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Hey Tap??

Shortgrass

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Joined
Sep 25, 2006
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Location
Eastern Colorado
Looks like a real livestock killer in the Dakotas. Hey Tap, you still out there? This storm hurting you? Post a few pics when you can. Soapweed, how are you faring--is it that far south? News said 10 - 12 foot drifts in Rapid City. TTB, if I'm not mistaken you may be catching it too??
 
Wondered why Valentine sale was postponed today. Got online about 2 to watch some of it and nothing there but Ogallala was having one.
 
Talked to a freind of mine at Valentine tonight. They don't have alot of snow but the wind is blowing what there is and can't see nothing. I'm about 100 miles east of there and have had wind rain and snow all day.
 
We got an inch of rain first, and then yesterday the snow came in. Don't really know how much snow we got, because the wind blew like it was nuts. We do have some pretty good sized snow banks though and it was a complete white out last night. But it never got very cold. Still upper 20's. It is really heavy wet snow.

BRG
 
We ended up with six tenths of an inch of rain, about five inches of snow if it would have stayed on the level (which it didn't :roll: ), and a very powerful wind. The steady wind was probably fifty miles per hour with gusts exceeding sixty. The electricity went off about 9 p.m. Wednesday evening and didn't come back on until 9 o'clock this morning, so we had a 36-hour chilly spell freezing to death in the dark. :-) Oh, it wasn't that bad. We fired up a generator to run the oven, the refrigerator, and a lamp. The kitchen stove is propane so the top burners work for cooking, but electricity is needed to make the oven perform. All in all it was quite a nasty little blizzard. Today turned out fairly nice though the wind continued to blow. The temperature made it up to the mid-thirties this afternoon. Right now it is still 27 degrees.
 
Soapweed said:
We ended up with six tenths of an inch of rain, about five inches of snow if it would have stayed on the level (which it didn't :roll: ), and a very powerful wind. The steady wind was probably fifty miles per hour with gusts exceeding sixty. The electricity went off about 9 p.m. Wednesday evening and didn't come back on until 9 o'clock this morning, so we had a 36-hour chilly spell freezing to death in the dark. :-) Oh, it wasn't that bad. We fired up a generator to run the oven, the refrigerator, and a lamp. The kitchen stove is propane so the top burners work for cooking, but electricity is needed to make the oven perform. All in all it was quite a nasty little blizzard. Today turned out fairly nice though the wind continued to blow. The temperature made it up to the mid-thirties this afternoon. Right now it is still 27 degrees.
Soap, ya need a good woodstove! We all have one in this country. The only thing less dependable than the power company is the phone idiots. When the wind blows or it rains or snow a little we usually lose both. To those companies we are 300 ranchers at the end of the line. We get very little "maintanance" on the high wires or the telegraph! :D Heck i type this thanks to the pony express! :wink: Although your firewood supply may be a tad bit smaller than ours!
 
leanin' H said:
Soapweed said:
We ended up with six tenths of an inch of rain, about five inches of snow if it would have stayed on the level (which it didn't :roll: ), and a very powerful wind. The steady wind was probably fifty miles per hour with gusts exceeding sixty. The electricity went off about 9 p.m. Wednesday evening and didn't come back on until 9 o'clock this morning, so we had a 36-hour chilly spell freezing to death in the dark. :-) Oh, it wasn't that bad. We fired up a generator to run the oven, the refrigerator, and a lamp. The kitchen stove is propane so the top burners work for cooking, but electricity is needed to make the oven perform. All in all it was quite a nasty little blizzard. Today turned out fairly nice though the wind continued to blow. The temperature made it up to the mid-thirties this afternoon. Right now it is still 27 degrees.
Soap, ya need a good woodstove! We all have one in this country. The only thing less dependable than the power company is the phone idiots. When the wind blows or it rains or snow a little we usually lose both. To those companies we are 300 ranchers at the end of the line. We get very little "maintanance" on the high wires or the telegraph! :D Heck i type this thanks to the pony express! :wink: Although your firewood supply may be a tad bit smaller than ours!

We could always burn cow chips like our forefathers and mothers did. :wink:
 
We just got power back last night about 10:00. My cattle seem to be alright and where they should be but there are cattle scattered everywhere. I am sure some ended up in dams and stomped in fence corners. My bred heifers stood in the corner and packed the snow so hard I bent a piece on my front wheel assist tractor trying to get it so the couldn't go back over the fence. I will post pictures tonight.
 
My power went off Weds night about 10PM and they got it back on yesterday about 3PM. At least I have some of the comforts of home with propane heat and cookstove that do not require juice to run!

Deer hunters are a hardy bunch. The weather did not deter some of them from coming. Some had to drive around the I-90 road blocks to get here. And I had the "pleasure" to pull a couple of them out when they got stuck. :oops:

Sat evening the hunter supper put on by the 4-H kids for the local community hall was pretty well attended. The supper had 3 different kinds of soup and all the trimmings. Another hunter pancake/sausage supper in the area was not held this year.

No significant livestock loss locally that I know of but several cattle herds including mine drifted and got mixed with neighbors. Most of that is contained and straightened out now.
 
I am glad to hear that the storm was more of a convience issue than an economic one. It was expensive enough I am sure. We are so dependent on electricity anymore, that that is a real issue in our daily productivity.
 
We had it pretty tough here but at least we didn't ever lose power. Neighbors and friends 20 miles north and west had over a foot of snow and some will be out of power for 10 days or 2 weeks. Most of my cows went on an 8 mile hike down the highway. Took 3 days to get everything back home. Still have some of the neighbors cattle. Irrigated corn fields are a mess, at least 200 yards of drifts covering the edges. I got a little over half done before it hit. My neighbors have 1000 acres left to do. Lots of long faces around here. Oh well we'll get through it, kind of a character builder. :)
 
Big Swede said:
We had it pretty tough here but at least we didn't ever lose power. Neighbors and friends 20 miles north and west had over a foot of snow and some will be out of power for 10 days or 2 weeks. Most of my cows went on an 8 mile hike down the highway. Took 3 days to get everything back home. Still have some of the neighbors cattle. Irrigated corn fields are a mess, at least 200 yards of drifts covering the edges. I got a little over half done before it hit. My neighbors have 1000 acres left to do. Lots of long faces around here. Oh well we'll get through it, kind of a character builder. :)

I read somewhere that the SD harvest was put on hold due to "POOR VISIBILITY" :roll:
 
Yeah, you can say that again. I heard this morning on the news that some farmers in North Dakota are going to park their machinery til spring and try it again then. We live in the banana belt here in SW South Dakota so hopefully we will get a good thaw before winter really sets in. The edges that are buried are a lost cause I'm afraid but I suppose the cattle can use most of it if we are careful to make sure they don't get too much.

So many problems in the last week, I knew something like this would if Obama got elected. :wink: :wink:
 

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