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Ocracoke spared heavy snow but remains in cold grip

The Ocracoke Lighthouse and Double Keepers Quarters on Sunday, Feb. 1. Photo: C. Leinbach/Ocracoke Observer

Editor’s note: This story was updated Feb. 2 with snow accumulation totals and Hyde County services information.

Unlike other areas of the state, Ocracoke Island had to dig out of only a few inches of snow on Sunday (Feb. 1), but below-freezing temperatures kept the island in winter mode.

Village streets were mostly snow covered in the morning and island NCDOT worker Shanon Eiben spent the day scraping off the snow.

Shanon Eiben spends Sunday scraping Ocracoke roads. Photo: C. Leinbach/Ocracoke Observer

Following a night of gusting winds Saturday, the island lost power late Sunday morning. Tideland Electric Membership Cooperative crews quickly jumped onto fixing the outage, which was fully restored island-wide by 3:30 p.m. Tideland officials did not give a cause for the outage but it occurred on the island.

Hyde County issued the following snowfall information on Feb. 1:

The National Weather Service forecasts cold weather to continue into Tuesday.

Ocracoke School will be closed on Monday and the Ocracoke Health Center and its pharmacy will be closed Monday and Tuesday .

High winds blew the snow off the beach. Photo: P. Vankevich/Ocracoke Observer

Several weather warnings also remain in effect until Feb. 2, including a Winter Storm Warning, Coastal Flood Warning, High Wind Warning, High Surf Warning, and Extreme Cold Warning.

NC Highway 12 remains closed between Rodanthe and Oregon Inlet due to hazardous conditions and on Ocracoke from the pony pens north, and all ferry operations to and from Ocracoke Island remain suspended.

The all-time record low of 13°F occurred on Feb. 20, 2015. On Jan. 24, 2003, nine inches of snow fell on the island and remained on the ground for five days.

Howard Street. Photo: C. Leinbach/Ocracoke Observer
The Island Inn Commons with a winter look. Photo: P. Vankevich/Ocracoke Observer
Community Square in snow flurries, Jan. 31, 2026. Photo: P. Vankevich/Ocracoke Observer
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