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Record Cold ?

Started by FL-Boss, January 23, 2014, 12:43:33 PM

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kevin2

Nasty cold here too. My kids have had 3 cold days off from school in the last couple weeks. I can only remember one other cold day in the last 15 years of them being in school.
I am going to bag my first Turkey this spring if it is the last thing I do!

Gut Pile

In 49 years I have never seen it this bad in Ohio, -5 to 7 degrees and that's without wind-chill for next week. I do blame All Gore, I suspect all those windmills, we so desperately need, are funneling air out of the North Pole directly on to my house
about the best religion can possibly do, is maybe make you a nice person, where as a relationship with Jesus Christ can make you a new creation

Yoder409

It's been pretty cool of and on here in west PA the last couple weeks.

Even native PA folks are grumbling.  Coldest air temp I've seen this winter is around -12 or -15 degrees.  Wind chills of -30 or -40.

Maybe I'm dating myself.  But the winter of 1977-78 we had a couple days where the air temp was in the -31 to -33 degree neighborhood.  About 10-12 years ago one day at work I stopped in the local municipal airport and the guy wanted to know where my hat and gloves were.  The weather computers behind him had the wind chill pegged at -67 degrees.

We've just not had a "good old-fashioned winter" for a while........................ which is fine with me.
PA elitist since 1979

The good Lord ain't made a gobbler I can't kill.  I just gotta be there at the right time.....  on the day he wants to die.

RutnNStrutn

It's all Al Gore's fault!! Him and his darned global warming!! Hmm, come to think of it, why haven't we heard anything out of him lately? ;) ;D :lol:

redarrow

Minus 35 wind chill this coming Tuesday

J Hook Max

 Expecting sleet and snow in Mobile , Al. for the next couple of days. Can't wait until spring finally arrives.

Tail Feathers

Definitely a colder than normal winter around here.  Not nearly as bad as some of our neighbors to the north have but we've seen more cold (for us) nights than normal.
Love to hunt the King of Spring!

Assault

Here in south Louisiana, they closed most of the bridges crossing the Mississippi River. A 1.5 hour drive took me almost 4 hours to get to the coast to go duck hunting!!!!! Now they are calling for snow for tonight, AGAIN!

Woodsman4God

Last I heard, Michigan is having a record cold. Last time temps got this cold for this long was 1947. We have already had 3-4 days around -10 air temp with -35 or colder windchill and the next couple gonna be right around that -10 again. I am usually one who doesnt mind winter all that much but its too cold to even go ice fishing. Cant wait for it to warm up to something nice like 25 degrees so I can enjoy winter sports. Cant take the kids out sledding ,shed hunting, ice fishing etc.

RutnNStrutn

You know, this is odd. Down here in central Florida, while we have had more days of cold (by our standards) weather, the actual low temps have not made it down as cold as they have gotten the last few years.

Turkey Trot

People are feeling the pain in heating bills, too.  I've heard that propane hit $6 per gallon in WI. 

Propane Is Scarce As Cold Spell Lifts Demand, Prices

By Caroline Porter and Alison Side
The Wall Street Journal
Jan. 24, 2014 7:13 p.m. ET

Frigid temperatures in many parts of the country are contributing to soaring demand for propane, kicking off a surge in prices and a scramble to get the liquid gas used in agriculture and home heating to parts of the Midwest and South.

"Demand has just been unprecedented," said Eldon Meyers, the operations and risk manager for K & H Cooperative Oil Co. in north-central Iowa. He said winter heating sales were 35% higher in December than a year earlier, and January's cold spell means that propane needs "have really hit the fan this past week."

On Friday, the energy supplier said that his retail price for propane of $4.24 per gallon nearly doubles the former record of $2.32 before this season.

"It's hard on people," he said. "We don't like to see our customers go through this."

According to the National Propane Gas Association, 5.5 million homes use propane for heating.

Issues such as maintenance on a major pipeline during November and December, as well as rail disruptions, kept propane supplies in the Midwest from being replenished in time for the cold weather, after farmers used more of it than usual to dry crops after a wet harvest, said T. Mason Hamilton, an analyst at the U.S. Energy Information Administration.

"There is propane out there, but in certain areas of the country it's hard to come by," said Simon Bowman, a spokesman for AmeriGas Partners APU -0.45% LP, the largest U.S. retail propane marketer.

The Department of Transportation has eased restrictions on propane transportation for states in the South, the Northeast and the Midwest, citing shortages in all three regions.

Jim Boyer, a farmer in Ringsted, Iowa, who grows corn and soybeans and raises about 16,000 hogs annually, figured the high prices will create a $9,000 hole in his budget. "We are using a lot more propane than we normally do," said Mr. Boyer, adding that he ran through his propane reserve earlier than expected and keeps his eight buildings devoted to hogs at 82 degrees Fahrenheit.

"I'm going to make sure my animals are warm even if I have to forgo something else," he said. "That's my income."

Sen. Chuck Grassley (R., Iowa) sent a letter to the Federal Trade Commission on Thursday asking for closer scrutiny "to prevent possible anti-competitive behavior or illegal manipulation" in the propane market. The commission confirmed it received the letter and is reviewing it.

In a 2007 settlement with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and the U.S. Justice Department, BP PLC agreed to pay $303 million in criminal and civil penalties and restitution for allegedly driving up wholesale propane prices in 2004.

Mike Knop, an Alabama poultry producer, said he hasn't yet had too much trouble getting his propane, as he can buy it from the company he farms for. But the colder-than-usual winter has meant he needs a lot more of it to keep his chicks warm. Mr. Knop said he is paying about 40 cents more per gallon this year, but he can't cut back since chicks need high temperatures to thrive in the first weeks of their lives.

"We're all sitting of the edge of our seats," he said. "Are we going to be able to get more propane?"

Paul Gieselman, a farmer in southeast Iowa, turned down his thermostat to 64 degrees Fahrenheit from 68 degrees to ration propane use in his three-story farmhouse, where he lives with his wife and three children.

"We are wearing layers and using blankets and electric space heaters as much as we can to supplement the heat," he said. He said refilling his propane tank at higher prices "could be a real issue."
Until The Turkeys Have Their Historians, Tales Of The Hunt Shall Always Glorify The Hunter