billski
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As much as I hate to say it, when it came to snow the worst I have seen were the two years I lived in Boston. I have never seen as much hype/craziness as down there. Honestly it snows EVERY year folks! The media always made things sound like it was the end of the world. We also had folks who would use 3 inches of snow as an excuse not to go to work.
As much as I hate to say it, when it came to snow the worst I have seen were the two years I lived in Boston. I have never seen as much hype/craziness as down there. Honestly it snows EVERY year folks! The media always made things sound like it was the end of the world. We also had folks who would use 3 inches of snow as an excuse not to go to work.
Last week, people where shocked when I showed up at work the day after we got a foot of snow, even though the roads were clear down to the pavement.
maybe the thought you'd be skiing?
I resemble that remark!We also had folks who would use 3 inches of snow as an excuse not to go to work.
Would you want to be that car that got stuck in the street and block the plow for 3 days?
HA...I'll tell ya, lived in Brighton, Mass for over 18yrs. 93' winter was just horrendous...mainly cuz I didn't ski I think. Most time was spent casting the new flyrod on the flat apt. roof...waiting for trout season in VT to start...but that winter...took ~4days for plow to get to us. Had like 24" of snow, what a mess...not to mention the games(ie warfare) of on-street parking that went on.
If I ever thought a big storm was gonna lock me down, I'd get out of Dodge early, and ski my brains out some place. :razz:
I don't think that would have worked during the blizzard of March 1969 at Sugarloaf. They got 5 feet. I lived near Augusta where we got 3 feet with drifts, and we couldn't go anywhere for 5 days. My father couldn't get to work because there were 8-foot drifts across Route 104; we heard that many of the state's big plows broke down trying to get through those drifts.
We finally got up to Sugarloaf on Day 6 and they were still plowing out the parking lots. I think if you had been stranded there at the start of the storm, there wouldn't have been much skiing for the first few days - staff coudn't get there and the base was already deep, so they had to shovel out the lifts. And forget about hiking up in 5 feet of fresh.
Prepare to be thrilled. That was probaby a once-in-10-years storm for New England as a whole, once-in-50-years for any specific location. There was a four-footer in 1978 IIRC that was centered over Rhode Island, and I think there have been a couple of 4-footers since - can anyone provide dates? Parts of Vermont and the Catskills got 4-5 feet last February, right? So guessing you're in your 50s and healthy, and live in Lexington, you've got a 50-50 chance of getting a 4-footer in your lifetime right where you live, and 3 or 4 chances to anticipate such a storm at some ski area, if you read the forecasts right.
I don't think climate change means we're less likely to get huge blizzards in the future. The trends are to more extreme weather, and in New England, I think there's a measured trend to more precipitation on an annual basis. Certainly we've had some unusual midwinter rainstorms; I don't see any reason why we won't have more 4-foot blizzards.
Oh, wait, were you kidding?
The problem is that we don't get storms like that any longer. The roads are always passable within a day. If we get another one like that in my lifetime, I'll be thrilled.
The Catskills got 6 feet in a storm last winter.
People who say it doesn't snow like it used to are severely misremembering things. As a data junky Bill you should know this.
The facts don't suggest it snowed any more or any less at any point in time over the past 50 years.
Last week, people where shocked when I showed up at work the day after we got a foot of snow, even though the roads were clear down to the pavement.