Buried in Oswego??
I don't think so , I remember when I was 15 yrs old in Chicago in the year 1967 when we had all our snow they kept all of the Bodies in the Coolers till they were able to dig in the groung, This I know! I also know that they can not dig in the groung when it is frozen My wife had her Aunt pass and they Burried her 3 weeks later due to the groung being frozen and this was in Calumet City, Il about 8 yrs ago
I am very happy that we didn't get 100" of snow this year.
I am very happy that we didn't get 100" of snow this year.
Last edited by Z-Man; Feb 9, 2007 at 07:03 PM.
I noticed a little town called Mexico, NY got inundated also. Never thought I'd see that name in the news! There's a company in that town called "Grandma Brown's Beans". They make the best baked beans and no one else makes anything like them. I have to mail order a case every so often. They've got all kind of beans in the stores here, but not Grandma's!
And it's still snowing:
Snow Isn't Over 'Til It's Over
By WILLIAM KATES, Associated Press Writer
3 hours ago
REDFIELD, N.Y. - The snow squalls that have buried Redfield and its neighbors up to their stop signs finally tapered off Monday, but forecasters warned that another storm system was on the way.
Unofficially, the past week of lake-effect storms dumped 12 feet, 2 inches of snow at Redfield.
If that number checks out, it would break the state record of 10 feet, 7 inches of snow that fell in nearby Montague over seven days ending Jan. 1, 2002, said Steve McLaughlin, a meteorologist for the National Weather Service in Buffalo. A weather service representative was sent to Redfield on Monday to verify the total.
Residents of this hardy upstate New York village seem unfazed by the weather, and a bit surprised by all the attention. Their economy thrives on snowmobilers and cross-country skiers, and they usually average 270 inches of snow for the season _ more than 22 feet.
"It's snow. We get a lot of it. So what?" said Allan Bab****, owner of Shar's Country Diner in this Oswego County village of 650 people.
The nearby community of Parish had recorded 115 inches of snow by early Sunday. Mexico had 103 inches, North Osceola had 99 and Scriba 94. The city of Oswego had 85 inches.
A cold front finally stifled the lake-effect snow squalls created by persistent wind picking up moisture from Lake Ontario to the west.
However, McLaughlin noted that a coastal winter storm expected to plow along the East Coast during the middle of the week could bring another 6 to 12 inches to parts of upstate New York. A winter storm watch was in effect through late Wednesday for Oswego County and other areas from Virginia to Maine, the weather service said Monday.
Oswego County roads had been mostly cleared as workers turned their attention to removing the snow and trimming down 10- and 12-foot-high snow banks that made driving dangerous.
"In all my life, I mean my entire life combined, I've never seen this much snow at once," said Jim Bevridge, 47, of Timmonium, Md., who drove up for a long weekend of snowmobiling.
Snow Isn't Over 'Til It's Over
By WILLIAM KATES, Associated Press Writer
3 hours ago
REDFIELD, N.Y. - The snow squalls that have buried Redfield and its neighbors up to their stop signs finally tapered off Monday, but forecasters warned that another storm system was on the way.
Unofficially, the past week of lake-effect storms dumped 12 feet, 2 inches of snow at Redfield.
If that number checks out, it would break the state record of 10 feet, 7 inches of snow that fell in nearby Montague over seven days ending Jan. 1, 2002, said Steve McLaughlin, a meteorologist for the National Weather Service in Buffalo. A weather service representative was sent to Redfield on Monday to verify the total.
Residents of this hardy upstate New York village seem unfazed by the weather, and a bit surprised by all the attention. Their economy thrives on snowmobilers and cross-country skiers, and they usually average 270 inches of snow for the season _ more than 22 feet.
"It's snow. We get a lot of it. So what?" said Allan Bab****, owner of Shar's Country Diner in this Oswego County village of 650 people.
The nearby community of Parish had recorded 115 inches of snow by early Sunday. Mexico had 103 inches, North Osceola had 99 and Scriba 94. The city of Oswego had 85 inches.
A cold front finally stifled the lake-effect snow squalls created by persistent wind picking up moisture from Lake Ontario to the west.
However, McLaughlin noted that a coastal winter storm expected to plow along the East Coast during the middle of the week could bring another 6 to 12 inches to parts of upstate New York. A winter storm watch was in effect through late Wednesday for Oswego County and other areas from Virginia to Maine, the weather service said Monday.
Oswego County roads had been mostly cleared as workers turned their attention to removing the snow and trimming down 10- and 12-foot-high snow banks that made driving dangerous.
"In all my life, I mean my entire life combined, I've never seen this much snow at once," said Jim Bevridge, 47, of Timmonium, Md., who drove up for a long weekend of snowmobiling.




