Editorial
After the Blizzard of ’26: The Jersey Shore’s Dig-Out Weekend, In Real Life
The Blizzard of ’26 came in loud and left behind a frozen postcard much like the one of 96, which I still think was better, or worse depending on your age. lol. Snow stacked high along Route 35. Boardwalk railings disappeared under white drifts. Side streets across Monmouth and Ocean County turned into quiet, glowing tunnels of ice and light.
The Blizzard of ’26 Recovery Weekend
The Blizzard of ’26 came in loud and left behind a frozen postcard much like the one of 96, which I still think was better, or worse depending on your age. lol. Snow stacked high along Route 35. Boardwalk railings disappeared under white drifts. Side streets across Monmouth and Ocean County turned into quiet, glowing tunnels of ice and light.
But today? Today is dig-out day.
From Belmar to Asbury Park to Point Pleasant, plows are finishing their passes. Neighbors are out with shovels. Snowblowers hum like background music. Kids who spent two straight days inside are finally back outside building lopsided snow forts in front yards.
This is the Jersey Shore version of recovery.
The Morning After
The first thing you notice is the brightness. Snow reflects everything. The sky feels bigger. The air feels sharper. Even the ocean looks different, darker and calmer against all that white.
Local coffee shops that reopened this morning filled fast. There’s something comforting about standing in line with strangers who all went through the same storm. You nod. You compare snowfall totals. Someone says, “This reminds me of ’96.” Someone else says, “Yeah, but this one hit harder.”
Hardware stores are seeing steady traffic — salt, ice melt, replacement shovel handles. Meanwhile, grocery stores are in restock mode after the pre-storm rush wiped shelves clean.
What’s Open, What’s Not
Major roads are mostly cleared, but side streets remain tight. Parking lots are still a challenge. If you’re heading out today:
• Give plows space
• Watch for black ice in shaded areas
• Clear the top of your car fully — not just the windshield
• Check local town alerts before driving far
Boardwalk access varies town to town. Some sections are open for walking, others remain roped off while crews remove heavy snow from benches and railings.
The Good Stuff
Here’s the part no one talks about enough, blizzards slow everything down.
You see people helping each other. A teenager shoveling an elderly neighbor’s walkway. A guy with a snowblower doing three driveways in a row. Someone pushing a stuck SUV while laughing about it.
For 48 hours, we weren’t scrolling. We were looking outside.
And now? We’re stepping back into the world a little softer.
The Jersey Reset
There’s something symbolic about this kind of storm. Everything gets covered. Everything looks clean. Quiet. Still.
Then life returns.
Restaurants light their signs again. Music starts playing in Asbury bars tonight. Kids head back to school Monday with stories about snow tunnels and sledding wipeouts.
The Blizzard of ’26 will be remembered; not just for totals, but for the pause.
And at the Shore, we always bounce back.
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