76F clear and sunny

Schadenfreude

patriot and widower
here on the beautiful california central coast

on another hand

Minn. father camps in blizzard to help school​
Associated Press/AP Online img:hover { text-decoration: none; }
By PATRICK CONDON MINNEAPOLIS - Hospital executive Robert Stevens donned four layers of long underwear, heavy boots and a down coat before climbing on the roof of a Minnesota coffee shop to raise money for his daughter's school.
He vowed not to come down until he had raised $100,000, but after reaching the half-way mark Saturday morning, he said he hoped the rest of the money would come fast. He didn't look forward to spending another night out in the blizzard that was sweeping through the Midwest.
"I think I've crossed the line into insanity," he told The Associated Press.
The storm formed in the Rocky Mountains on Friday and then swept into northern Nebraska and Iowa overnight. By Saturday morning, heavy snow and strong winds had created blizzard conditions across eastern South Dakota, northwest Iowa and southwest Minnesota, and the storm was moving east into Minnesota's Twin Cities and western Wisconsin.
Stevens camped Friday night on the roof of the Dunn Brothers coffee shop in Excelsior, a Minneapolis suburb on the shore of Lake Minnetonka. The president and CEO of Ridgeview Medical Center in nearby Waconia, he was raising money for the private Spring Hill School, where his daughter attends eighth grade.
He slept inside a tent surrounded by hay bales, swaddled in a double-insulated sleeping bag as he listened to the winds whip off the lake just a block away.
Stevens said the blizzard may turn out to be fortunate since it's bringing more attention to his fundraising goal. But he also questioned whether, if he doesn't get there by nightfall, he could bear another night on the roof.
"Right now I'm thinking I can do it," he said. "But nature might get the upper hand later on tonight."
With near whiteout conditions in many areas, Minnesota transportation officials closed westbound Interstate 90 from Albert Lea to the South Dakota border, pulled plows off roads in the southern part of the state and told drivers to stay home.
"With this type of a storm, it's a blanket approach, because it's a visibility issue," Minnesota Department of Transportation spokeswoman Rebecca Arndt said.
Portions of Interstates 29 and 76 were closed in Iowa because of blowing snow and related crashes.
Between 8 and 18 inches of snow were expected in Minnesota, with the heaviest snowfall stretching from near Hutchinson and Mankato to the Twin Cities. Heavy snow also was falling in northern Iowa, where up to 10 inches were expected, and eastern South Dakota, where 5 to 8 inches were forecast.
Tyler Hoverson, 18, was part of a six-person crew clearing snow at a Minneapolis-area strip mall early Saturday morning. He had been at work since 3 a.m. and, with snowfall expected to continue all day, he predicted he'd be there until 2 a.m. Sunday.
""It's discouraging," he said, his eyebrows frosty with snow. "Feels kind of unproductive."
The snow was expected to be followed by dangerous cold. A wind chill advisory covered most of North Dakota on Saturday morning. North winds of 15 miles per hour or more combined with air temperatures at or below zero to drop wind chill readings to 20 below zero, the National Weather Service said.
The arctic air was expected to spread east behind the storm, dropping temperatures below zero throughout the Dakotas and in parts of Iowa, Minnesota and Wisconsin by Sunday night.
---
Associated Press writers Dirk Lammers in Sioux Falls, S.D., and Jeff Baenen in Plymouth, Minn., contributed to this report.
A service of YellowBrix, Inc. .
 
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here on the beautiful california central coast

on another hand

Minn. father camps in blizzard to help school​
Associated Press/AP Online img:hover { text-decoration: none; }
By PATRICK CONDON MINNEAPOLIS - Hospital executive Robert Stevens donned four layers of long underwear, heavy boots and a down coat before climbing on the roof of a Minnesota coffee shop to raise money for his daughter's school.
He vowed not to come down until he had raised $100,000, but after reaching the half-way mark Saturday morning, he said he hoped the rest of the money would come fast. He didn't look forward to spending another night out in the blizzard that was sweeping through the Midwest.
"I think I've crossed the line into insanity," he told The Associated Press.
The storm formed in the Rocky Mountains on Friday and then swept into northern Nebraska and Iowa overnight. By Saturday morning, heavy snow and strong winds had created blizzard conditions across eastern South Dakota, northwest Iowa and southwest Minnesota, and the storm was moving east into Minnesota's Twin Cities and western Wisconsin.
Stevens camped Friday night on the roof of the Dunn Brothers coffee shop in Excelsior, a Minneapolis suburb on the shore of Lake Minnetonka. The president and CEO of Ridgeview Medical Center in nearby Waconia, he was raising money for the private Spring Hill School, where his daughter attends eighth grade.
He slept inside a tent surrounded by hay bales, swaddled in a double-insulated sleeping bag as he listened to the winds whip off the lake just a block away.
Stevens said the blizzard may turn out to be fortunate since it's bringing more attention to his fundraising goal. But he also questioned whether, if he doesn't get there by nightfall, he could bear another night on the roof.
"Right now I'm thinking I can do it," he said. "But nature might get the upper hand later on tonight."
With near whiteout conditions in many areas, Minnesota transportation officials closed westbound Interstate 90 from Albert Lea to the South Dakota border, pulled plows off roads in the southern part of the state and told drivers to stay home.
"With this type of a storm, it's a blanket approach, because it's a visibility issue," Minnesota Department of Transportation spokeswoman Rebecca Arndt said.
Portions of Interstates 29 and 76 were closed in Iowa because of blowing snow and related crashes.
Between 8 and 18 inches of snow were expected in Minnesota, with the heaviest snowfall stretching from near Hutchinson and Mankato to the Twin Cities. Heavy snow also was falling in northern Iowa, where up to 10 inches were expected, and eastern South Dakota, where 5 to 8 inches were forecast.
Tyler Hoverson, 18, was part of a six-person crew clearing snow at a Minneapolis-area strip mall early Saturday morning. He had been at work since 3 a.m. and, with snowfall expected to continue all day, he predicted he'd be there until 2 a.m. Sunday.
""It's discouraging," he said, his eyebrows frosty with snow. "Feels kind of unproductive."
The snow was expected to be followed by dangerous cold. A wind chill advisory covered most of North Dakota on Saturday morning. North winds of 15 miles per hour or more combined with air temperatures at or below zero to drop wind chill readings to 20 below zero, the National Weather Service said.
The arctic air was expected to spread east behind the storm, dropping temperatures below zero throughout the Dakotas and in parts of Iowa, Minnesota and Wisconsin by Sunday night.
---
Associated Press writers Dirk Lammers in Sioux Falls, S.D., and Jeff Baenen in Plymouth, Minn., contributed to this report.
A service of YellowBrix, Inc. .

It is so crystal clear and cold today! We went to the zoo last night to see their Christmas light display, it was 13 degrees out and it was absolutely beautiful and really got me in the mood for Christmas! The animals were very active, the wolves howled at us and the mountain lion came to the fence and cried at us! they aren't use to people being at the zoo at night! It was awesome!
 
It is so crystal clear and cold today! We went to the zoo last night to see their Christmas light display, it was 13 degrees out and it was absolutely beautiful and really got me in the mood for Christmas! The animals were very active, the wolves howled at us and the mountain lion came to the fence and cried at us! they aren't use to people being at the zoo at night! It was awesome!

we had another beautiful day today

i got all of the snow and ice i ever wanted when i spent a lifetime one year in michigan
 
Texans are the only people you meet that feel utterly compelled to tell you where they are from as if you are supposed to cheer their decision to live in a place with so little to offer.

They are closed minded and arrogant from my experience.
 
Texans are the only people you meet that feel utterly compelled to tell you where they are from as if you are supposed to cheer their decision to live in a place with so little to offer.

They are closed minded and arrogant from my experience.

Desh you don't like them because of how they vote, except for Austin.

Now every place/area has its share of good and bad people. But as a reasonable generalization you get that Southern hospitality/kindness coming from a lot of Texans. You do get that Texas pride coming from a lot of Texans which I suppose can turn some people off. I see that same pride held by a lot of people in California so I guess it comes down to whether you like the place or not if it is going to offend you.

Not sure why you believe Texas has so little to offer. Again I think you just don't like the state because of how they vote.
 
Fuck you all! lol

Its 12 degrees here in Kentucky, with 4 inches of snow on the ground and more falling. The worst part is that it rained all weekend, so there is a nice layer of ice under the snow.

I'm ready to get back to Alabama.
 
Got up to 11 degrees here in SE OK, drove the bus around and picked up all the little tricycle motors. At least the wind isn't blowing. I am now in a warm classroom waiting on the kiddos.
 
Desh you don't like them because of how they vote, except for Austin.

Now every place/area has its share of good and bad people. But as a reasonable generalization you get that Southern hospitality/kindness coming from a lot of Texans. You do get that Texas pride coming from a lot of Texans which I suppose can turn some people off. I see that same pride held by a lot of people in California so I guess it comes down to whether you like the place or not if it is going to offend you.

Not sure why you believe Texas has so little to offer. Again I think you just don't like the state because of how they vote.

Just got back from Dallas Saturday evening. That place doesn't look like a place facing a severe ecomomic depression. Construction and building going on everywhere. Now if they could just learn to play football. :)
 
Californians are the only people you meet that feel utterly compelled to tell you where they are from as if you are supposed to cheer their decision to live in a place with so little to offer.

They are closed minded and arrogant from my experience.

fixed the above for you....

the same could be said for New Yorkers.
 
Desh you don't like them because of how they vote, except for Austin.

Now every place/area has its share of good and bad people. But as a reasonable generalization you get that Southern hospitality/kindness coming from a lot of Texans. You do get that Texas pride coming from a lot of Texans which I suppose can turn some people off. I see that same pride held by a lot of people in California so I guess it comes down to whether you like the place or not if it is going to offend you.

Not sure why you believe Texas has so little to offer. Again I think you just don't like the state because of how they vote.

Texas pride is essentially, we are fucking loners and we seceeded from the Union... Well, congrats on all of that. :thup:
 
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