January
14, 2007:
It
was -37° this morning, making us about the coldest spot in the province,
except maybe Stoney Rapids. There ws no wind at all, and it was clear
except for a frost fog, likely from all the furnaces running flat out. I
went for a morning walk, but a short one.
We
made a fast trip to Tisdale on Tuesday. After searching high and low in
Porcupine Plain and
Saskatoon
for an essential part for my snow blower, I found it at G & R Small
Motor Service in Tisdale! Which once again points out the fact that one
should start looking close to home. G & R has a good reputation, and
why I didn’t check there earlier I’ll never know.
Gary
was familiar with the make of my blower too, which is more than I could
say for the people in
Saskatoon
.
The
roads were quite icy. In some places they were solid ice, in most of it
there were ruts worn down to pavement. Driving with speed control was not
recommended. It looked as if several vehicles had to get pulled out of the
ditches.
Speaking
of which, Highway workers, who had been on strike earlier in the week,
went back to work voluntarily Tuesday night. Terrible weather in the
forecasts and a rash of highway accidents blamed on weather were the
reason. We all heaved a sigh of relief. I think it was a very good move
politically. Any deaths in those accidents while the operators were on
strike would be blamed directly on the
Union
.
We
woke up Wednesday to a dilly of a blizzard, with lots of new snow and a
very strong wind from the east. Jenny phoned; when she drove to her store
in the morning, from the Co-op store she couldn’t even see the
intersection, a half block away. Jenny drives a SUV so I warned her about
the statistics – of the rollovers in a recent string of weather-related
accidents, 45% were SUVs. Part of that is due to their high center of
gravity, but I’ll bet most of it is over-confidence on the part of the
drivers. “I have four-wheel drive and great, huge knobby snow tires. I
can handle anything!” Except ice, that is!
The
blizzard continued until about nine PM. I don’t know how much snow fell,
but when I blew the driveways the minimum depth would be about eight
inches. Drifts were up to two feet high. It was pretty hard to find
anything on the news except the blizzard, rated as the worst since 1955.
When they rate blizzards, they take into account temperature, wind
velocity, amount of snowfall, and duration. We can now say that we
survived the Great Blizzard of ’07!
Thank
heavens we were at home! Many people spent hours at Wal-Mart, Canadian
Tire, or in their cars and trucks. Three deaths were blamed on the
blizzard, the usual case where people get stuck and try to walk to safety.
Thursday
morning was calm and sunny, but the temperature was -33°. I blew out our
and the neighbors’ driveways and found it quite comfortable outside. As
long as there’s no wind! By the way, my repaired snow blower worked like
a dream.
Back
to Tisdale on Friday. We had planned to go to
Saskatoon
to visit with Doreen’s nephew and his wife, but the temperatures, and
the ground-drift between
Crooked
River
and Tisdale, changed our minds for us. We then went to Porcupine Plain for
some groceries, and home. It took us a long time to get from Tisdale to
Porcupine Plain, but it was not because of the weather, but because of the
photo ops! The snow sculptures along the way were beautiful, but one
didn’t stand out in the wind with bare hands for long.
We
were impressed with the progress made in both Tisdale and Porcupine Plain
in cleaning up after the blizzard. They seemed to have all streets and
avenues open, though I doubt if they had time to do driveways. In
Porcupine Plain, they were just finished hauling away the huge windrow on
McAllister Street
. Fifty years ago, that blizzard would have spelled the end of wheeled
traffic in town for the rest of the winter!