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Its been a snowy winter so far
in Colorado, where three blizzards
have already pounded the Denver area. In the meantime farmers in the northern
Great Plains are praying for snow or freezing rain or any precipitation
as government officials plan for a possible continuation of the drought
much of our state has experienced the past couple of years. Drought was
not on peoples mind around here during the winter of 1996-97.
(sfx-weather report on radio
more of the same in the weather
today, another 6 to 8 inches of new snow expected on top of the nearly
5 feet weve already gotten this season. That, along with a stiff
NW wind of 15-25 mph will make for difficult driving again today
)
The first blizzard of the season roared across the state in the middle
of November 1996, and by the end of the year, residents of the Red River
Valley had already had enough to last them the winter. The novelty had
worn off and people were tired of digging out of snowstorms. The head
of the University of North Dakotas Regional Weather Information
Center, professor Leon Osborne, told the Grand Forks Herald in mid December,
Weve already had a month of January weather and January isnt
even here yet!
So far this year the National Weather Service in Fargo has measured about
8 inches of snow. By this time in 1997, there was over five feet of snow
on the ground! The storms came pounding through with such regularity that
Mike Jacobs, editor of the GF Herald, revived a tradition at the Herald
and began naming the Blizzards!
(Jacobs quote: The Herald started naming blizzards in 1990. It
was Greg Turasaks idea. He was the managing editor at that time,
and there have been 28 named blizzards since then. The last one was in
2003 actually, Blizzard Arlys in February of 2003. Of course the big year
for blizzards was 96-97. There were 8 that winter
Andy,
Betty, Christopher, Doris, Elmo, Francie, Gust and Hannah
and after
Hannah which was the first weekend in April, of course, came the flood.
Those names by the way are related to people we know an usually like!
Hannah was named for the infant daughter of one of our copy editors. Francie
was named for a foreign exchange student. Doris was named for a typesetter
and so on.)
English teacher and author Jane Varley moved from Virginia to North Dakota
in the fall of 96 to attend graduate school at UND in Grand Forks.
In her book, Flood Stage and Rising she writes about that
winter
Blizzards made me feel my place in the world. I could
see myself from above, a dot on the map at the top of North Dakota, snuggled
into a pinpoint in the midst of white space. Winter erased the surroundings
and made an empty expanse, the place beyond the end of the road I had
always dreamed of finding. It felt like self-diminishment, shrinking beneath
the power of much greater, humbling forces, and I was left alone with
words and images, burrowing into our apartment.
On this date, January 12th in 1997, President Clinton declared North Dakota
a major disaster area, freeing up federal funds for snow removal. Little
did he know at the time that the real disaster was still looming ahead.
Written By Merrill Piepkorn
Sources:
Flood Stage and Rising, by Jane Varley
Red River Rising by Ashley Shelby
Mike Jacobs, Editor, GF Herald
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