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- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!rpi!utcsri!cs.ubc.ca!unixg.ubc.ca!buckland
- From: buckland@ucs.ubc.ca (Tony Buckland)
- Newsgroups: can.general,soc.culture.canada
- Subject: Vancouver area weather
- Date: 21 Jan 1993 19:57:42 GMT
- Organization: University Computing Services, UBC, Canada
- Lines: 51
- Distribution: can
- Message-ID: <1jmv7mINNdq4@skeena.ucs.ubc.ca>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: swiss.ucs.ubc.ca
-
- Near the end of last year, some happy soul whose name has escaped
- me burbled about Vancouver having a "no snow, never cold" climate.
- Well, it hasn't quite worked out that way in January. At the
- moment, we are in the third day of thaw after a substantial
- snowfall had sat undisturbed for slightly over two weeks. During
- those two weeks, we had next to no wind, and no precipitation.
- The snow just sat where it had been shoved to, and slowly turned
- to ice.
-
- So did the mixture of snow, water and ice on top of my pool cover.
- The Western way of dealing with a pool in Winter is to cover it
- over. We can't drain, because the normally unfrozen ground water
- would just fill it from below. You _can_ drain below the skimmer
- outlets, put bleach bottles in the skimmers and turn off the pump;
- but what we do is leave the level at normal and leave the pump
- running. By the beginning of this week, just before the Rains
- Came, I was getting seriously worried about whether the plumbing
- was going to freeze anyway as the ground freezing deepened and
- the ice sheet on top of the cover thickened. A power failure of
- anything other than momentary duration would certainly have
- caused serious trouble. OK, I know some of you Easterners would
- just love to have such worries.
-
- We had not one, but two rows of icicles hanging outside the living
- room window. We had, and to a substantial degree still have, a
- bank of shovelled snow 1.2 m high alongside the drive, 1.5 m
- down by the road where I have to fight the fight, familiar to many
- of you, with the city's attempts to plough up a ridge of ice across
- the drive. There's so much ice in that 1.5 m that it's hardly
- begun to shrink. It wasn't so much as dented by the second car
- to skid onto our lawn this month.
-
- Sidewalk clearing is almost unheard-of in North Vancouver district
- except in commercial areas, partly no doubt because we have no
- bylaw even theoretically obliging homeowners to do it. So we're
- continuing mostly to walk in the road, which is at least,
- blessedly, not subject to black ice every morning now that our
- seasonal temperatures of a few degrees plus have returned.
-
- Oh yes, the _first_ car to skid onto our lawn since New Year's.
- This was when the snow wasn't very thick yet, but the temperature
- was around -10 and had been for some time. She ended up leaving
- four tire tracks that barely burned the grass on the rock-hard
- ground, as the skidded in a half-abeam attitude to the drive,
- where she astonishingly avoided all the available trees and rocks,
- not to mention the house, and ended up after further rotation
- pointed straight out to the street as though she'd been parked
- for the night. Her nerves were noticeably jangled.
-
- Well, such is one perspective on the reality of this Winter in
- Lotusland. So far.
-