Rick A
Subscriber
It stopped snowing last night, just over 20 inches of whiteness up here on the mountain.
Hope you have a good snow blower. We have two snow blowers and a Kubota tractor with rear blade and front loader, we are prepared.1.5 feet of heavy heavy stuff.
Hope you have a good snow blower. We have two snow blowers and a Kubota tractor with rear blade and front loader, we are prepared.
FWIW, if you were my neighbor, I'd run one of my machines down your walkway and have the kid do the driveway for ya.Ha! I have 4 different shovels. Yes, a snow blower would have helped the preliminary cleanup. I would have done nothing for the driveway apron.
Anyhow, can't afford either of those machines, nor do I know how to maintain them. Instead I creep ever so closer to busting a gut and blowing my back again.
FWIW, if you were my neighbor, I'd run one of my machines down your walkway and have the kid do the driveway for ya.
I do the swearing around here. I grew up holding the tools for my dad.I used to tinker on machines with my old neighbor. We ran a 2 stroke together. Was nice. I'd hold the tools and he'd swear and ask for tools.
Sleet is starting to accumulate here. About to go spread rock salt to keep the driveway from getting a cap of ice before the snow (supposedly) is to arrive later today.
Bought 50 lbs of rock salt; should have bought 150. Looks like a substantial ice sheet will form prior to any snow in 22960.
Started snowing around 10 AM, dropping an inch per hour average.
Expecting 12-18 inches, possibly much more.Expectation.??
We should only see three inches or so here, but points west and out to CT a lot more, I read.
The new Toro snowblower sitting in the shed has not seen much action in past two years...
Photo; the pre-snow light is interesting. Some folks may know how to use it?
I'm in eastern Iowa. We are experiencing typical weather. Typical is we have no idea what will happen until it happens. In the last 30 years we've had 4 once in 500 year floods. This summer we had a Derecho I had never heard of it. In recorded history never had anything like this. A line of straight line winds 100 miles wide, 140 mph, swept across the state. Flattened crops, toppled 200 year old Oak, Maple and Walnut trees whole, literally looked like a head of broccoli laying on it's side.
Roofs gone, nuts. In Cedar Rapids, the city has been working for 6 months trying to clean up.
Last week it was 60 F, this week snow 10 F.
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