Valdez is the snowiest town in Alaska with an annual average of over 300 inches of snow. Most of Alaska gets well below 100 inches annually, which makes Valdez the snowiest town by far. This small town is piled with snow most winters and people simply adapt their lives to the conditions. Many residents snowbird and leave town when the snow is piled high, but the brave figuring out how to survive is just another of the challenges life in Alaska presents.
Life can present many challenges when you live in a small town where an average of over 20 feet a year of snow falls on the residents.
Valdez is right on a deep fjord in the Prince William Sound and tucked into the base of the heavily glaciated Chugach Mountains. This provides the perfect conditions for heavy snowfall.
Snowfalls can be so intense that a foot or more falls overnight in heavy conditions. This can constantly slow down transportation and plans to leave or return to town through the mountain passes.
The light, like the rest of Alaska, is low in the winter. This can be especially true when the sky is covered with clouds and the light is constantly obscured by falling snow.
The roofs of houses have to be regularly shovelled off to avoid dangerous snow slides in the spring. It also helps roofs from caving in under the weight of the heavy, wet snow.
And all that snow has to be put somewhere. They form a giant snow pile with the snow from the roads that sits in the middle town until the epic melt in May.