I thought some of you might like to see what winter in the frozen north is like. This is the aftermath of a snowstorm the other night - about 6" of snow. At least it justified some seat time.
Case-IH Farmall 45A, Kubota M8540 Narrow, New Holland TN 65, Bobcat 331, Ford 1920, 1952 John Deere M, Allis Chalmers B, Bombardier Traxter XT, Massey Harris 81RC and a John Deere 3300 combine, Cub Cadet GT1554
<font color=blue>Ice<font color=blue><font color=black> 3" thick on my father trout pond before this new cold snap move in.. 2F w/a full moon as of now..and the brook frozen over safe enough to cross.
I was wonder about the Muskrats around your pond,since it looks like heaven for them to spend the winter.
My father trout pond now being visit by otter /w3tcompact/icons/crazy.gif sure hate to see the little guy trapped. /w3tcompact/icons/sad.gif
We had a lot of ice in central NC last week. Not much on the ground, but a lot on the trees and power lines. Here's a view of the trees in front of my house.
The ice storm last week caused the tops of trees, and a lot of branches to break. I have one very large white pine that a limb broke off of. Attached is a picture of the break.
We don't have many white pines in the area as they can't stand the heat. Usually only live for about 15 years in this area. I set this one out over 30 years ago. Not sure why it has lasted this long.
Look at where it broke off. Notice the tip of the break. The tip went almost to the center of the tree. The tree will probably die since it has such a large hole in it.
Anyway, I thought the way it broke was interesting. Never seen anything like it before.
Nearly every last Bradford Pear tree I've seen was split in two.
The cottonwood - I've always hated that tree, can't say I'm REAL sorry to see it go - but it was a large shade tree, and now it's gone and I can't replace it in a year.
We had over a million homes without power - many for over a week.