Lil Foot
Well-known member
Lifetime Member
Equipment
1979 B7100DT Gear, Nissan Hanix N150-2 Excavator
Okay, if you really need to be that picky.How can you have "wet snow", when snow is made of frozen crystals of water? If snow contains water, then it is slush! That is why you have to plow slush because a snowblower makes a poor slush blower.
In fact, Antarctica is a 'Desert', just a Polar one.Yes, it does snow in the desert!
It has been some time since we got really blasted but in the past I would plow then set the alarm to wake . in a few hours to go out and keep up. First time I ignored that I had a heck of of time. Snow was too heavy to push without the blade turned as far as it could go and even then the B ran out of traction. Snow over the top of the blade and piling up in front of the wheels. Tried to raise the plow and ran out for clearance. It is a lesson you have to live through to appreciate the old guys that plow every couple of inches.clipped
That is why I learned years ago to plow with the storm as best as I can. I can remember some blizzards where it was falling so fast that you couldn't keep up with it. I have a bad feeling that I should have put a clutch in my plow truck because I am not certain that the BX23S is up to the task if we get hammered.
I am in Canada but we do most of our measuring here at home in inches, feet, yards, etc.Almost 22 cm, huh? That's darn near 10 inches!
You are in Canada, right?
I jest, I jest.
We're supposed to get nailed this weekend. I've heard anywhere between 5 and 27 inches... It is what it is. If we lose power, we've got the generator. I can blow snow... I have a truck... This is Northern Michigan, it's not the end of the world.
I have never seen humming birds in the winter before, interesting.We got our first real snow and it was a doozy - about a foot. Unusual for around here. Then we lost power - but a pic of feeding time - we have about 30 wintering with us this year. View attachment 92546