Thursday, March 20, 2008

3/20/08 Happy First Day of Spring

Winter Weather Advisory
Southern Franklin (Maine)

URGENT - WINTER WEATHER MESSAGE
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE GRAY ME
356 AM EDT THU MAR 20 2008
...MIXED PRECIPITATION STARTING TO WIND DOWN...MORE SNOW IN THE
OFFING FOR THE MOUNTAINS...
.LOW PRESSURE OVER SOUTHEAST NEW YORK EARLY THIS MORNING WILL TRACK
TO THE MAINE COAST THIS MORNING...THEN HEAD FOR THE MARITIMES THIS
AFTERNOON AND TONIGHT. AS THE LOW APPROACHES...THE STEADIEST
PRECIPITATION WILL START TO WIND DOWN ACROSS MUCH OF THE AREA.
WITH TEMPERATURES NEAR OR JUST BELOW THE FREEZING MARK FOR MUCH OF
NORTHERN NEW HAMPSHIRE AND INTERIOR WESTERN AND CENTRAL MAINE...SLEET
AND FREEZING RAIN WILL CONTINUE EARLY THIS MORNING. HOWEVER...
TEMPERATURES WILL RISE ABOVE THE FREEZING MARK THIS MORNING...
ALLOWING THE SLEET AND FREEZING RAIN TO CHANGE TO PLAIN RAIN.
AS THE LOW PASSES MAINE LATER THIS MORNING...COLDER AIR WILL COME
IN ON THE BACK SIDE OF THE STORM. THIS WILL CHANGE THE MIXED
PRECIPITATION OVER THE MOUNTAINS TO SNOW...AND THE SNOW WILL FALL
WITH VARYING INTENSITIES INTO FRIDAY MORNING. IN THE FAVORED
LOCATIONS...AS MUCH AS 12 INCHES MAY ACCUMULATE BY FRIDAY MORNING.
WEST TO NORTHWEST WINDS WILL GUST TO 40 MPH THIS AFTERNOON AND
TONIGHT...RESULTING IN NEAR BLIZZARD CONDITIONS AT TIMES...
ESPECIALLY IN THE NOTCHES OF NORTHERN NEW HAMPSHIRE. TRAVEL IN
THESE AREAS COULD BECOME TREACHEROUS LATER TODAY AND CONTINUE THIS
WAY INTO FRIDAY MORNING.
MEZ012>014-NHZ004-201200-
/O.CAN.KGYX.WW.Y.0012.000000T0000Z-080320T0800Z/
/O.NEW.KGYX.WW.Y.0013.080320T0800Z-080320T1200Z/
SOUTHERN OXFORD-SOUTHERN FRANKLIN-SOUTHERN SOMERSET-
NORTHERN CARROLL-
INCLUDING THE CITIES OF...RUMFORD...NORWAY...SOUTH PARIS...
MEXICO...FRYEBURG...OXFORD...FARMINGTON...WILTON...SKOWHEGAN...
PITTSFIELD...MADISON...FAIRFIELD...NORTH CONWAY...CONWAY
356 AM EDT THU MAR 20 2008
...WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY IN EFFECT UNTIL 8 AM EDT THIS
MORNING...
THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN GRAY HAS ISSUED A WINTER WEATHER
ADVISORY...WHICH IS IN EFFECT UNTIL 8 AM EDT THIS MORNING.
AREAS OF FREEZING RAIN WILL CONTINUE THROUGH THE EARLY MORNING
HOURS. AS TEMPERATURES RISE ABOVE THE FREEZING MARK IN ALL AREAS
LATER THIS MORNING...THE ICING THREAT WILL DIMINISH. BEFORE
THEN...PLACES LIKE CONWAY...SOUTH PARIS...HARTFORD AND WILTON
COULD SEE A LIGHT COATING OF ICE.
IF YOU PLAN TO TRAVEL THIS MORNING...BE ON THE ALERT FOR SLICK
SPOTS. TRAVEL SURFACES THAT APPEAR TO BE WET MAY INSTEAD BE ICY.
PLEASE REPORT SNOW OR ICE ACCUMULATIONS TO THE NATIONAL WEATHER
SERVICE BY CALLING TOLL FREE...1-877-633-6772...WHEN YOU CAN DO
SO SAFELY. STAY TUNED TO NOAA WEATHER RADIO...YOUR LOCAL MEDIA...
OR GO TO WWW.WEATHER.GOV/GRAY FOR FURTHER UPDATES ON THIS WEATHER
SITUATION.
$$
(bold emphasis added by me)

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

"If it's Tuesday, this must be Belgium"

...and if it's Wednesday, it must be snowing in Farmington.

I don't know how obscure that title line is, but we quote it all the time in my family. According to Wikipedia, "If It's Tuesday, This Must Be Belgium is a 1969 romantic comedy film made by Wolper Pictures and released by United Artists. The title, also used by a 1965 documentary on CBS television that filmed one such tour, was taken from a magazine cartoon caption*, humorously depicting the whirlwind nature of European tour schedules, which formed the premise of the film's plot." Supposedly the cartoon was in the New Yorker Magazine.

So if that expression is all about predictability, so is the snow on Wednesdays. The University has had 3 days this semester where it closed due to snow (well, one was ice and snow) and all 3 were on Wednesdays.

Today it snowed all day long. It wasn't a heavy snow, and they didn't close the University, but there's at least 2 inches accumulated and more coming down.

Sunday, March 16, 2008

3/14/08 front page photo

A pair of ski patrollers head around the back side of the snowfields at Sugarloaf/USA Thursday afternoon to check out the terrain. With nearly zero wind at the top and bright sunny skies, conditions were perfect not only for riders and skiers, but also for workers getting the mountain ready for next week's US Alpine Championships.


3/16/08 Meteorology Prognostication Errors

I've been impressed up here how often the weather predictions are right. You can almost count on them. That hasn't been my experience in most cities. But this past week, they've really been off. The prediction for Tuesday night was snow--a dusting to two inches. My concern was that it wouldn't happen until after I got back from Dixfield so I wouldn't have to drive in it. But in fact, it didn't happen at all. I woke up Wednesday morning and there was nary a new flake on the ground or in the air.

The prediction after that was for clear skies through the weekend. So imagine my surprise when waking up Saturday morning to a good inch of snow already on the ground and more flakes falling. It stopped by 10am and because it went up to 37, you couldn't find any signs of it by afternoon, but it was still quite a surprise.

This morning, I look out my window at 7:30 and there's snow falling! As late as 10pm last night there was no mention of snow in the forecast, yet here it is. There's no accumulation so far but those big fat fluffy flakes that I like so much are slowly falling from the sky.

I still love snow but now I'm learning that I especially love surprise snow. :-)

Saturday, March 15, 2008

3/15/2008 Happy Birthday, Maine!

I received the following email from friends in Philadelphia. Nobody in Maine mentioned it, but Texas friends who live in Pennsylvania did. ;-)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Subject: Welcome to the U.S. Pine Tree State
Date: March 15, 2008 9:32:59 PM EDT

On March 15th 1820 Maine became the 23rd state. So go celebrate, eat some landlocked salmon (state fish) or snack on a chickadee (state bird). Climb a white pine tree (state tree), or smell a white pine cone and tassel (state flower). Since you have a nice voice sing their state song "State of Maine Song" ( I wonder how they come up with that name). Make some peppermint candy in the shapes of lobsters, moose, blueberries and light houses.

If you're in the state capital of Augusta say hello to Governor John Baldacci. Maybe US Senator Susan Collins and Olympia J. Snowe and US Representative Thomas H. Allen and Mike Michuad will be in town.

You might just want to find a good tavern and read a book by Stephen King or Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. Or go watch a movie directed by John Ford.

Enjoy your celebration, just don't eat any Tex-Mex.

Friday, March 14, 2008

3/14/08 interesting governmental body

I took the elevator to the third floor of the building called Roberts. I usually take the stairs, but I wasn't sure where I was going and decided finding the right office was adventure enough. I'm sure other elevators have a similar certificate but this was the first time I noticed the wording on the certificate. "Department of Professional and Financial Regulation." I find that combination interesting. I've never heard of such a department before. "Board of Elevator and Tramway Safety." How many tramways do you think there might be in this state? And is someone who's knowledgeable in elevator safety going to also be knowledgeable in tramway safety? Inquiring minds want to know.

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3.14 Happy National Pi Day

I sent "Happy National Pi Day" emails to some UMF friends and I received this photo in return.

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

3/12/08 yesterday's damage

Today on my walk to school, I saw this pile of giant wood chips and when I looked up, I saw these odd gouges in the side of the tree. This is the tree that woodpecker was in yesterday. Wow. That's some serious damage.



3/12/08 More birds

Walking to school this morning, I heard birds. Spring must really be in the air, right? But they're crows! First woodpeckers, now crows?! Where are the red robins and the chickadees? This is an odd set of birds to be the first of the spring season. I'm guessing it's an anomaly, but further research may be required.

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

3/11/08 souvenirs for my students

When I was in Vegas, I held my graduate class "long distance" using Skype software across the Internet. It was pretty fun and a very good thing to do for a class called "Communication Tools for Teaching and Learning." During the Skype chat, one of them said, "Now you know we all love souvenirs." Oh golly gee. Now what?!


That night at dinner (it was Tuesday night...check the Vegas blog for details), I told all my friends what the students had said. Some of us had just received our beverages and these cute palm trees were in the fruit. Someone suggested that I collect palm trees as my souvenirs. Fortunately, I have really great friends who were willing to make the sacrifice for my students and helped me collect 14 of these. My students were appropriately appreciative of the sacrifice made by my friends on their behalf.

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3/11/08 a wonderful surprise in my mailbox

After being out of town for a week, I finally got to the Post Office to check my mailbox. I really didn't have time to check it because I needed to be in Dixfield for the graduate course I teach, but I really needed to check my mail. So I went. My box was crammed full of mail. I've learned to go ahead and flip through it there at the post office in case there's a notice to pick up a package or something. Sure enough, I had a notice that I had a package. I really didn't have time to get the package either, but I wasn't expecting anything and I didn't know when I'd get back to the post office, so I got in line. Fortunately, it wasn't a very long wait at all.


It was a package from Kathy and Steve. They're my Texas friends that live in Pennsylvania now. I was so excited! I was ripping into it on the way back to my car and finished opening it as I was driving off to the graduate class. I couldn't believe it. It was the perfect gift!

Kathy and Steve make an amazing Christmas candy that's white chocolate bark with peppermint in it. They know I love it. Usually, I only get it at Christmas and it's a plate full like of broken pieces that are delicious to eat--sort of like peanut brittle. But look what they figured out how to do! They must've poured the candy mixture while it was still soft into Texas cookie cutters. I don't know how they got it out without breaking it. And then they packed it so perfectly and carefully that none of it broke in transit. Look at those cowboy boots and hats and armadillos plus the outline of the state. What a hoot!

Texas Independence Day was March 2. It was a Sunday this year. I made all 3 of my undergraduate classes learn and dance the Cotton-Eyed Joe on the Friday before. So today, I made my graduate students do the same, but then I shared my TID treat sent by my friends from Philly. It was delicious, but it's even better when you share.

3/11/08 How much snow can one library handle?

On Tuesdays, I teach a graduate class in Dixfield, about 30 minutes south of Farmington. We haven't been able to meet for the last few weeks: we had winter break, then there was a snow day, then I was in Las Vegas. I finally had a chance to return and this was the view out the library window.

And this is the back door entrance.

Now that's a lot of snow!

3/11/08 Harbinger of spring?

Do you see it? Up in the tree? We often think of the sound of birds as the first indicators of spring. Walking home today I heard a bird. And when I looked up, I actually saw the bird! Do you see it in the tree up there?

No? Here's a close-up:

It's a red-headed woodpecker! This picture doesn't do it justice. It was spectacular with its bright red head and brilliantly contrasting black and white body and head. It is definitely not the typical first bird of spring for me. But it is definitely easily heard and easily recognizable.

Monday, March 10, 2008

3/10/08 and now the river is solid

Yep, there is one very thick river of ice out our walkway now. Most of the sidewalks are like that except where people (or the city or the university) put out a lot of salt. But there's traction! It's all very bumpy and jagged ice (not pointy sharp, just jagged) from where folks like me broke the ice when it still had water underneath and then the broken pieces froze in all different directions. It's pretty interesting. I do think that it's better this way than one smooth ice rink runway.

The sun is out, it's a balmy 32. And they're predicting another 1-3 inches (a mere dusting) of snow Tuesday tonight.

Sunday, March 9, 2008

3/9/08 When it rains . . .

. . . it makes a big mess. With all this snow and the hard frozen ground, the rain water has no where to go, so it just sits there. This is the walk from the driveway to the side porch (the entrance we use all the time). That's snow piled high on either side and river inbetween the banks. The sidewalk is made of asphalt like the driveway--that's the gray color you see. But on top of that is a giant river of water. It went below freezing last night, so that's a thick layer of ice on top.


Here I am standing in the semi-frozen river.

BTW, do you like my new rainboots? Up here they call them Wellingtons or "Wellies". (The really old name is "rubber boots".) And they come in a variety of colors and prints as well as a variety of prices. L.L. Bean has some fancy designer ones for $49.99. I got mine at Reny's on the March Madness sale. Solids were $19.99 (regularly $22.99) and fancy ones were $24.99 (regularly $26.99). I wanted the lime green solids but this was the only color in my size so I paid extra money to get a print because obviously, I really need them . . . NOW. Remember, this is not just water I'm standing in, this is ice water!

3/9/08 . . . like the swallows of San Juan Capistrano

We've been waiting all winter for Gifford's to open back up. And now it's here! Friday the 14th. On that night you can stand in a very long line and get free ice cream. Last year there was a blizzard snow storm. We went to the movies to get out of the cold but I heard tale of a long line in spite of the weather. Maybe I'll be a part of the tradition this year. It's the Farmington sign that winter is on its way out and Mud Season followed by Spring and Summer are on their way. Now which harbinger of spring do you prefer--ice cream or a bunch of birds flying in?

3/9/08 try to find these at your local department store

Only at Reny's (A Maine Adventure) could you find butterfly nets made with bamboo poles that are at least 3 feet long. This is a "wicked good" butterfly net--one that would actually work to catch butterflies. And it's only 99 cents. Gotta love it.

3/9/08 The Farmington Diner is Moving on

Ah, the Diner. Farmington has had a good, old-fashioned "diner" since the 1950's. Made in that classic all-aluminum exterior, it has the booths and stools that you would expect in a classic diner. Mother and Daddy and I ate there when they came to visit last October. I've been there with MRM and her parents for breakfast. But the land was sold to Rite-Aid along with the plot next door and a new shiny sign of progress will be built in that location. There are many stories about who bought the building of the diner, but it didn't get demolished. Here it is, hooked up to a truck, ready to be moved to its new home, wherever that may be.

3/9/08 Snow Status

The yellow building on the right is the garage, the green building in the back is the cabana by the pool. If you look carefully inbetween them, you can see a chain link fence. But you'll only see the top 6-10 inches of the chain link fence because the rest is surrounded by snow! Those aren't drifts from blowing snow or banks from shoveled snow. That's the accumulated snow that's fallen this winter. And that's after we've had a few rainstorms and "winter thaw", so it's not the total accumulation, we've had some melt. It's a L O T of snow.

This looks like a path shoveled to nowhere but at the end of the path is the opening to the heating oil tank in the basement. You're required to keep that path shoveled so the heating oil delivery person can deliver your oil. I guess it's not only required by the heating oil company but pretty much self-mandated if you don't want to freeze your winter away.

It may look like trick photography . . . maybe I was laying down and taking this photo to get an angle that would create the illusion of a lot of snow. But this is no illusion. I am standing in the driveway looking at the front porch. I'm 5'9" and I can barely see over the snow piled on either side of the driveway.

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Saturday, March 8, 2008

3/3/08 - 3/7/08 a little side trip

Grace, Beth, and I wrote a paper that was accepted by the Society for Information Technology and Teacher Education. We went to the International Conference in Las Vegas to present our paper. They closed UMF while we were out of town, so we did miss some more weather. Read all about our trip on my travel blog at: http://texastheresa.blogspot.com/search/label/SITE08

Tuesday, March 4, 2008

3/1/08 Cabin Fever

We got that foot of snow. It started Saturday morning (in the wee hours) and kept coming and coming all day long. By 4:00 it had mostly stopped. MRM and I had backed our cars in the driveway and parked them very near the end of the driveway. Cool trick--less shoveling when they're already at the end of the driveway and with front wheel drive, you don't have to try to shovel under the backside of the tires if you're facing forward (if you have to use reverse to get out, you have to make sure the front tires can get traction on the "reverse" side of the tire). There was a party to go to tonight and I decided to brave the driving conditions and go. I picked up Dalila who is a new professor this year from Portugal. She doesn't have a car and I promised myself I would pay it forward when it came to giving folks rides (in appreciation for everyone who gave me rides in spring 2007 when I didn't have a car). Plus, she's really fun (now that I know her from giving her rides to parties), so it makes for a great trip.

So we went to Games Night. This is the second one. It was started by a faculty group, but anyone can come. Last time we played Apples to Apples (which I first encountered at my Godfamily's house in New York [we played the child's version] on the drive from Texas to Maine) and this time we played Quiddler (made by the makers of Set -- one of my very favorite games) which is a combination card and word game. It was pretty fun. We created our own "team version" where everyone helped everyone else.

I'm really glad I went. And I did okay in the driving conditions. The roads were plowed, so you just had to drive slowly on the packed thin layer of snow. On the way home, at least until we got to Farmington, the roads were "tar" (you could see the black surface). In Farmington, the roads were still covered with a packed white layer. I'm guessing that they've run out of salt for the season (not very common most winters, but very common during this winter which has had an unusually high amount of snow spread out over soooooo many days) and either can't afford to buy more or are waiting for a new shipment. It's happening all over the state. It even happened at UMF where we got an email warning us to be extra careful because they weren't able to clear the sidewalks of ice in their usual manner as they were waiting for a new shipment.

Saturday, March 1, 2008

3/1/08 How snowy is it?

Seasonal snowfall information for Franklin County, Maine
(retrieved from http://www.mainesledder.com/showthread.php?p=11548)

12/3/07 14"
12/12/07 6"
12/14/07 6"
12/16/07 12"
12/20/07 6"
12/28/07 4"
12/30/07 6"
01/03/08 10"
01/04/08 8"
01/11/08 3"
01/14/08 5"
01/17/08 4"
01/18/08 6"
01/19/08 2"
01/22/08 2"
01/26/08 2" (total = 96" = 8'0" @Franklin County)
02/01/08 5"
02/03/08 1"
02/05/08 4"
02/06/08 3"
02/07/08 2" (total = 111" = 9'3" @Franklin County) Keep in mind that some areas may have gotten even more, this is just a County average.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
FOR PERSPECTIVE, THE TOP 10 SNOWIEST SEASONS IN BANGOR WERE:

RANK SNOW YEAR
(INCHES)

1 181.9 1962
2 132.3 1970
3 118.9 1968
4 112.1 1995
5 103.9 1971
6 101.1 1965
7 100.8 1954
8 97.7 1958
9 96.6 1981
10 95.3 2000