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About tamarack

- Birthday 03/10/1946
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Gender
Male
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Location:
New Sharon, Maine
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Interests
Family, church, forestry, weather, hunting/fishing, gardening
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Might be 81-82. 80-81 was dry in Maine (Farmington co-op's least snowy of 130 winters) with very cold Dec/Jan followed by a spectacular February thaw - CAR had 14.5° for the month, including 9 days of +25-30, 7 of which were consecutive. 81-82 had scads of snow, capped by the April blizzard.
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A bit noisier than my 5 minutes of broom work on 1.4" fluff.
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Clipper produced only m0.09" LE but even with mostly tiny flakes that modest moisture brought 1.4".
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Small lawn area with trees 60-80 feet tall. Mostly hardwoods but even they block about 1/3 of direct sun. That plus the frost pocket topography help to preserve pack. (Of course, our garden gets less sun and earlier frosts than most.)
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Bit longer on the places I researched. Total 1"+ Consec. days CAR 134 120 Rangeley 143 131 Farmington 112 102 My short (27 yr) pack-retention spot: 123 total, 119 consec.
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7-8 years ago, I wrote a short essay on potential effects of climate change on the Bureau of Parks and Public Lands' timber management. As part of it I looked at snowfall and temps for the northerly 2/3 of Maine where 90%+ of the BPL-managed acreage. I used CAR for the north, Rangeley for the mountains and Farmington for non-mountain inland areas. Temps have risen noticeably this century, particularly in deep cold - subzero mornings, important for freezing down winter roads. 21st century snowfall increased at all 3 sites, averaging 6% more. Duration of snow cover was lower (3-5%) at CAR and Farmington but up 5% at Rangeley - elevation helps, I guess. First subzero morning here - expected about -5 but reached -9, earliest in the season this cold since moving here in 1998. Maybe the wind quieted earlier than expected?
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Reached -9 this morning, coldest we've had this early in the season. Saw -15 at HIE.
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Squalls passed to the south, only a few flakes here, but wind is noisy and temps diving. Might go subzero tomorrow morning, would be the season's earliest since 2019.
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Dover reported 7.0 and Rochester had reports of 8.0 and 7.0. PSM only 4.6".
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Or use it very cautiously. After the 2.4" we had on Nov 16 the snow cover hung around for 7 more days, despite upper 30s maxima and sunny/PC skies. Move those conditions to March 16 and the cover is gone 2 days after the storm. Noting sun angle in December means holding onto the pack.
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That was the max on 12/25/2020 at CAR. +35 anyone?
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And any snowstorm bigger than a weak clipper is a bomb cyclone (looking at you, CNN). Usually those have some wind, even inland.
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The 50-foot path between driveway and tool shed has the same effect, though closer to 4". Deep blue all morning, now solid clouds.
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Had constant SN from 7:15 AM thru 11:30 PM as the temp slowly climbed from 17 to 23, finishing with 6.9" on 0.49" LE, 14:1 ratio. However, it was like 2 different storms; by 4:30 we had only 2" of tiny flakes. I didn't take a core then, but it was like walking on cornmeal, probably no higher ratio than 8:1. Then the dendrites began to look better and by 9 the total was 5.2" on 0.43" LE, probably close to 20:1. The board held 1.7" this morning with only 0.06" LE and given the fluff, the post-9 PM might've been 2" if I'd gone out at midnight. Very little wind as of now, so the fir and hemlocks are loaded.
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Maybe a move to the south? Good for coastal snow, less QPF to the north?
