Do you see in those maps where it says 3.3 ... right in the middle of the Island, in red???
Welcome to Icey Hollow !!
Welcome to Icey Hollow !!
Went to the largest grocery store in the area last night for the regular weekly order. Sure enough hardly any bread and eggs left. When i asked what they do with 10 gallons of milk and 12 loaves of bread and 6 doz of eggs after the storm one familys reply was,"just throw them away". Go figure.Never have quite understood the buy all the bread, milk, and eggs right before a storm thing. I'll usually make sure the cabinet is stocked with canned goods and a couple propane bottles for the camp stove.
We're in the 6-8" range for total accumulation which I can easily handle; however, I'm nowhere near ready for single digits. The stove shop still hasn't gotten back to me with a quote for the reline and getting this stove to run right with the oversized chimney just doesn't work real well. I could probably use about 2 more cords of good wood.
Milk and bread! Must get milk n bread!
always thought bees active year round, believe they use the circle inside out to keep warm. live on their honey. no sleep for the poor workers..I don't miss that stuff one bit. We're looking at early spring here. Broke a record at 65F and saw a honeybee out yesterday. That was weird. Too early!
Leaves are starting show on some plants and bulbs are sprouting. This is on the north (cold) side of the house!
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They don't leave the hive until it gets above 55F. Seeing them out collecting nectar in January is very unusual.always thought bees active year round, believe they use the circle inside out to keep warm. live on their honey. no sleep for the poor workers..
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