KENYA-WEATHER
SEPTEMBER 3 2008 16:55h
Text
VideoExcited villagers pelted each other with snowballs while some ate pieces of the icy sheet that formed over an entire hillside.
Hailstorms are usual in some parts of Kenya, which straddles the equator, but the ferocity of the storm in Busara, 255 km (158 miles) northwest of the capital was unprecedented.
Excited villagers pelted each other with snowballs while some ate pieces of the icy sheet that formed over an entire hillside.
"We thought a big white sheet had been spread, so we decided to come and see for ourselves. We thought that it was Jesus who had come back," one villager told reporters.
Kenya's Meteorological Department said Tuesday's storm was caused by the convergence of cold air currents from the Indian Ocean and warm air currents from the Congo.
"The hailstones falling on the ground joined together to form expansive sheets of ice or snow flakes occupying a large area, 30 acres," a statement by the meteorologists said.
More than 12 hours after the storm, the forested hillside was still white despite the hot tropical sun.
"In fact this thing is very sweet, we have never seen anything like this. We like the ice so much because with the sun being hot, you take it and you feel satisfied," resident Simon Kimani said.
The only snow to be seen in normally sunny Kenya is on top of the country's highest mountain, 5,199-metre (17,057 ft) Mount Kenya.
Comment
Report: Cardinal predicted pope's death


Israel Separation Barrier Bethelehem
Pro-Putin electtion rally in Moscow
Young Fan Throws Football During Super Bowl XLVI N
Iran Oil Minister holds News Conference in Tehran,
Rare visitors from the Artic, Snowy Owls, make ap
Monlam festival begins at the Labrang Monastery in
Actor Jason Segel shows off pudding pot at Harvard
Cost of Living Rises in Iran
Obama visits Fire station in Arlington
Protesters Clashes With Security Forces in Egypt
SCIENCE
SCIENCE
SCIENCE