Being pedantic:
In a true blizzard, winds must be sustained at 35 miles per hour; the snow must reduce visibility by a quarter mile or less, and the conditions must be expected to last for at least three hours.
Lots of people call regular snowstorms "blizzards" when they aren't.
Yes I've been in blizzards. I rather like them, and snowstorms, and any type of storm!
The worst thing is that I've always had to go to work in blizzards and snowstorms. My workplace never closed due to weather conditions. Occasionally I got to leave work early because of snow but work would always open in the morning. Staff were not allowed to stay home on bad weather days. Ever.
When my daughter was an infant that meant getting up at 3 or 4 a.m. to breastfeed, get ready for work, get her ready, shovel the snow for an hour or so (sometimes up to the car windows, and the road not plowed, then chip ice off the doors so they would open, then drive baby to our nanny, then drive to work even if police told people not to drive).
same question
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