British Expats

British Expats (https://britishexpats.com/forum/)
-   Canada (https://britishexpats.com/forum/canada-56/)
-   -   For those approaching their first winter (https://britishexpats.com/forum/canada-56/those-approaching-their-first-winter-884674/)

Piff Poff Oct 17th 2016 8:52 am

Re: For those approaching their first winter
 
The Arctic blasts have started, snow over thanksgiving, Friday saw freezing rain (I really hate that) and today fog and more fog. The high today is supposed to be something like 2. The forecast mentioned 8 degrees by Wednesday, there may be trouble if they are wrong!

plasticcanuck Oct 17th 2016 9:22 am

Re: For those approaching their first winter
 

Originally Posted by BristolUK (Post 12078928)
Here too...couple of overnight frost 'advisories' but I believe someone somewhere had snow. :nod:

We have a big fir tree - or whatever it is - in our back garden. There's one little patch where the needles are sort of yellow among the green. Never seen that before. I hope this doesn't mean the tree is dying and will fall on the house. :eek:

So if it is dying, will you wait for it to fall on the house and then do something about it? Better to get an Arborist to examine it. I had a large Fir tree removed some years ago. Cost close to $1,000.

MarkG Oct 17th 2016 9:46 am

Re: For those approaching their first winter
 

Originally Posted by Piff Poff (Post 12079149)
The Arctic blasts have started, snow over thanksgiving, Friday saw freezing rain (I really hate that) and today fog and more fog. The high today is supposed to be something like 2. The forecast mentioned 8 degrees by Wednesday, there may be trouble if they are wrong!

With a level of sunspots similar to the Little Ice Age, and the El Nino over, this is likely to be a really interesting winter.

Certainly the hamster looks like he's not planning to come out of his igloo until spring.

Howefamily Oct 17th 2016 11:03 am

Re: For those approaching their first winter
 
Lovely and warm here still
Long may it last

scrubbedexpat091 Oct 17th 2016 11:25 am

Re: For those approaching their first winter
 
We haven't had a good snow/cold winter in a few years now, I hope we get some cold and snow this year, I don't mind cold or snow.

TrishP Oct 17th 2016 12:58 pm

Re: For those approaching their first winter
 

Originally Posted by plasticcanuck (Post 12079170)
So if it is dying, will you wait for it to fall on the house and then do something about it? Better to get an Arborist to examine it. I had a large Fir tree removed some years ago. Cost close to $1,000.

You need to make friends with the guys who work for your local hydro company who manage the lines and pay them on the side ... we have a guy we found on Kijiji who works for Hydro One and takes down trees for us for peanuts. He took down a dead spruce yesterday >100ft tall for $100! Previous quotes from specialist companies to take down 3 trees ran to $000s, he did the job for $300.

Piff Poff Oct 17th 2016 1:12 pm

Re: For those approaching their first winter
 

Originally Posted by MarkG (Post 12079186)
With a level of sunspots similar to the Little Ice Age, and the El Nino over, this is likely to be a really interesting winter.

Certainly the hamster looks like he's not planning to come out of his igloo until spring.

I think your right. It's been a very strange summer, maybe the sun will shine for us during the next couple of months.

BristolUK Oct 17th 2016 1:36 pm

Re: For those approaching their first winter
 

Originally Posted by plasticcanuck (Post 12079170)
So if it is dying, will you wait for it to fall on the house and then do something about it?...

I think you've been away from the UK too long and are not recognising Brit humour...faux angst and all that ;)

Souvy Oct 17th 2016 11:31 pm

Re: For those approaching their first winter
 
Odd weather here at the moment. The forecast today is 25 (humidex 31). On Sunday it is forecast to snow.

Paul_Shepherd Oct 20th 2016 4:05 am

Re: For those approaching their first winter
 
Above average snow fall in southern Ontario! great news!! plenty of skiing and it may just push me into making that snowmobile purchase!! :thumbsup:

leith Oct 20th 2016 4:56 am

Re: For those approaching their first winter
 
Climate varies a lot across Canada so preparing for winter differs quite a bit depending on where you are Winter here on coastal BC is wet, often windy but seldom any snow Just had another storm front come in last night with high winds and lot of rain but temperatures well above zero c.f. interior parts of Canada - winters very cold, dry on prairies. tons of snow.

BristolUK Oct 20th 2016 6:33 am

Re: For those approaching their first winter
 

Originally Posted by leith (Post 12081646)
Climate varies a lot across Canada so preparing for winter differs quite a bit depending on where you are

Well, differs a bit...I'm not sure about quite a bit but maybe that depends on your definition.

Winter here on coastal BC is wet, often windy but seldom any snow
So that small part differs from the rest but how much does the rest differ within the rest?


interior parts of Canada - winters very cold, dry on prairies. tons of snow.
Everywhere else is very cold with a ton of snow isn't it? Of course a ton of snow to one person in one part of Canada might not be a ton of snow to another in another part and sometimes you might even get two different people disagreeing in the same bit.

The idea of moving from here and getting away from our winter snow is appealing. Much of southern Ontario gets half to two-thirds what we get here and to me that would be a significant reduction. But people there will doubtless complain about it. :unsure:

Oink Oct 20th 2016 6:46 am

Re: For those approaching their first winter
 

Originally Posted by BristolUK (Post 12081729)
Well, differs a bit...I'm not sure about quite a bit but maybe that depends on your definition.

So that small part differs from the rest but how much does the rest differ within the rest?


Everywhere else is very cold with a ton of snow isn't it? Of course a ton of snow to one person in one part of Canada might not be a ton of snow to another in another part and sometimes you might even get two different people disagreeing in the same bit.

The idea of moving from here and getting away from our winter snow is appealing. Much of southern Ontario gets half to two-thirds what we get here and to me that would be a significant reduction. But people there will doubtless complain about it. :unsure:

Winter in Canada is rubbish. It might a bit less rubbish in some parts but it is generally awful anywhere you live. If you don't like terrible winter weather, go somewhere else. There's a practical reason nearly all the Canadians live near the US border.

Almost Canadian Oct 20th 2016 7:49 am

Re: For those approaching their first winter
 

Originally Posted by Oink (Post 12081739)
Winter in Canada is rubbish. It might a bit less rubbish in some parts but it is generally awful anywhere you live. If you don't like terrible winter weather, go somewhere else. There's a practical reason nearly all the Canadians live near the US border.

Does the north of the US have markedly different weather to the south of Canada? :p

scrubbedexpat091 Oct 20th 2016 7:56 am

Re: For those approaching their first winter
 

Originally Posted by Oink (Post 12081739)
Winter in Canada is rubbish. It might a bit less rubbish in some parts but it is generally awful anywhere you live. If you don't like terrible winter weather, go somewhere else. There's a practical reason nearly all the Canadians live near the US border.

:goodpost:


My mom lives in the Palm Springs area and when I go visit in winter, seems every other car has a BC or Alberta plate. :lol:


All times are GMT -12. The time now is 3:49 pm.

Powered by vBulletin: ©2000 - 2026, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.