The Great Buddha statue is covered in snow at a temple in Kamakura, near Tokyo. People in the town woke up on Thursday to the first November snowfall in more than 50 years. An unusually cold air mass brought wet snow to Japan’s capital as well. Above-freezing temperatures kept the snow from sticking in most places, even though it did accumulate on sidewalks and cars in the city’s far western suburbs.—AP
The Great Buddha statue is covered in snow at a temple in Kamakura, near Tokyo. People in the town woke up on Thursday to the first November snowfall in more than 50 years. An unusually cold air mass brought wet snow to Japan’s capital as well. Above-freezing temperatures kept the snow from sticking in most places, even though it did accumulate on sidewalks and cars in the city’s far western suburbs.—AP

TOKYO: The Japanese capital on Thursday was hit by its first November snow in 54 years, slowing rush hour trains as residents slogged to work wearing heavy coats and boots in a city far more accustomed to earthquakes than to snow.

The last time snow fell in November in Tokyo, John F. Kennedy was president of the United States and singer Bob Dylan — who this year won the Nobel Literature Prize — had released his debut album just months before.

The snow, which began as sleet around dawn but turned to snow soon after, was sparked by an unusual cold front spreading over the Tokyo area that sent temperatures down to near zero degree Celsius.

Average temperatures at this time of year are highs of 14 degrees Celsius and rose as far as 20 degrees Celsius as recently as Sunday.

“I was shocked,” said Masaru Machida, who had just finished night shift work and was walking home. “It’s too early.” Though Tokyo, which is on roughly the same latitude as the US city of Raleigh, North Carolina, does see snow at least once a year, it usually falls in January or February and rarely accumulates for long.

As much as 2 cm of snow was predicted for central Tokyo by the time the snow stops, likely by early afternoon, according to the Japanese Meteorological Agency.

Published in Dawn, November 25th, 2016

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