Guadalajara has been experiencing summer temperatures of around 31 degrees Celsius. Then a freak storm rained ice.

A freak hail storm struck Guadalajara, one of Mexico‘s most populous cities on Sunday, shocking residents and trapping vehicles in a deluge of ice pellets up to two metres deep.

“I’ve never seen such scenes in Guadalajara,” said the state Governor, Enrique Alfaro.

“Then we ask ourselves if climate change is real. These are never-before-seen natural phenomena,” he said. “It’s incredible.”

Guadalajara, located north of Mexico City with a population of around five million, has been experiencing summer temperatures of up to 31 degrees Celsius in recent days.

While seasonal hail storms do occur, there is no record of anything like the one that covered the city in ice in the early hours of Sunday morning.

A truck buried in ice after a heavy storm of rain and hail which affected some areas of the city [Fernando Carranza/Reuters]

At least six neighbourhoods on the outskirts of the city woke up to ice pellets up to two metres deep.

The hail trapped cars and truck in the streets, as ice froze the vehicles in place [Ulises Ruiz/ AFP]

While children scampered around and hurled ice balls at each other, civil protection personnel and soldiers brought out heavy machinery to clear the roads.

Soldiers were brought in to help remove the layer of hail that covered streets and sidewalks and damaged homes [Fernando Carranza/Reuters]

Nearly 200 homes and businesses reported hail damage, and at least 50 vehicles were swept away by the deluge of ice in hilly areas, some buried under piles of pellets.

While no casualties were reported, two people showed “early signs of hypothermia”, the state Civil Protection office said.