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-   -   Winter 2017-18 (https://britishexpats.com/forum/maple-leaf-98/winter-2017-18-a-905397/)

bats Dec 12th 2017 1:02 am

Re: Winter 2017-18
 

Originally Posted by BristolUK (Post 12398390)
That's lovely. :nod:

I still like to keep a sort of discipline in getting up fairly early. Stepdaughter has had loads of early starts lately meaning leaving for the bus at 7.15 so I'm up making sure she's up and having her brekky ready when she gets downstairs.

Yep, I've found it's better to get up at a set time. I set the alarm for 6.45 then drink coffee and check messages in bed. Usually up by 7.30. Today I'll be shovelling snow, I could get the blower out but I usually end up covered in snow when I use it - I don't get the funnel direction changed in time- so today I'll shovel as there's only a bit.

scrubbedexpat091 Dec 12th 2017 4:17 am

Re: Winter 2017-18
 
On my days off I let my internal clock wake me. It usually does about an hour after my usual wake time for work which is a little too early.

I figure the brain knows when the body is rested and ready to wake up...lol

dbd33 Dec 12th 2017 12:23 pm

Re: Winter 2017-18
 
According to the car thermometer it is -17. The forecast is for lower temperatures tomorrow. There is maybe 8" of snow on the ground.

It's horrible.

bats Dec 12th 2017 12:36 pm

Re: Winter 2017-18
 

Originally Posted by dbd33 (Post 12398803)
According to the car thermometer it is -17. The forecast is for lower temperatures tomorrow. There is maybe 8" of snow on the ground.

It's horrible.

I tried going for a walk today and it was evil. The bits of me that were covered were ok but the wind felt as if it were peeling the skin from my face.
I hate dressing to go outside. You struggle into a million layers then remember something that's at the other end if the house, you fetch it getting increasingly uncomfortable in outdoor clothing. But you still have to struggle into your boots which takes forever and the blood rushes to your head. Then upright again you see your gloves across the room so you have to get them by levitating across the floor - cos you've got your mucky boots on. Finally head gear and gloves on you batter outside dripping in sweat not caring that you want to pee.

BristolUK Dec 12th 2017 12:37 pm

Re: Winter 2017-18
 
I nearly slipped over yesterday but I was saved by ice. :blink:

My foot slid to the side but there was a frozen lump welded to the sidewalk and I didn't do the splits.

dbd33 Dec 12th 2017 12:42 pm

Re: Winter 2017-18
 

Originally Posted by bats (Post 12398807)
I tried going for a walk today and it was evil. The bits of me that were covered were ok but the wind felt as if it were peeling the skin from my face.
I hate dressing to go outside. You struggle into a million layers then remember something that's at the other end if the house, you fetch it getting increasingly uncomfortable in outdoor clothing. But you still have to struggle into your boots which takes forever and the blood rushes to your head. Then upright again you see your gloves across the room so you have to get them by levitating across the floor - cos you've got your mucky boots on. Finally head gear and gloves on you batter outside dripping in sweat not caring that you want to pee.

In this weather the success or failure of the whole day depends on how long it takes the dog to shit.

bats Dec 12th 2017 1:14 pm

Re: Winter 2017-18
 

Originally Posted by dbd33 (Post 12398809)
In this weather the success or failure of the whole day depends on how long it takes the dog to shit.

I hear you. I've just been outside with my poncey poodle who has refused to go all day until now. It was huge so at least I could find it in the snow

dbd33 Dec 12th 2017 1:31 pm

Re: Winter 2017-18
 

Originally Posted by bats (Post 12398818)
I hear you. I've just been outside with my poncey poodle who has refused to go all day until now. It was huge so at least I could find it in the snow

The worst is when she squats but leaps up when the snow is cold. First there's the issue of the arm being wrenched from the socket (you can't let go of a greyhound) and then there's knowing that she has to go, eventually.

bats Dec 12th 2017 2:05 pm

Re: Winter 2017-18
 

Originally Posted by dbd33 (Post 12398823)
The worst is when she squats but leaps up when the snow is cold. First there's the issue of the arm being wrenched from the socket (you can't let go of a greyhound) and then there's knowing that she has to go, eventually.

A longer leash wouldn't help much. My dog runs around me in a circle backwards and forwards as if he's on a lunge line. Then he'll suddenly choose the presumably optimum spot to let loose on.
I never realised how much of my life would be occupied with dog pee and poop.

Siouxie Dec 13th 2017 5:08 pm

Re: Winter 2017-18
 

Originally Posted by bats (Post 12398829)
A longer leash wouldn't help much. My dog runs around me in a circle backwards and forwards as if he's on a lunge line. Then he'll suddenly choose the presumably optimum spot to let loose on.
I never realised how much of my life would be occupied with dog pee and poop.

I'm lucky with mine, she pee's on demand.. very accommodating she is.

:)

Former Lancastrian Dec 13th 2017 8:39 pm

Re: Winter 2017-18
 
Well if you had cats then most of these problems wouldn't occur;)

Who needs alarm clocks when you have a cat. That genie pawing and nibbling at 4 am isn't saying I need to go out to pee or poop Its I want food and no matter how many times you throw me off the bed I still want food. Sure try closing the door I will just howl till you get up as there is no way Im gonna let you back to sleep until you feed me.

BristolUK Dec 13th 2017 11:26 pm

Re: Winter 2017-18
 
A bit chilly today. :sneaky: I woke to the sound of wind - the kind outside :lol:

It's -11 right now with the feels like being -22.

Jingsamichty Dec 14th 2017 12:26 am

Re: Winter 2017-18
 
I'm going to the Weihnachtsmarkt (Christmas market) tonight with work colleagues to have gluhwein, and venison & boar gulasch for dinner.

https://image.jimcdn.com/app/cms/ima...9321/image.jpg

caretaker Dec 14th 2017 12:36 am

Re: Winter 2017-18
 
Oooh you will be having some fun!

Souvy Dec 14th 2017 1:06 am

Re: Winter 2017-18
 

Originally Posted by BristolUK (Post 12399609)
A bit chilly today. :sneaky: I woke to the sound of wind - the kind outside :lol:

It's -11 right now with the feels like being -22.

Wimp.

Try the -22 (-33) we've got this morning!

Atlantic Xpat Dec 14th 2017 1:22 am

Re: Winter 2017-18
 

Originally Posted by Souvy (Post 12399651)
Wimp.

Try the -22 (-33) we've got this morning!

+4 and sunny here. Bit breezy though.

caretaker Dec 14th 2017 1:30 am

Re: Winter 2017-18
 
I haven't needed parka or boots for a week.

Souvy Dec 14th 2017 1:31 am

Re: Winter 2017-18
 

Originally Posted by Atlantic Xpat (Post 12399657)
+4 and sunny here. Bit breezy though.

Bright sunshine here too. The cat is looking wistfully through the patio doors, wanting to go outside because it's sunny. The daft bint doesn't seem to understand that there is a 44-degree difference between one side of the door and the other.

bats Dec 14th 2017 1:34 am

Re: Winter 2017-18
 

Originally Posted by Souvy (Post 12399651)
Wimp.

Try the -22 (-33) we've got this morning!

Trying it. I see your -22 and raise it.

-24C plus some stupid wind chill. At least the sun is shining

Teaandtoday5 Dec 14th 2017 12:27 pm

Re: Winter 2017-18
 

Originally Posted by bats (Post 12399665)
Trying it. I see your -22 and raise it.

-24C plus some stupid wind chill. At least the sun is shining

The dog has started his annual 'I can walk on three legs' thing, whilst keeping the other for tucked up to defrost. I may have to give in and get him a coat. Getting it on him should be fun.

dbd33 Dec 15th 2017 12:22 am

Re: Winter 2017-18
 
A cautionary tale of morning in winter. Most of this happens four or five times per winter.

The new woodstove comes today. It seemed a good idea to clear the driveway for the truck. So, at 5:30 this morning I was on tractor listening to the engine turn slower and slower until the battery died. Luckily I had one of those lithium battery jump starter machines newly purchased from Amazon. I’d selected a well-reviewed one from Amazon.com but it wasn’t available in Canada so Amazon.ca suggested a different one and I bought that. I’ve fallen for that line before, I should have driven to Buffalo and bought the good one.

The instructions said to clamp the clamps on to the battery and to plug the other end of the jumper cable into the device. OK, it was cold and dark and I’m no genius but I swear there is no hole in the device into which to plug the cable. I gave up and fetched conventional cables and that’s when things went wrong.

At the moment, the tractor, lawn tractor, commuter car and precious artifact are all in the barn and that’s tight. The cables wouldn’t reach from the Mustang to the tractor so I drove it out and in nose first needing to angle it just right so as to be close enough. In the course of that I scraped it along the snow blower. I then attached the cables, it’s fiddly, there’s little room at the tractor end. I stood up, bashing my head on the tractor bucket and cutting my forehead messily. The tractor then started and I was able to blow the driveway and be ready for dog walking and going to work.

I hope that stove comes, fits, and entails no hidden charges. I’m too tired for more trouble today.

Atlantic Xpat Dec 15th 2017 12:35 am

Re: Winter 2017-18
 

Originally Posted by dbd33 (Post 12400143)
A cautionary tale of morning in winter. Most of this happens four or five times per winter.

The new woodstove comes today. It seemed a good idea to clear the driveway for the truck. So, at 5:30 this morning I was on tractor listening to the engine turn slower and slower until the battery died. Luckily I had one of those lithium battery jump starter machines newly purchased from Amazon. I’d selected a well-reviewed one from Amazon.com but it wasn’t available in Canada so Amazon.ca suggested a different one and I bought that. I’ve fallen for that line before, I should have driven to Buffalo and bought the good one.

The instructions said to clamp the clamps on to the battery and to plug the other end of the jumper cable into the device. OK, it was cold and dark and I’m no genius but I swear there is no hole in the device into which to plug the cable. I gave up and fetched conventional cables and that’s when things went wrong.

At the moment, the tractor, lawn tractor, commuter car and precious artifact are all in the barn and that’s tight. The cables wouldn’t reach from the Mustang to the tractor so I drove it out and in nose first needing to angle it just right so as to be close enough. In the course of that I scraped it along the snow blower. I then attached the cables, it’s fiddly, there’s little room at the tractor end. I stood up, bashing my head on the tractor bucket and cutting my forehead messily. The tractor then started and I was able to blow the driveway and be ready for dog walking and going to work.

I hope that stove comes, fits, and entails no hidden charges. I’m too tired for more trouble today.

Oh dear, that all sounds a bit expensive/painful.

I have a Lithium battery thingy purchased through Amazon.ca https://www.amazon.ca/gp/product/B01...?ie=UTF8&psc=1 Helpfully it comes with a built in torch, although unhelpfully I couldn't work out how to turn that feature on last night in the dark when I needed to jump start my faux-John Deere lawn tractor. Eventually figured it out which allowed me to rearrange gas powered things in the garage to get the car in to fit snow tires & then put stuff back so that the snowblower & quad with a plow are handy by the garage door rather than buried behind lawn mowers and the UTV. That'll be handy for tomorrow when winter is forecasted to arrive with 20-30cm on the way!

Souvy Dec 15th 2017 12:44 am

Re: Winter 2017-18
 
One should not let lithium batteries get cold. It knackers them. A problem with the Tesla idea is that Li batteries lose about a third of their distance charge at minus 15. That sort of thing happens in Canada!

Ottawa had the dubious distinction this morning of being the world's coldest capital city, beating out its rival Ulaanwhatever.

It is nippy.

BristolUK Dec 15th 2017 12:54 am

Re: Winter 2017-18
 

Originally Posted by dbd33 (Post 12400143)
A cautionary tale of morning in winter...

You'd probably avoid all that if you were in Brampton.

HGerchikov Dec 15th 2017 1:13 am

Re: Winter 2017-18
 

Originally Posted by dbd33 (Post 12400143)
A cautionary tale of morning in winter. Most of this happens four or five times per winter.

The new woodstove comes today. It seemed a good idea to clear the driveway for the truck. So, at 5:30 this morning I was on tractor listening to the engine turn slower and slower until the battery died. Luckily I had one of those lithium battery jump starter machines newly purchased from Amazon. I’d selected a well-reviewed one from Amazon.com but it wasn’t available in Canada so Amazon.ca suggested a different one and I bought that. I’ve fallen for that line before, I should have driven to Buffalo and bought the good one.

The instructions said to clamp the clamps on to the battery and to plug the other end of the jumper cable into the device. OK, it was cold and dark and I’m no genius but I swear there is no hole in the device into which to plug the cable. I gave up and fetched conventional cables and that’s when things went wrong.

At the moment, the tractor, lawn tractor, commuter car and precious artifact are all in the barn and that’s tight. The cables wouldn’t reach from the Mustang to the tractor so I drove it out and in nose first needing to angle it just right so as to be close enough. In the course of that I scraped it along the snow blower. I then attached the cables, it’s fiddly, there’s little room at the tractor end. I stood up, bashing my head on the tractor bucket and cutting my forehead messily. The tractor then started and I was able to blow the driveway and be ready for dog walking and going to work.

I hope that stove comes, fits, and entails no hidden charges. I’m too tired for more trouble today.

I did the driveway and the lane ways earlier this week with the tractor, it's a lot more fun than shovelling - although you may disagree! Had some trouble reversing until it occurred to me to put it in 4 wheel drive mode - duh.
Just waiting for some Christmas Tree purchaser to get stuck and need me to haul them out.

Almost Canadian Dec 15th 2017 1:37 am

Re: Winter 2017-18
 

Originally Posted by dbd33 (Post 12400143)
A cautionary tale of morning in winter. Most of this happens four or five times per winter.

The new woodstove comes today. It seemed a good idea to clear the driveway for the truck. So, at 5:30 this morning I was on tractor listening to the engine turn slower and slower until the battery died. Luckily I had one of those lithium battery jump starter machines newly purchased from Amazon. I’d selected a well-reviewed one from Amazon.com but it wasn’t available in Canada so Amazon.ca suggested a different one and I bought that. I’ve fallen for that line before, I should have driven to Buffalo and bought the good one.

The instructions said to clamp the clamps on to the battery and to plug the other end of the jumper cable into the device. OK, it was cold and dark and I’m no genius but I swear there is no hole in the device into which to plug the cable. I gave up and fetched conventional cables and that’s when things went wrong.

At the moment, the tractor, lawn tractor, commuter car and precious artifact are all in the barn and that’s tight. The cables wouldn’t reach from the Mustang to the tractor so I drove it out and in nose first needing to angle it just right so as to be close enough. In the course of that I scraped it along the snow blower. I then attached the cables, it’s fiddly, there’s little room at the tractor end. I stood up, bashing my head on the tractor bucket and cutting my forehead messily. The tractor then started and I was able to blow the driveway and be ready for dog walking and going to work.

I hope that stove comes, fits, and entails no hidden charges. I’m too tired for more trouble today.


Originally Posted by Atlantic Xpat (Post 12400150)
Oh dear, that all sounds a bit expensive/painful.

I have a Lithium battery thingy purchased through Amazon.ca https://www.amazon.ca/gp/product/B01...?ie=UTF8&psc=1 Helpfully it comes with a built in torch, although unhelpfully I couldn't work out how to turn that feature on last night in the dark when I needed to jump start my faux-John Deere lawn tractor. Eventually figured it out which allowed me to rearrange gas powered things in the garage to get the car in to fit snow tires & then put stuff back so that the snowblower & quad with a plow are handy by the garage door rather than buried behind lawn mowers and the UTV. That'll be handy for tomorrow when winter is forecasted to arrive with 20-30cm on the way!

Before I moved to an acreage, I had never owned a trickle charger. I now have loads of the bloody things, attached to all manner of machines in our Quonset/garage. Trying to navigate through either in the dark is potentially lethal as there are all many of cables running in all manner of directions. This wouldn't be so bad if everyone that disconnects them/connects them would put them back in the same place in which they had found them but, alas, no one ever does.

I hate the switch from winter to spring, and from fall to winter that involves the tractor. We have a quick attach to the FEL. We don't have one for the 3 point hitch so the switching of rear bale spear to blade each time involves much gnashing of teeth, ripping of skin from fingers and, usually, at least one dropping of something heavy onto my foot.

dbd33 Dec 15th 2017 1:39 am

Re: Winter 2017-18
 
1 Attachment(s)

Originally Posted by Atlantic Xpat (Post 12400150)
Oh dear, that all sounds a bit expensive/painful.

I have a Lithium battery thingy purchased through Amazon.ca https://www.amazon.ca/gp/product/B01...?ie=UTF8&psc=1 Helpfully it comes with a built in torch, although unhelpfully I couldn't work out how to turn that feature on last night in the dark when I needed to jump start my faux-John Deere lawn tractor. Eventually figured it out which allowed me to rearrange gas powered things in the garage to get the car in to fit snow tires & then put stuff back so that the snowblower & quad with a plow are handy by the garage door rather than buried behind lawn mowers and the UTV. That'll be handy for tomorrow when winter is forecasted to arrive with 20-30cm on the way!

That's interesting, the manual I have for the battery thingy describes the unit you have, not the one I have. I'll revisit trying to use it tonight, indoors, in the warm.

Here's a view of the crowding problem, truck now displaced, Mustang in that spot. Note the wall crinkling just ahead of the bucket, an example of my steering last year. I shall be very glad when the garage adjusting man comes and we're able to put the truck and day-to-day car in there.

dbd33 Dec 15th 2017 1:40 am

Re: Winter 2017-18
 

Originally Posted by Almost Canadian (Post 12400206)
I hate the switch from winter to spring, and from fall to winter that involves the tractor. We have a quick attach to the FEL. We don't have one for the 3 point hitch so the switching of rear bale spear to blade each time involves much gnashing of teeth, ripping of skin from fingers and, usually, at least one dropping of something heavy onto my foot.

I feel your pain.

Almost Canadian Dec 15th 2017 1:45 am

Re: Winter 2017-18
 

Originally Posted by dbd33 (Post 12400208)
That's interesting, the manual I have for the battery thingy describes the unit you have, not the one I have. I'll revisit trying to use it tonight, indoors, in the warm.

Here's a view of the crowding problem, truck now displaced, Mustang in that spot. Note the wall crinkling just ahead of the bucket, an example of my steering last year. I shall be very glad when the garage adjusting man comes and we're able to put the truck and day-to-day car in there.

I note you have an auger. Do you use that for drilling holes for fence posts? If so, how well does it work and do you have to drill hole, place post into it and then cement around post? Or do you drill a hole slightly smaller than the post and then "bash" the post in somehow?

The reason I ask is that I need to replace miles of fences and I am split between hiring a post pounder (I can't afford the $10,000 cost of buying one) and bashing them in (wooden post so when they eventually rot I can simply pull them out) or drilling/cementing (so when they eventually rot I will have to pull not only the posts out, but the concrete too).

Logic tells me that the post pounder is the preferred option but I'd be interested to hear your opinion if you have any particular knowledge.

dbd33 Dec 15th 2017 2:09 am

Re: Winter 2017-18
 

Originally Posted by Almost Canadian (Post 12400215)
I note you have an auger. Do you use that for drilling holes for fence posts?.

Yes, we fenced the backyard for the dogs, a few dozen posts. We used square posts so as to create a semi-formal garden fence.


Originally Posted by Almost Canadian (Post 12400215)
If so, how well does it work and do you have to drill hole, place post into it and then cement around post?

Yes. Mixed results with the auger, it works very well on level ground but, if there's the least slope, it's difficult to make a hole that's exactly vertical. I note that professional fencers use an auger that's mounted on a boom over a skid steer, that'd be easier to keep straight. It does work well for planting trees and bushes subject to the hook problems you've mentioned.


Originally Posted by Almost Canadian (Post 12400215)
Logic tells me that the post pounder is the preferred option but I'd be interested to hear your opinion if you have any particular knowledge.

I know someone who operates a boarding barn with lots of paddocks. Her husband described the acquisition of his, second-hand, post pounder as life changing. "Knife through butter", "hours and hours saved". It was five grand though.

Something you haven't mentioned is the cost of the concrete. At a bag and a half per post building the dog fence wiped out five year's worth of Amex points. If you have a lot of posts that's some way toward a used pounder.

Atlantic Xpat Dec 15th 2017 2:26 am

Re: Winter 2017-18
 

Originally Posted by Almost Canadian (Post 12400206)
Before I moved to an acreage, I had never owned a trickle charger. I now have loads of the bloody things, attached to all manner of machines in our Quonset/garage. Trying to navigate through either in the dark is potentially lethal as there are all many of cables running in all manner of directions. This wouldn't be so bad if everyone that disconnects them/connects them would put them back in the same place in which they had found them but, alas, no one ever does..

Ah yes, I've tripped over trickle charger cords as well!;) I had to invest in one for the quad because I was forever flattening the battery either just through plowing or through forgetting to turn the ignition switch off when I was done. Really rather annoying when you have snow to clear and a dead battery.

LonelyCloud Dec 15th 2017 5:50 am

Re: Winter 2017-18
 
Managed to catch the first real snow of the winter in Vaughan, ON on Monday and a pleasant -7, now back in England where it's just...wet

Siouxie Dec 15th 2017 6:50 am

Re: Winter 2017-18
 
There's been big fat snowflakes falling from the sky all day, adding to the foot we already had.

Hello winter...

Almost Canadian Dec 15th 2017 7:05 am

Re: Winter 2017-18
 

Originally Posted by dbd33 (Post 12400241)
Yes, we fenced the backyard for the dogs, a few dozen posts. We used square posts so as to create a semi-formal garden fence.



Yes. Mixed results with the auger, it works very well on level ground but, if there's the least slope, it's difficult to make a hole that's exactly vertical. I note that professional fencers use an auger that's mounted on a boom over a skid steer, that'd be easier to keep straight. It does work well for planting trees and bushes subject to the hook problems you've mentioned.



I know someone who operates a boarding barn with lots of paddocks. Her husband described the acquisition of his, second-hand, post pounder as life changing. "Knife through butter", "hours and hours saved". It was five grand though.

Something you haven't mentioned is the cost of the concrete. At a bag and a half per post building the dog fence wiped out five year's worth of Amex points. If you have a lot of posts that's some way toward a used pounder.

Many thanks.

My friend has a post pounder that he will let me use. However, he has to be the one operating it and he gives not a shit whether they go in straight and how far in they go. I am not too anal, but I'd like them to be somewhat straight and even.

dbd33 Dec 15th 2017 10:36 am

Re: Winter 2017-18
 

Originally Posted by Almost Canadian (Post 12400419)
Many thanks.

My friend has a post pounder that he will let me use. However, he has to be the one operating it and he gives not a shit whether they go in straight and how far in they go. I am not too anal, but I'd like them to be somewhat straight and even.

Even can be done by chain sawing off the tops, that's what we do. Straight though, that requires attention.

scrubbedexpat091 Dec 18th 2017 6:20 pm

Re: Winter 2017-18
 
Possible snow Tues and Thurs in some areas of Vancouver.

We are like 4 blocks from the water so not likely to see any in this area.

Colder but sunny this weekend.

Looks like Christmas will be sunny at this point which is okay since I have to work.

Danny B Dec 19th 2017 2:54 am

Re: Winter 2017-18
 
1 Attachment(s)
Winter has arrived...

BristolUK Dec 19th 2017 4:45 am

Re: Winter 2017-18
 

Originally Posted by Danny B (Post 12402174)
Winter has arrived...

From the link:

The weather will become very wintery.
:rofl:

scrubbedexpat091 Dec 19th 2017 4:46 am

Re: Winter 2017-18
 
Snow is falling from the sky in Vancouver, but not currently sticking.

Well a mix of snow and rain..


Edit: Now it's sticking.

BristolUK Dec 19th 2017 4:50 am

Re: Winter 2017-18
 

Originally Posted by Jsmth321 (Post 12402255)
Snow is falling from the sky in Vancouver...

From where would it normally fall? ;)


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