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Old September 6th 04, 05:22 PM
Roger Halstead
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On Mon, 06 Sep 2004 09:17:11 -0400, Matt Whiting
wrote:

Roger Halstead wrote:

On Sun, 05 Sep 2004 21:39:30 GMT, "Steven P. McNicoll"
wrote:


"Mitty" wrote in message
...

The runway is effectively 300' wide


Really? Plates say 150.


When the USAF owned it the runways were 300' wide. Now they're 150' wide
with 75' paved shoulders. Half the pavement to maintain and plow that way.
At Kincheloe/Chippewa County they abandoned the south mile or so of runway
completely and reduced the width of the rest to 200'.



We ended up with one of their snow plows, or rather blowers. The
thing can take the snow off the runway and put it over the taxiways.
I think we've only had one major snow storm since then.


Did the blower blow so hard that it blew all the storms away? :-)

I guess that could be used as well and any other reason:-))
The first time they plowed out, they made a pass down a taxiway and
then over to the runway. They discovered they were putting all the
snow back on the taxiway.

I think if they really tired they could take the snow off the taxiway
for 18/36 and put it out in the road.

Our weather here in Central Michigan has changed greatly over the last
50 years. We seldom get the big snows that were once common. They
measure the length of Winter weather by the time some lakes remain
frozen. In the last 50 years we have gained almost 5 weeks of warm
weather (that's warm by Michigan Standards, not Florida's)

Another indication is the first snows.
When I was a teen we'd have 8 to 10 inches of snow around the first
day of Pheasant hunting season. (October 15 or 20th). Now it's rare to
see snow, other than some flurries or a very light covering by
December.
OTOH we seem to have a lot more tornados although they tend to be on
the weak side.

In the 50's and 60's 5 and 6 foot drifts were not uncommon. I have
some photos of our cars being completely covered in the driveway (when
I lived out in the country by Breckenridge about 30 miles SW of here)
and those cars were far larger than most of today's. The last time I
saw drifts that deep was in 1984.

Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member)
(N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair)
www.rogerhalstead.com

Matt