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SNOW SURPRISE IN HOUSTON:Fluffy flakes bring delight to some,consternation to others-and tie a 64-year-old record

Falling snowflakes glimmered in streetlights, so wide that they billowed to the ground like parachutes, and so tantalizing that even awestruck adults reached out their hands or stuck out their tongues to catch one.By Wednesday evening, the flakes were big enough to hold their shape for a moment on the street before melting into the pavement, and a dusting had collected on parked cars in some parts of town.The flurries tied a record for Houston's earliest snowfall ever and warmed the hearts of winter weather lovers who have pined for snow since it last made an appearance on Christmas Eve 2004."I've got a pot roast in the Crock-Pot, and I'm going to go home, change into my warmest pajamas and eat pot roast and enjoy what may be the only real winter day we have all year," said Tina Arnold, an Illinois native who took advantage of the wintry backdrop to pick up Christmas presents Wednesday at The Woodlands Mall.Since 1895, records indicate, snow has fallen this early just once-on Dec. 10, 1944.Ali Ahly had been cooped up in an office all day when he stopped to gas up his white Mercedes-Benz near the corner of Hillcroft and the Southwest Freeway at 7:30 p.m.The 43-year-old, wearing jeans and a leather jacket, stepped out from under the gas station canopy and looked up as the downy flakes sifted toward him. Then he stretched his hand toward the sky."This is real snow," he said. "I feel like I'm in Lake Tahoe."Ahly's 9-year-old daughter is the family's true snow aficionado, he said. She went running around a mall parking lot that afternoon when the flakes began to fall."She's going nuts," he said.Across the street from the gas station, a line formed for lattes and hot chocolate at the Starbucks drive-through window. There was no wait at the cash register inside, however.
"People just don't want to walk inside," said a barista.Outside, 18-year-old Ingrid Mejia beamed in the brisk night air as her 10-year-old brother shivered in cargo shorts."I'm excited," Ingrid said. "I just hope it stays overnight, so it's on the ground when we wake up."The Lamar High senior wasn't holding her breath for a snow day, though. She couldn't think of a time when winter weather had delayed school."I don't think so, unless it gets to be a blizzard," she said hopefully....
By ERIC BERGER,, JENNIFER LATSON and JENNIFER LEAHY
Chronicle staff writer Bradley Olson contributed to this report.
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