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Brrr, y'all: Temps startle South, blanket the East
#1
By JAY REEVES, Associated Press Writer 
Fri Jan 16, 6:39 pm ET
 
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. – Miserable, lung-burning, face-numbing temperatures are one thing in the Midwest and Northeast. But the Deep South? Temperatures plummeted Friday across the Midwest and eastern U.S., and delivered a stinging slap to Southerners unaccustomed to the frigid weather. Schools were closed in a dozen states and homeless shelters were overcrowded. Those that did venture outside bundled up and made quick trips.

In an odd twist, Alabama was colder than Alaska.

"I never thought I'd see weather like this, not at all," said Maya Morgan, a 20-year-old Christian missionary from Barbados, who is on a fellowship at the Atlanta University complex. "And so that's why I like have, literally, six jackets on. Sometimes it's too cold to keep your eyes open."

Forecasters said temperatures in the upper Midwest could turn into the coldest in years as Arctic air keeps spilling southward from Canada. The cold snap has claimed at least six lives and contributed to dozens of traffic accidents. One death involved a man in a wheelchair who was found in subzero temperatures stuck in the snow, a shovel in his hand, outside his home in Des Moines, Iowa. He died at a hospital.

The cold weather has gripped the Midwest and Northeast for days, but as it crept farther South, some were growing worried.

"We're afraid people will die in this kind of weather," said Anita Beaty, who works with the homeless in Atlanta, where temperatures dropped below the teens, some 20 degrees below normal lows in January. About 900 men packed a shelter that normally houses 700.

Freezing temperatures threatened to kill picturesque Spanish moss hanging from Gulf Coast trees. Wind and choppy seas frustrated efforts to free an endangered right whale tangled in fishing gear off the Southeastern coast. And it was too cold to bet on dogs in West Virginia: A greyhound track shut down because of a predicted high of 7 degrees.

Then again, the cold was testing even the heartiest winter-weather states. On Friday morning, it was minus 10 in Cleveland, minus 6 in Detroit and minus 11 in Chicago. In upstate New York, areas near Lake Erie received up to 2 inches of snow per hour.

Quentin Masters wore two coats and long underwear to mail a gift at the post office in downtown Syracuse.

"It was almost too cold to come down here today but it's a birthday present for my sister in Buffalo," said Masters, 28. "It's on Monday and I don't want it to be late."

It was so cold in Milwaukee that ice thawed at skating rinks. The subzero temperatures froze the ammonia tank needed to make ice at the indoor Pettit National Ice Center. Workers fixed the problem and two hockey rinks and the Olympic oval were expected to be ready for skaters later in the day.

Some in Illinois and Ohio lost power for several hours while Charleston, W.Va.-based Appalachian Power, which delivers electricity to more than 1 million customers Tennessee, Virginia and West Virginia, had a record for electricity demand as businesses and homes cranked up the heat.

The National Weather Service predicted the frigid temperatures would persist into the weekend. Wind chill warnings were in effect and forecasters said the cold and strong winds could lead to hypothermia, frostbite and death.

To Southerners, who rarely see temperatures so cold, the icebox-like weather was the most jarring. Construction worker Allen Johnson wore a gray beanie, flannel shirt, long johns and boots as he stopped for morning coffee in Montgomery, where the overnight low was 22 degrees.

"No matter how bad it is, it could be worse — we could be in Anchorage, Alaska," Johnson said. Actually, the temperature was about 20 degrees warmer in Anchorage.

Second-grader Abbey Roberts waited for the school bus as the temperature hovered at 12 degrees in suburban Birmingham.

"I stood out there for a couple of minutes and my nose turned red. I was so cold I thought I was going to turn to an ice cube," Roberts said.

In western Georgia, about 15,000 students got a day off in Carroll County; the temperature only made it to 25 degrees by lunchtime.

"You know us Southerners," said schools spokeswoman Elena Schulenburg. "We might have the gloves and scarves, but we might not consider pulling them out. We may not consider how cold it is."

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090116/ap_o...ther/print
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#2
Well, our pipes are frozen this morning.  That royally sucks.  On Friday I had every intention of hiding indoors, but was called out to run a favor for a family member.  I went out and it awful outside then - bitter cold.  Last night I think it hit 4 or 5 degrees.  Sunday, this will all be a memory, as it is to go up into the 40's.


[Image: 1812.gif]
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#3
I’m sorry to hear about your water pipes. It got to 13 below zero here Friday. After I got off work we went out grocery shopping and it was interesting to see how people dressed in this weather. One guy only wore shorts and a shirt. His legs were beet red. It amazes me how stupid guys are about wearing shorts in the winter. Lots of young people only had thin hoodies on. It just seems kind of funny strange why so many people have an aversion to bundling up in the winter.

Today it got to 20 degrees above zero and that feels a ton better than 13 below zero. We’re having a heat wave. Cool
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#4
[color="#800080 Wrote:Richard[/color]]One guy only wore shorts and a shirt. His legs were beet red..
Nuts.  That guy is nuts!

I was on the phone with my mother and at 1:11pm the water comes shooting through the kitchen sink faucet (we had left the faucet open to alert just when the water came back on).  If my pipes become unfrozen at 1:11pm, I wanna say "I love you 1:11!"

Enjoy your heat wave.  Sheesh.... whatta winter.  icon_baeh
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#5
That’s cool you got your water back. Did you guys have to put heaters near the pipes to thaw them out?
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#6
Oh no.  We aren't that energetic. 

Our modus operandi, is to wait and see if rise in temp, thaws them out like last year. 
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#7
It sounds like you guys are pretty laid back out there. I would have been heating the pipes up right away. I’ve lost water quite a few times because of well problems and I hate it.
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#8
[color="#800080 Wrote:Richard[/color]]....you guys are pretty laid back out there.....

Laid back, is a very polite way to describe me and my husband. 

I would have used the words "inept  and/or LAZY with the ways and whys of frozen plumbing/pipes".    icon_biggrin 


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#9
I know how that lazy bug is. We get that way about things too. We’re not gung ho teenagers anymore.  ;)
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#10
[color="#800080 Wrote:Richard[/color]]...We’re not gung ho teenagers anymore.  ;)
Tru dat....  ;)
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