Last night’s storm

I’ve become a little nervous in regard to severe weather these days. The reason: I just had new siding and shingles put on my house, and so has my next door neighbor! That’s just asking for a good pounding from those nasty North Dakota hail stones. Thankfully, all we got last night was a nice soaking rain.

After I got off work Monday, I noticed these clouds boiling up east of town. When clouds get that big, you know something’s brewing. When they start travelling northwest in North Dakota, that means there’s REALLY something on the way. It was, in the form of a long stretch of thunderstorm activity reaching from South Dakota nearly to Canada. There were even a few tornado and hail photos on Kevin’s weather last night from the Beulah area. Check them out on KFYR’s Sky Spies page.

I had just spread fertilizer/weed killer on my lawn, so hopefully this will help me rescue what’s left of it after last year’s scorching summer!

Graupel: avalanche danger, but not here

I shoveled a lot of snow today, but this was different. This is a kind of snow that really looks like someone cut open a giant bean bag and shook it over Bismarck-Mandan…some call it graupel.

As you can read in this article from avalanche.org, this snow can be hazardous because it causes fluidity in layers of snow.

When I lived at a ski resort in the rockies, we’d do out-of-bounds boarding on our days off. That basically involves getting an avalanche “beeper” locator, a shovel and pack, signing a waiver, and digging a snow pit to test snow conditions before descending. Layers of snow that look like they’ll let loose are a good indicator to find another place to board or ski that day.

Naturally this isn’t terribly relevant here in North Dakota, as our mountain ranges are conspicuously absent. But back at my old stompin’ grounds, 10,000 feet and steep, this kind of snow would definitely be cause for concern.

Foggy Tuesday

This is the time of year when the weather swings start to take place. Temperature swings of 40 degrees or more within a 24 hour period aren’t that unusual. Tuesday morning’s pleasant temperatures brought a haze of thick fog east of Bismarck, providing me with this shot of some of the transmission towers.

1997 snow – a look back

With all the talk about the snows in the northeastern United States lately, I thought I’d share a few pictures I took of the nasty spring storm we received in Bismarck-Mandan back in 1997. This was a particularly wicked storm, as the snow was very fine and icy. It packed in so tightly that the roads had to be cut open with snowblower-equipped payloaders, instead of simply plowed.

At the time I lived north of Century in the vicinity of Montreal Street. Since only the major roads were cut open, I had to hike around six blocks down to Century Avenue, where the big KFYR-TV 4×4 engineering truck was waiting to transport me to work. As you can imagine, we were pretty busy in a news capacity at that point.

It was a surreal walk down to Century Avenue. The snow was taller than even full size pickups parked along Montreal Street, and as I walked down the road I noticed that I wasn’t leaving any footprints. The snow was made of such fine snow crystals and packed so tightly that I wasn’t breaking through the surface. Every now and then I’d see part of a pickup cab poking up through the snow, but for the most part I couldn’t even tell where the street was, much less where cars were parked.

After the roads were beginning to clear, a crazy friend picked me up in his Escort GT and we went out to document the whole thing. At this time I had merely a little Canon point-and-shoot film camera, but I think it tells the story:

The perspective on this one is slightly misleading, since I was sitting in a compact car. But you get the idea.

As you can see from the walls of snow lining Century Avenue, these roads were literally cut open, as plowing would do no good. Not only was the snow too deep, but it was fine, compacted “sugar snow” composed of tiny little crystals. It was rock hard.

Since we were already into Spring, the sun started to work on the snowbanks right away. They’re melting down pretty quickly. We weren’t in a particularly low-riding car, but even along the Expressway the snow was taller than we were.

The fence along the Expressway was almost completely hidden by snow. Lots of places were packed in completely as the snow settled in and froze solid.

It was a Saturday storm, and I remember being quite put out at having some of my motorcycles stranded at the Hall of Ports for the annual Freedom Riders Motorcycle Show! At least I got to bring home some trophy hardware later.

Anyway…just in case the news of all the massive snowfalls in New York are making you pine for a real North Dakota winter, maybe this will help get you through it!

Saturday sundog

After a breakfast meeting with some of the guys from church, I saw the sun starting to poke up over the horizon. What the heck, I might as well head east a bit and see what it does! This morning it had to blaze through a layer of clouds and lots of blowing snow, but that made it possible to spot a really bright sundog to the north. The cloud cover made it impossible to spot a corresponding parhelion to the south.

Snow Day!

It was long overdue, but I’m not complaining. This weekend we finally got enough snow to frolic in, and that’s exactly what the truck, the camera, and I did yesterday. A few guys from church meet the last Saturday morning of each month for breakfast, so I met them at 6:45, and after that came several hours of driving and hiking in the white stuff! My first stop was the cross country ski trail on the northeast corner of Mandan. My footsteps there were not the first.

Next I decided to poke around along the Missouri River. The geese apparently had the same idea, because an enormous flock of them was tucked into the rocks along the shore. They didn’t care for a guy with a big backpack and monopod poking around (or was it the NDSU Bison hat?) so they swam outward and upstream. Thankfully I managed to avoid falling in.


There are a lot of wild turkeys in the Bismarck-Mandan area, and this is a portion of one of them. They were hanging out in a residential neighborhood in north Mandan, and even came toward me as I crouched to take their photo! The snow was coming down fast enough to accumulate on their backs, and they fluffed up to stay warm and shake the snow off every now and then.

With a fresh tank of gas, it was time to drive Around the World and see what kind of nice rural snow scenes awaited. It actually began to snow so heavily that the view was obscured. That didn’t stop me from taking a picture of this friendly scarecrow before moving on.

While out south of Fort Lincoln, I paused to capture this bridge and the high waters of the Missouri River on the other side. When I started to leave, the window on my truck wouldn’t roll up! The passenger side window worked, so I knew the fuse was good. I pounded on the door a bit, tugged on the window…nothing worked. I resigned myself to a cold, damp drive into town, but when I got back on the highway…it worked! The trip wasn’t over yet.

This bridge was sold to the Fort Lincoln Trolley folks many years ago, so it doesn’t see any traffic during the winter. It ought to. This was a very picturesque scene, although they’d have to bring hot chocolate along for the ride.

I took lots more photos, but it’s been such a busy weekend that I’m just posting the highlights. It’s time to wax the sleds for more frolicking!

What to do when there’s no snow

I’ve been in a mild funk due to the lack of snow this Christmas, but there’s one sure fire cure for that situation: get out and ride! Actually, that’s the cure for just about any state of bummitude. Besides, it’s a unique photo opportunity; it’s not often that I can take a picture in front of the Christmas capitol!

Having successfully performed an attitude adjustment, I burned tires back to the house, grabbed the family, and went out to look at Christmas lights. We were able to ignore the absence of snow, as were many others. Northview Lane was absolutely packed with constant traffic, as were other Christmas display hot spots. Bismarck-Mandan residents, including newly reminded ones like myself, don’t allow Christmas to be determined by precipitation totals; rather, by their good cheer.

Jack Frost strikes…with spikes

I had originally intended to drive out along Apple Creek to try taking pictures of pretty frosty trees. Then I formulated a different plan: run over to the cross country ski trail between Bismarck and Mandan! But sadly, the trees along that path didn’t have any frost clinging to them.

It was back to plan A, although it was nearly dark, when I came along this lonely barbed wire fence east of Bismarck. The frost on this barbed wire came in the form of long, spiky formations. I got out of the truck to visually inspect the fence, leaving my camera on the seat. Once I got a good look at the fence, however, I literally dashed back to get my gear and take a bunch of cool photos such as the one above.

It’s getting late now so I’m only going to post the one, but who knows…maybe one of the other photos of the fence or posts will make its way into a future entry.

Ice 9

If you can name the artist whose song this post is titled for (without a Google search) I’ll be impressed! I was taking the long way home again today and found some really wild ice jams on the river. Naturally I had to go out and photograph them from up close!

I’m not saying how far out on the ice I went to get these, but I can say that I know it was only a foot deep or so before it froze. In all likelihood it was frozen all the way down. In any case, it was solid…and in the event of a plunge through the ice, the only casualty would be my ankles.

Advancing front

Sometimes I get a picture that’s blurry, grainy, or otherwise imperfect, yet is so COOL that I just have to hang on to it. This is one of those nights. These clouds were so neat that I had to pull over, lean out the window of the truck, and snap the picture before the clouds advanced in front of the moon.

I had the camera set to 3200 ISO, which (if I do my math correctly) is about 8x more sensitive than your typical digital camera will go. That would hopefully allow me to capture the moment, which it did. It was still a little blurry because I am not very steady while protruding from a truck window. But I took it in order to show other people what the clouds looked like last night…so it works.