made its way over the Pacific brought multiple days of unexpected snowfall to some parts of Southern California.
Some areas have already received over 30 inches of snow and there is more coming in the forecast.
The snow came as the National Weather Service issued a rare blizzard warning for the San Bernardino mountains as well as the LA County and Ventura County mountains.
Ski area manager James Mckenzie said it was lucky that the snow coincided with Mt Hutt's open day, an annual fundraiser for Westpac Helicopters and the Methven Lions Club.
He said it is the first time in five years he has seen this much snow in summer.
"To get this amount of snow in February weather - 30 centimetres of snow on Wednesday and Thursday, which was enough to get us out skiing and riding today, which is amazing."
Mckenzie said about 1000 people were on the mountain today.

Snow has snarled mountain roads around southern California, as a brutal, and unusual, winter storm grips the area.
Breathless television weather presenters more used to delivering a same-every-day forecast of warm sunshine found themselves knee-deep in the white stuff as the region grappled with its worst winter storm for decades.
Major roads were closed as ice and snow made them impassable, including sections of Interstate 5, the main north-south highway that connects Mexico, California, the Pacific Northwest and Canada.
Authorities said there was no estimate when it would be reopened.
"Dangerous and potentially life-threatening snow related impacts are likely for mountain, desert, and foothill roadways in southern California," the National Weather Service (NWS) said.
"Multiple rounds of heavy snowfall coupled with strong winds will lead to blizzard conditions over some of the higher terrain and mountain passes.
"Areas very close to the Pacific Coast and also into the interior valleys that are not accustomed to seeing snow, may see some accumulating snowfall."
Carbon County was the gold medal winner for snowfall on Wednesday as 48 inches of snow was recorded at Battle Lake while campgrounds along Jack Creek and Sugar Loaf each received 42 inches.
Locations in Yellowstone National Park and Teton and Lincoln counties all received snow in excess of two feet.
The most snow in Cheyenne was in the northern areas with only 5 inches, but a 129-year record was broken when the temperature hit 19 degrees below zero early Thursday. The old record was set in 1894 at minus 13.

Cathy Morgan-Mace cleans snow and ice off her family's car during a snowstorm in Salt Lake City, Utah, on Wednesday, Feb. 22, 2023.
Storm warnings and advisories stretch across almost the entire northern US, with blizzard warnings in place in Minnesota and the Dakotas, which will get the brunt of the storm on Wednesday. The southern edge of the system will deliver sleet and freezing rain, leaving roads treacherous.
"We are looking at the potential for hazardous to impossible travel conditions," said Frank Pereira, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service. "The bottom line is don't travel unless you absolutely have to."
Ice-storm warnings stretch from northern Iowa to Michigan, with the potential to down trees and power lines and knock out electricity.
Comment: See also: Snowfall totals surpass 5 FEET in some areas of southern California with nearly 7 FEET at Mountain High