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RURAL PINGREE, N.D. - It's not the most traditional way of predicting the weather, but one Jamestown man boasts a near-perfect record stretching back decades.Pig spleens and their height and width are how Norbert Schulz predicts the snowy season in North Dakota. This year, Schulz offered the same advice as years before: Buy a new shovel."It's going to be real nice here for a while; then she's going to turn real mean," Schulz said sizing up the spleen in his rural butcher shop. ...
It's winter in North Dakota. Isn't it always mean???
Well, around here (NC), the farmers are all sayin to prepare for a rough winter. Apparently, lots of wooly worms out very early, July this year, means a really cold winter. I stepped on as many as I could, but they tell me that makes no difference.
debk was saying the same thing.WTF do the wooly worms know that we don't????
I heard some thing about if you have a high yield of acorns, that means a rough winter. Last year we had a rough winter, but no high yield of acorns. Maybe y'alls wooly worms came over and ate our acorns last year? Hell I don't know.
All I know is we've had damn near two months of just about picture-perfect weather. Sunny, warm, a shade of breeze, a tiny bit of rain not enough to even mention.When the hell is the bottom gonna fall out????
Yeah,about that, me too. And I saw my forecast for next week. Looks like right about then. But, that is the price we pay for living in a Red State. Or Less Purple than Blue.
Pretty much all the home-folksy predictions (including Farmer's Almanac) have been for average snow, but bitter cold. Whee.That to me says -30 instead of -10 or -15.