edinsomd
New Member
Gonna make damn sure the ex-riding mower current snow plow is ready to roll. Weights and chains, grab ethanol free gas.
Gonna make damn sure my bourbon and stogie supply is up to snuff!
Gonna make damn sure the ex-riding mower current snow plow is ready to roll. Weights and chains, grab ethanol free gas.
Gonna make damn sure my bourbon and stogie supply is up to snuff!
Might be a good idea. Forecast (and yes, I realize we have days to go and these are unreliable. But they're unreliable 1 day before, so......) was changed back up to 12+ inches and 5-8 the following day. I guess I'm heading to the parental unit's house to dig them out.We (brother and I) were going to stop and pickup a couple 1950 Lincoln flathead V-8s in Roanaoke on Saturday and head on down to family's place in Danville.
Thinking we'll postpone a week.....
It most definitely will not be anything major this upcoming weekend. 5 days is still way too far out to estimate snowfall totals.
That being said, I'd be ok with it. Makes for good duck/goose hunting.
For hunting, yes and no. At the beginning of the storm they'll be flying. The snow gets too deep the geese won't come onto the fields because there's no food and they move south. That screws up the rest of the season, which ends Feb. 3.
The shallower marshes are already starting to freeze over, so that's another variable.
Well I have off Friday and Saturday. Field on Friday and a creek on Saturday. Keep them coming.
It has been a pretty unproductive season. Only got skunked 2-3 times all year, but haven't limited out just yet
with the first few snows the geese wont even notice. they will stick around here for quitre a while. Now they will sit on their roosts much longer and only fly once it has warmed up or they are scared off. If you are field hunting in the snow the best thing you can do is tear up the snow with a 4 wheeler or with your feet exposing the dirt and crops underneath. the geesee can see this from far off and will come to it. For hunting from the water or the filed you are going to need to keep the heavy snow off your decoys. Real ducks and geese dont let snow pile up on them.
Good luck
Might be a good idea. Forecast (and yes, I realize we have days to go and these are unreliable. But they're unreliable 1 day before, so......) was changed back up to 12+ inches and 5-8 the following day. I guess I'm heading to the parental unit's house to dig them out.
For hunting, yes and no. At the beginning of the storm they'll be flying. The snow gets too deep the geese won't come onto the fields because there's no food and they move south. That screws up the rest of the season, which ends Feb. 3.
The shallower marshes are already starting to freeze over, so that's another variable.
I was looking at where my folks are, near Charlottesville, VA, ... they were supposed to get 12+ as of yesterday, 8-12" today. I have a sneaky suspicion this will rapidly downgrade.
...and then again, I might be wrong. Forecast for my parents area is now 12+ Friday and 8-12 Sat.
There's about a million of those things on the lawn (and street) next to the Westbury community center. Pretty sure you could bag your limit with a slingshot.
Between Intellicast, WU, and Weather Channel it looks like the snow will track mostly to the west of the Chesapeake, and rain east.
Fox 5 said that southern maryland would be in a rain/snow band. We would start as snow then change to a wintery mix then end as snow, but we wont have any blockbuster numbers.
It's going to change hourly for the next few days. A little while ago, Wunderground had us for 8-12" both Fri and Sat, no rain, so 16-24" total. Now it's 5-8", total 10-16".
If there is any appreciable accumulation, I hope the guy who plowed my driveway last year shows up again this year. I can't believe I forgot to get his name and number. I can shovel myself, but I don't want to. Sometimes the best tool for the job is cold, hard cash. We shall see...