Local

Central Pa. dad recreated ’96 igloo sleepover with his kids Monday

Drew Zimmerman recreated an igloo his dad made for him during the blizzard of 1996 for his own kids during the recent snowstorm.

Drew Zimmerman and his three kids, Ruby, 5, Opal, 9, and Onyx, 7, made and slept in this igloo Monday night, re-creating a 30-year-old childhood memory of Drew's. (Photo: USA Today Network)

In the aftermath of the blizzard of 1996, on Jan. 14, to be specific, Drew Zimmerman’s dad Jim had a great notion.

He created a huge pile of snow with his snowblower and when he headed off to work – his business is Zimmerman Jewelers in York – he told his son Drew and daughter Ashley to hollow it out to make an igloo. If they were successful, they would sleep in it that night.

They were and they did.

Drew was 7 at the time and doesn’t remember a lot about the construction, but he remembers sleeping in it with his father and older sister in a sleeping bag atop a cardboard floor. “I remember it was cold,” he said, recalling the temperature that night dipped to 18 degrees.

“I thought that was freezing,” Drew said.

Thirty years ago, Drew Zimmerman and his sister Ashley slept in an igloo they made with the help of their father, Jim. Drew recreated the childhood memory with his kids during this week’s snowstorm. (Photo: USA Today Network)

 

But it was nothing compared to Monday night when Drew re-created his childhood memory with his kids, Opal, 9, Onyx, 7, and Ruby, 5, in the yard of their Manchester Township home. (Drew is a watchmaker in York, but you can see the influence of his father in his kids’ names.)

The entire construction process took two days, Drew said. He piled up the snow Sunday and let it freeze to strengthen its structural integrity. Then, on Monday, he and his kids hollowed it out and shored it up to make sure it was safe, a process that took maybe three hours.

And that night, they slept in it, atop a cardboard floor, huddled under a comforter to share their body heat. Like his father, he fitted a piece of wood over the opening to keep the heat in, making sure to cut a one-inch-square hole in it to allow air to flow in so they wouldn’t asphyxiate.

He checked the temperature. It was 9 degrees overnight. It was cold and Drew didn’t sleep. “My kids fell right asleep,” he said. “I might have dozed off in the middle of the night, but I woke right up.”

He also stayed awake to check on his kids during the night, to make sure they were OK.

He would recommend it, come next snowstorm.

“Done the right way, taking the right safety precautions,” he said, “it makes an excellent family tradition.”

Keep The Keystone free for everyone

If you found this story useful, would you consider supporting The Keystone?

Every day, our team works to provide Pennsylvanians with free, fact-based reporting about the issues, policies, and decisions shaping life across the commonwealth. We believe everyone deserves access to trustworthy local news—not just those who can afford a subscription.

That's why you'll never hit a paywall here (though we may ask you to sign up for our newsletter). But keeping our journalism free depends on readers who believe informed communities are worth investing in.

If our reporting has helped you better understand what's happening in Pennsylvania, please consider making a donation today. Every contribution helps us continue reporting, informing, and serving communities across the state.

Patrick Berkery
Patrick Berkery Senior Newsletter Editor
Support our team