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Peter Hendra wrote in
: On Mon, 30 Apr 2007 01:37:56 +0000, Larry wrote: Certainly a different type of farming than that of New Zealand. Seasonal snowfalls do sometimes cause a few problems in some parts of the high country in the South Island but the stock - sheep and beef cattle - is still left outside. In the rest of the country the grass still grows in the winter, albeit less prolifically than in the flush of spring and autumn - we don't experience a "fall" as the leaves of the native trees stay on - much more sensible. I suppose that is why New Zealand butter and cheddar cheese is able to be sold here in Trinidad - low cost of production. NZ sounds like South Carolina. We rarely get any snow at all and only once or twice in a lifetime is there snow to close the place down. In 1973, the last snow storm in SC, the state was shut down for nearly a week! Some trees shed in the fall here. Others shed in the spring with the new growth pushing the very hard Southern Oak leaves out of their sockets just in time for the flowers to bloom, then fall out in massive flower storms to clog every port on every car they blow into...a real mess. SC farmers are, mostly, way too lazy to dairy farm. There are few dairy farms across the state. They raise cash crops like soybeans, tobacco, stuff that is nearly plant-and-forget-until-harvest, except for a few bug sprayings, mostly from airplanes. The rich outer sea islands have very fertile ground for vegetable crops, melons, we even have a historic TEA plantation, the only one inside the USA, right here in Charleston. We used to be famous, back in the plantation days, for rice. The place is covered with abandoned rice paddies, now grown over with weeds just itching to clog a prop if you get out of the channel. It sounds terribly romantic to have such snowfalls, to be able to ice skate, ski and make snowmen outside your back door and feed the cows in a barn, but the romance obviously pales to the farmer. If we want snow, we have to drive several hours to the mountains, and only for a couple of months of the year. My youngest son had to wait to get to Afyon in central Turkey at the age of ten in order to make his first snowman. Still, it was a beautiful setting. It was in the grounds of the great mosque there which, with its 15th century spirally tiled onion domed minaret is a work of art in itself. I had gone in to pray and they (owner and son) played in the snow outside. I was amazed at the locals who took off their shoes and socks to wash their feet in the freezing water of the fountain before prayer and who walked barefooted on the ice to the door. Still, they were used to it. The streets were covered in solid ice. Difficult to drive and walk. The housewives were putting the ashes from their fires on the snow in a line so that people could more safely walk. Magical to us though. No other tourists - apparently wrong season. When I was young, in the 1950's, NY state had terrible snow storms from the Great Lakes "Lake Effect" snows. It was frigid cold and the local lake, Owasco Lake, ring finger of the upstate Finger Lakes region, froze so solid you could drive a snowplow-equipped dump truck out in the middle of it and plow the snow off the ice to make a car/motorcycle race track...right in the middle of the lake. I spent many days with my grandfather, sitting in his gas mantle lantern-heated ice fishing shack on skis we towed out at 3AM to clean out the ice fishing holes and set the "tip ups", an automatic snatching rig, spring loaded to set the hooks of any fish that bit the little minnow wiggling on the hook below. The holes were augered into the ice with a special gasoline powered auger drill and the ice was about 1-2 ft thick, where the fish wintered in warmer water on the bottom. That same lake, now that the sun has increased in intensity in one of its pulsating cycles, hardly freezes over and certainly not hard enough to drive on, any more. My time in the 1950's is during the 1940-1975 cooling period the Global Warming Business has amnesia about....right when Americans drove these awful gasoline beasts, heated their houses with gun oil furnaces and lit the lights with coal-fired huge electric plants. So much for man-made global warming nonsense. It was DEATHLY COLD! Of course, that wouldn't create massive government grants to fight global warming, which is caused by the big thermonuclear star 93M miles away....(sigh). Man can't stand it when HE doesn't control everything. Did the power lines break because of the weight of the snow or due to the copper becoming brittle with the intense cold? N ever seen such a thing. Not exactly. What would happen some time is the powerlines were simply bowled over by shifting snow several feet thick, sort of like a mini glacier. At other times, overzealous snowplow crews put too much snow up against them and they broke off at the base. Cars drove in snow canyons, especially after the invention of the snow blowers mounted on heavy trucks. In grade school (primary school) we got Mimeographed handouts from the power company, New York State Electric and Gouge, warning us NOT to touch any high voltage overhead power lines we could reach with a stick if we stood on top of the snow banks the plows had piled up after a big storm. The banks were THAT high! My grandparents had a lake house, where they lived most of the time. It had a back door on the first floor, for summer, and on the second floor, for sometimes in winter when the first floor was "undersnow". This snow mass, near the edges of spring, would also melt during the day, freeze hard again at night, creating a layered cake of solid ice over snow over solid ice over snow by spring. Any warm spell made a new ice sheet of the snow piled up everywhere....great for walking or hunting until it got unstable and you fell through it on every step, ripping your skin open on the jagged ice edges of the hole your boot made. Every spring, of course, there would be a sudden warm period, melting vast fields of deep snow quite quickly. This caused every stream to become a torrent, every river to flood like hell and the lake to overflow, flooding the whole valley even with the flood gates running wide open. My grandparents' lake house, of course, took this into consideration. It was on pilings, as were all the others, to allow the lake to just run under it at will until it drained away. You parked way up the road where it was out of the water and rode the aluminum fishing boat with 7.5hp Evinrude Sportwin outboard to the house. There were cleats by the back door and all the neighbors would help each other move their lake docks up to the back doors of the houses during floods to tie boats up to...creating each house as an island...complete with power, heat, water, etc....an inconvenience, not a catastrophy like New Orleans. The flood waters were 0.01C so we didn't do much diving off the roof into the lake water covering up the road....(c; You had two choices to visit the neighbors...take the boat or use your waders...your choice. As this melt subsided, a wonderful little silver fish called "S'melt" started running up every creek out of the lake to spawn. You were only allowed 4 buckets of S'melt per day catch limit with your dipnets. There were MILLIONS of them in every little creek for a couple of weeks until the eggs were laid for next year. S'melt are amazingly easy to cook and eat, being just bigger than a minnow. Their entire body was what you ate. All their organs were contained right below the head just forward of their gills. You simply cut them behind the gills and threw them into the deep fat fryer you'd find us kids staring into waiting to see them float (done) a few seconds later. To eat them, you simply put them into your mouth, tail sticking out, lightly bit down just ahead of the tail and pull the tail out....complete with all their bones....too easy! I could still eat a hundred....(c; A little lemon sauce to dip them in is nice. I'm not sure if they still run like that, now. The old lake is so polluted by the damned sewage plants the Federal bureaucrats forced on all the little towns there are huge algae blooms and lots of lake pollution. When I lived there, you could drink the lake water, and we did! Not any more. Everyone used to have cesspools and septic tanks with drainage fields in the fast draining gravel soils of the valley. How stupid to change what worked for 300 years. It was a fantastic place to grow up. When I call my old friends I grew up with who never left the town, I always ask them, "What day was Summer this year?"....(c; |
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