The blizzard of 2004 swept through the Ohio Valley from December 21st through the 24th. 14U Ice Green 14U Green Schedule; 13U. 16U Ice Platinum 16U Ice Platinum Schedule; 15U.

An ice storm struck central Ohio on Dec. 23, 2004, leaving more than 400,000 homes without power, many of whom had to celebrate Christmas in the dark and cold.

By Saturday morning, March 4, the ice was 2–3 inches (5–8 cm) thick on the roadways.

An ice storm that struck the region on Dec. 23, 2004, left more than 400,000 customers without power. It wasn’t a very merry Christmas for most central Ohioans 14 years ago. 13U Ice Orange; 13U Ice Orange Schedule; 12U. Temperatures were at first above 70 °F (21 °C) but suddenly on Friday March 3 and it suddenly got cold, below freezing, and ice started forming in the late evening.

A record setting winter storm affected northern Ohio on December 22nd and 23 rd of 2004. Low pressure moved from Texas to the Ohio Valley spreading heavy snow across the region. 15U Ice Silver 15U Ice Silver Schedule; 14U. … Record snowfall fell across many areas of Kentucky, Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio. Nearly two feet or snow fell in some areas and new snowfall records were established at several locations. 12U Ice Black 12U Ice Black Schedule; 11U. Ohio Valley Winter Storm. December 21-23, 2004. 18U Ice Gold 18U Gold Schedule; 16U . 11U Ice Blue 11U Ice Blue Schedule; 10U . General Storm Evolution| Radar Animations| Snowfall Total Maps| Satellite Imagery. The ice storm toppled trees and utility poles, downed power lines, made traffic impossible and closed some schools.