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Mr. Luddite February 12th 15 09:33 PM

Made my day
 
On 2/12/2015 4:17 PM, Wayne.B wrote:
On Thu, 12 Feb 2015 15:21:50 -0500, Abit Loco
wrote:

On Thu, 12 Feb 2015 14:15:44 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote:

On 2/12/2015 8:19 AM, Abit Loco wrote:
On Wed, 11 Feb 2015 19:09:59 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote:

I spent about 6 hours outside today moving snow from here to there just
trying to make room for truck deliveries, etc.

Came in the house only to receive an email from my sister regarding
the storm forecast for this coming Saturday through Monday.
She is the Deputy Director of Emergency Management for Plymouth.
(10 miles south of us).

Here's the email:

-------------------------------------

THIS IS TO BE TAKEN VERY SERIOUSLY -

We just got a call directly from the Taunton Weather Service. They
NEVER call us directly and we monitor their site as storms approach.

The head forecaster, the one who approves all forecasts to go out, said
he wanted to give us a heads up that the approaching storm is likely to
be like none we've seen before. He had HIGH confidence that our area is
going to get hit and when we do, it will be with 1 to 2, possibly 3 feet
of snow and blizzard like conditions at times with winds at 50-70 mph.
With the already sagging branches on trees from snow that is still on
them, there will undoubtedly be power outages, perhaps lengthy. Mobile
homes should be prepared for roof collapses.

I don't send this to alarm you, but to give you time to start thinking
seriously of what you need to do to prepare. IF, and I hope that's a
big IF, this comes to fruition the way they expect, this could be a
life-threatening storm. We are praying the NWS is wrong, but better to
be prepared however you can be than not be.

Sorry to be the bearer of bad news.

----------------------------------

This is insane.

Best be cranking up those Hondas, just to be sure.



I've been outside since 7:30 this morning widening the driveway and
plowing places on lawn areas to put additional snow should this storm
materialize. Also spent an hour with the tractor uncovering my
neighbor's mailbox that was buried in a 7 foot high by 9 feet wide pile
of snow. Then, visited a friend who plows and sands for the state. He
dumped a bucketful of treated sand (has salt in it) in the bed of my
truck and I spread about half of it on the driveway. I'll save the rest
for later. Then, shoveled the deck above the 4 season porch (again)
and shoveled a path to the propane tank for for the garage heater.

One thing is for sure. Getting lots of exercise. I must be in
halfway decent cardiac shape otherwise I should have flopped over
by now.


Be friggin' careful. Once you drop, it's pretty damn late!


===

Very late, and unfortunately it happens frequently. I probably know
of half a dozen people who have died shoveling snow. It seems to be a
combination of the cold and exertion that brings it on.



Being 65 it's something on your mind, for sure. This winter has been
the ultimate stress test though. I've shoveled more snow than I have
in many years. So far, so good. That said, today's activities were
a bit more strenuous than normal. Right now I am relaxing with a
couple of rare, liquid Advils ... namely a couple of Sam Adams Lagers.




Tim February 12th 15 09:36 PM

Made my day
 
Not only so Wayne but snow is loaded with Nitrogen which isn't a good replacement for oxygen in the blood system

Mr. Luddite February 12th 15 09:44 PM

Made my day
 
On 2/12/2015 4:36 PM, Tim wrote:
Not only so Wayne but snow is loaded with Nitrogen which isn't a good replacement for oxygen in the blood system



Nitrogen? I thought snow (frozen water vapor) was H2O.



Tim February 12th 15 10:22 PM

Made my day
 
On Thursday, February 12, 2015 at 1:44:18 PM UTC-8, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2015 4:36 PM, Tim wrote:
Not only so Wayne but snow is loaded with Nitrogen which isn't a good replacement for oxygen in the blood system



Nitrogen? I thought snow (frozen water vapor) was H2O.


Nitrogen is there Richard. Snow is called the 'poor mans fertilizer"

http://cultureofchemistry.fieldofsci...n-in-snow.html

Mr. Luddite February 12th 15 10:46 PM

Made my day
 
On 2/12/2015 5:22 PM, Tim wrote:
On Thursday, February 12, 2015 at 1:44:18 PM UTC-8, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2015 4:36 PM, Tim wrote:
Not only so Wayne but snow is loaded with Nitrogen which isn't a good replacement for oxygen in the blood system



Nitrogen? I thought snow (frozen water vapor) was H2O.


Nitrogen is there Richard. Snow is called the 'poor mans fertilizer"

http://cultureofchemistry.fieldofsci...n-in-snow.html



Yeah, when you mentioned it I looked it up. Miniscule amounts though.
The nitrogen is actually in the air, not the precipitation.
Questionable whether it is really a "natural fertilizer" or an old
wive's tale.



Tim February 12th 15 11:06 PM

Made my day
 
On Thursday, February 12, 2015 at 2:46:09 PM UTC-8, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2015 5:22 PM, Tim wrote:
On Thursday, February 12, 2015 at 1:44:18 PM UTC-8, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2015 4:36 PM, Tim wrote:
Not only so Wayne but snow is loaded with Nitrogen which isn't a good replacement for oxygen in the blood system



Nitrogen? I thought snow (frozen water vapor) was H2O.


Nitrogen is there Richard. Snow is called the 'poor mans fertilizer"

http://cultureofchemistry.fieldofsci...n-in-snow.html



Yeah, when you mentioned it I looked it up. Miniscule amounts though.
The nitrogen is actually in the air, not the precipitation.
Questionable whether it is really a "natural fertilizer" or an old
wive's tale.


Yes, it's in the air, and you're breathing it. Nitrogen is naturally in the air anyhow, but when it's snowing (or raining) there is a heavier concentration of it.

I think it's more than a mere wives tail. It seems the crp fields contain a higher nitrogen level after a snow than before. minute but higher.

Mr. Luddite February 12th 15 11:19 PM

Made my day
 
On 2/12/2015 6:06 PM, Tim wrote:
On Thursday, February 12, 2015 at 2:46:09 PM UTC-8, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2015 5:22 PM, Tim wrote:
On Thursday, February 12, 2015 at 1:44:18 PM UTC-8, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2015 4:36 PM, Tim wrote:
Not only so Wayne but snow is loaded with Nitrogen which isn't a good replacement for oxygen in the blood system



Nitrogen? I thought snow (frozen water vapor) was H2O.

Nitrogen is there Richard. Snow is called the 'poor mans fertilizer"

http://cultureofchemistry.fieldofsci...n-in-snow.html



Yeah, when you mentioned it I looked it up. Miniscule amounts though.
The nitrogen is actually in the air, not the precipitation.
Questionable whether it is really a "natural fertilizer" or an old
wive's tale.


Yes, it's in the air, and you're breathing it. Nitrogen is naturally in the air anyhow, but when it's snowing (or raining) there is a heavier concentration of it.

I think it's more than a mere wives tail. It seems the crp fields contain a higher nitrogen level after a snow than before. minute but higher.


The atmosphere is something like 76 percent nitrogen. I don't
understand why rain or snow increases it.




Tim February 12th 15 11:49 PM

Made my day
 
On Thursday, February 12, 2015 at 3:19:06 PM UTC-8, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2015 6:06 PM, Tim wrote:
On Thursday, February 12, 2015 at 2:46:09 PM UTC-8, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2015 5:22 PM, Tim wrote:
On Thursday, February 12, 2015 at 1:44:18 PM UTC-8, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2015 4:36 PM, Tim wrote:
Not only so Wayne but snow is loaded with Nitrogen which isn't a good replacement for oxygen in the blood system



Nitrogen? I thought snow (frozen water vapor) was H2O.

Nitrogen is there Richard. Snow is called the 'poor mans fertilizer"

http://cultureofchemistry.fieldofsci...n-in-snow.html



Yeah, when you mentioned it I looked it up. Miniscule amounts though.
The nitrogen is actually in the air, not the precipitation.
Questionable whether it is really a "natural fertilizer" or an old
wive's tale.


Yes, it's in the air, and you're breathing it. Nitrogen is naturally in the air anyhow, but when it's snowing (or raining) there is a heavier concentration of it.

I think it's more than a mere wives tail. It seems the crp fields contain a higher nitrogen level after a snow than before. minute but higher.


The atmosphere is something like 76 percent nitrogen. I don't
understand why rain or snow increases it.


It really doesn't. But it concentrates it more to the earths surface.

KC February 13th 15 03:36 AM

Made my day
 
On 2/12/2015 3:21 PM, Abit Loco wrote:
On Thu, 12 Feb 2015 14:15:44 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote:

On 2/12/2015 8:19 AM, Abit Loco wrote:
On Wed, 11 Feb 2015 19:09:59 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote:

I spent about 6 hours outside today moving snow from here to there just
trying to make room for truck deliveries, etc.

Came in the house only to receive an email from my sister regarding
the storm forecast for this coming Saturday through Monday.
She is the Deputy Director of Emergency Management for Plymouth.
(10 miles south of us).

Here's the email:

-------------------------------------

THIS IS TO BE TAKEN VERY SERIOUSLY -

We just got a call directly from the Taunton Weather Service. They
NEVER call us directly and we monitor their site as storms approach.

The head forecaster, the one who approves all forecasts to go out, said
he wanted to give us a heads up that the approaching storm is likely to
be like none we've seen before. He had HIGH confidence that our area is
going to get hit and when we do, it will be with 1 to 2, possibly 3 feet
of snow and blizzard like conditions at times with winds at 50-70 mph.
With the already sagging branches on trees from snow that is still on
them, there will undoubtedly be power outages, perhaps lengthy. Mobile
homes should be prepared for roof collapses.

I don't send this to alarm you, but to give you time to start thinking
seriously of what you need to do to prepare. IF, and I hope that's a
big IF, this comes to fruition the way they expect, this could be a
life-threatening storm. We are praying the NWS is wrong, but better to
be prepared however you can be than not be.

Sorry to be the bearer of bad news.

----------------------------------

This is insane.

Best be cranking up those Hondas, just to be sure.



I've been outside since 7:30 this morning widening the driveway and
plowing places on lawn areas to put additional snow should this storm
materialize. Also spent an hour with the tractor uncovering my
neighbor's mailbox that was buried in a 7 foot high by 9 feet wide pile
of snow. Then, visited a friend who plows and sands for the state. He
dumped a bucketful of treated sand (has salt in it) in the bed of my
truck and I spread about half of it on the driveway. I'll save the rest
for later. Then, shoveled the deck above the 4 season porch (again)
and shoveled a path to the propane tank for for the garage heater.

One thing is for sure. Getting lots of exercise. I must be in
halfway decent cardiac shape otherwise I should have flopped over
by now.


Be friggin' careful. Once you drop, it's pretty damn late!


Me and Jess had to dig a hole through the side of the road pile to make
a path to the fuel oil filler hube on the side of the hous... I was
shocked and delighted how soft and light it was, even in the street side
snow bank. I dug through it in less than five minutes but despite what
wafa and others say, I still can get out there and get it done :)

Califbill February 13th 15 03:44 AM

Made my day
 
"Mr. Luddite" wrote:
On 2/12/2015 6:06 PM, Tim wrote:
On Thursday, February 12, 2015 at 2:46:09 PM UTC-8, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2015 5:22 PM, Tim wrote:
On Thursday, February 12, 2015 at 1:44:18 PM UTC-8, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/12/2015 4:36 PM, Tim wrote:
Not only so Wayne but snow is loaded with Nitrogen which isn't a
good replacement for oxygen in the blood system



Nitrogen? I thought snow (frozen water vapor) was H2O.

Nitrogen is there Richard. Snow is called the 'poor mans fertilizer"

http://cultureofchemistry.fieldofsci...n-in-snow.html



Yeah, when you mentioned it I looked it up. Miniscule amounts though.
The nitrogen is actually in the air, not the precipitation.
Questionable whether it is really a "natural fertilizer" or an old
wive's tale.


Yes, it's in the air, and you're breathing it. Nitrogen is naturally in
the air anyhow, but when it's snowing (or raining) there is a heavier concentration of it.

I think it's more than a mere wives tail. It seems the crp fields
contain a higher nitrogen level after a snow than before. minute but higher.


The atmosphere is something like 76 percent nitrogen. I don't understand
why rain or snow increases it.


I understand most of the nitrogen in the atmosphere that is made available
to the ground is via lighting.


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