Frigid and snowy weather stories

Marie5656

SF VIP
Location
Batavia, NY
Many stories are out there now about the serious weather we are having up here in the Northeastern US these days. Frigid cold, lots of snow. Here is a story from NY State:

LORRAINE, N.Y. -- A woman in Lorraine, New York, was trapped in her home Wednesday due to piled-up snow, requiring the help of firefighters and a bulldozer.This morning, a woman who lived on French Settlement Road could not get out of her home. More than six feet of snow fell yesterday in some parts of Jefferson County.Firefighters used a bulldozer, shovels and plenty of manpower to clear the area in front of the home. "Residents in the Town of Lorraine and Worth, please check on your neighbors," fire department officials wrote on the department's Facebook page.
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That's some serious snow for sure, easy to get snowed inside your house. We had some blizzards like that in the past, but this month just a few inches. Hope you're safe Marie, it's 30 degrees warmer today than it was yesterday and day before, we had single digits at night and teens in the daytime....nothing like in the Northeast though.
 

That's some serious snow for sure, easy to get snowed inside your house. We had some blizzards like that in the past, but this month just a few inches. Hope you're safe Marie, it's 30 degrees warmer today than it was yesterday and day before, we had single digits at night and teens in the daytime....nothing like in the Northeast though.

Thanks. We are fine here, except for the cold. Mostly single digits, at least through next week.
 
I remember heavily frozen window panes. We'd heat up coins to unfreeze little places to see out of. Our bedrooms were all upstairs, which was woefully-underinsulated. We'd go to bed in thick flannel gowns and pj's with wool socks on our feet, under pounds of quilts and blankets. We'd stay warm, but WOOO! when you had to get out of bed in the morning.
 
I remember heavily frozen window panes. We'd heat up coins to unfreeze little places to see out of. Our bedrooms were all upstairs, which was woefully-underinsulated. We'd go to bed in thick flannel gowns and pj's with wool socks on our feet, under pounds of quilts and blankets. We'd stay warm, but WOOO! when you had to get out of bed in the morning.

I remember about the same thing in the winter, Jujube. I grew up in northern Idaho, and below zero was a normal winter for us.
My bedroom was in the very back of the house (which was an old house anyway), and the only heat we had in the whole house was an oil stove in the front room. My room had been the back porch at one time, and then closed in, and it did not have much insulation at all.
The windows would always be covered over with those beautiful whorls of frost and I couldn’t see outside. If I blew on the window for a while, it made a little circle so I could see out, at least until it froze back over again.
I slept in my warmest pants and a sweatshirt, and bundled down inside the sleeping bag and a quilt on top of that. It was pretty warm in there once I got over the freezing and shaking from getting ready for bed, but, like you said, getting back out of the bed the next morning was awful.
I would have my clothes laid out the night before, jump out of bed, grab the clothes and streak for the front room where the oil stove was doing its best to keep that old house warm, and get dressed as close to the stove as i could get without burning myself.
Just thinking about it makes me glad that I don’t live up there anymore !
 
I used to shovel a path, layer by layer from the top because the snow was so deep and too heavy to take any more than that. I'd layer until I got near the ground and then go further and do another section, making a path to my back fence and a looped return route back to the porch. I'd make another path to the side fence and back, both areas where my dogs were encouraged to go potty since pups. It was fun to watch them walk through their maze.
 
It's arctic cold where I am. I trickle icemelt on the asphalt on my way to the car every morning. We've had snow which has frozen into ice. It's much worse for many who've really been dumped on in the snow dept.
 
As a pilot, I was twice stuck in Chicago when they closed the airport due to a blizzard back in the early 90's both times. The temperature was well below zero, which makes starting a jet engine a bit of a challenge. Once the engine has been started, the next concern is not having the fuel freeze. Although jets fly somewhere around 37,000 ft. and above with the temperature at that elevation is somewhere around -40° to -60°, fuel can still freeze while on the ground and having a frozen fuel line is a real problem, but only if you are in the air. It's a different story once the plane is airborn because the fuel passes through several different heated engine parts that keeps the fuel from freezing.

The biggest challenge for airports in the north where it tends to snow a lot is keeping the runways open and clear of any ice or snow.
 


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