Comments

From Jim W. Miller
Posted from 172.196.18.134 on November 6, 2005 at 1:25 AM (GMT)
Daylight savings is over. You're complaining about normal time :))
From Sydney Menees
Posted from 24.166.184.121 on November 6, 2005 at 1:38 AM (GMT)
I always love the first snow...so pure and clean. After a week, it's pretty gross. Enjoy your Alaskan winter!
From Emily Grossman
Posted from 209.112.223.188 on November 6, 2005 at 2:07 AM (GMT)
Nope, I was complaining about daylight savings. They gave us all the daylight when we needed it least. And now it's gone. So there. :)
From Pauline Lerner
Posted from 70.108.85.192 on November 6, 2005 at 3:53 AM (GMT)
Why does it warm up when it snows?
From Sheila Ganapathy
Posted from 70.21.212.89 on November 6, 2005 at 4:02 AM (GMT)
The clouds keep the atmosphere warmer when it rains or snows b/c they sort of act as a blanket.

I was really surprised to see that you are in AK. I am very interested in visiting AK and I was thinking of coming during my Dec brak from school but everyone says it's going to be so cold I will want to like kill myself. What's it like there in the summer? My friend said they have mosquitos that are my size (heavily exagerated ofcourse). I think it's really cool to live in AK. I just learned about the lake they found below all the snow, I think it's called Plasor or Laskor or something...I don't exactly remember, I just think its' neat

Sheila

From Bill _
Posted from 206.105.184.73 on November 6, 2005 at 4:17 AM (GMT)
God, zero farenheit already! Meanwhile, I was painting the house today in shorts. No wonder these intrepid Kodiak bears won't move on. They've finished off the birthday cake and moved on to the ice cream. I wonder if the ice cream makes them homesick ;-)
From Pratik Desai
Posted from 65.4.180.142 on November 6, 2005 at 5:17 AM (GMT)
Haha! I like how you said, "It WARMS up to about twenty..." Down here in SC, fifty degrees is considered chilly!
From Emily Grossman
Posted from 209.112.223.188 on November 6, 2005 at 8:58 AM (GMT)
Everyone loves talking about the weather. Currently -2 F and clear, with two-three inches of old snow on the ground. What's the weather like where you all live?
From Danielle Gauthier
Posted from 71.208.113.60 on November 6, 2005 at 4:08 PM (GMT)
feels like something's blowing in.
From Jim W. Miller
Posted from 172.194.122.100 on November 6, 2005 at 7:12 PM (GMT)
Well, just don't accidently vote it dark all the time.

Seven day forecast:
70/40,66/52,76/59,74/60,70/49,68/50,73/56. Clear and breezy.

Tied with Vermont for best fall colors in the world.

From Emily Grossman
Posted from 216.67.10.79 on November 6, 2005 at 8:59 PM (GMT)
Oh yeah, Shiela, you're right about the clouds being like a blanket. Soldotna is coastal and stays, on average, quite a bit warmer than the interior part of the state. Warm fronts from the south bring the moisture, usually. You would enjoy a visit, I'm pretty sure, if you like snow. Or come in the summer, and the scenery is heartbreakingly gorgeous, with nonstop daylight.

Speaking of blankets and mosquitos, I remember a time a few years ago when I helped out with a canoe trip for our summer camp. We camped on a small knoll in the middle of the swamp, and I have never seen mosquitos like I saw that day. I'd covered every part of my body with repellent and pulled my hooded sweatshirt tight around my face, exposing as little skin as humanly possible to those evil bloodsuckers. We couldn't stay still long enough to get a fire started. They sqooshed into my ears, stuck in my eyes, and every time I tried to breathe, I inhaled them in my nose. You could pick any spot on your body and swat seven mosquitos in one blow, that's how dense they were. God help you if you had to go to the bathroom. We eventually gave up on the fire and hid out in our tents until morning. Who wants Smore-squito sandwiches, anyway?