Who knew Hurricane Dorian would bring snow?

The storm’s waves churned up more than a dozen bricks of cocaine on two of the Florida’s beaches, according to new reports.

Most recently, a beachgoer told a Melbourne police officer on patrol at Paradise Beach and Park around 8 a.m. Tuesday that something suspicious had washed ashore, NBC News reported.

An officer examined the find and determined that it was a brick inside a package, “wrapped in a way that was consistent with narcotics,” a spokeswoman for the local police department told NBC.

The brick was tested and determined to be a kilo of cocaine, which will be destroyed, the spokeswoman told the network.

The outside of the brick appeared to be marked with the beginning of a word, but the only visible letters are “D-I-A-M-A-N-T,” according to the report.

Four days earlier, authorities about 20 miles north in Cocoa Beach found a duffel bag packed with 15 kilos of blow — worth at least $300,000 — that had also washed ashore, Florida Today reported.

Another beachgoer reported that find around 5:30 p.m. Friday, near the park’s Sixth Street entrance, according to the report.

“There is a possibility that more will come onshore,” Manny Hernandez, spokesman for the Cocoa Beach Police Department, told the outlet. “Especially now with these conditions. It could be coming from anywhere.”

“We’re telling people to be cautious and not to grab or handle it because if there is an opening, it can go into your pores and you can overdose,” he added.

Authorities contacted federal customs agents, who now have custody of the drugs, Hernandez said.

“I think this is the largest find we’ve had in a while,” the police official told the outlet.