We often have this problem in coastal New Hampshire. I've done it both ways: get up at 2 a.m. and plow through the night to stay ahead of it, OR wait till next day so I can plow away the ice on top of the snow. The breakpoint for me is about six inches if it's dry, four inches if it's wet, because that overwhelms my tractor and if I let it go I have to call a plowman at $100 a sweep. (He generally plows twice, once in the night plus a cleanup next day.)
This time, however, I awoke to high winds and driving rain, so I'm snug inside unless the power goes out. Just ten miles to the west there's a blizzard. Twenty miles to the east, the surf is breaking over the top of Whaleback Lighthouse tower.
This time, however, I awoke to high winds and driving rain, so I'm snug inside unless the power goes out. Just ten miles to the west there's a blizzard. Twenty miles to the east, the surf is breaking over the top of Whaleback Lighthouse tower.