xsledder
Active member
I have been snowmobiling since the late '70's and the first snowmobile I drove was my uncle's 1970 Mercury 250E. My family bought our first snowmobile in 1980 after Chicago's winter of 1979. Since that winter I have been paying attention to them and I never remember cold and snowy as the norm. In fact, I remember most winters in Illinois, Iowa, and Wisconsin the other way around (I remember a few years in the late '80's were Minnesota got a lot of snow). We traveled to many different spots chasing snow, especially at Christmas. Like I am doing this year.
I find it funny that most people say the winters are not like they use to be and snow was all over the place in 4 to 5 foot piles. I remember a few years that had lots of snow and the rest of them was marginal. I came across this newspaper article about Arctic Cats bankruptcy in 1981. It talks about the winters of 1980 and 1981 as warm and lean snow years and its effect on the entire industry. Here is a link to the article http://www.vintagesnowmobiles.50megs.com/PP15013.html . Between 1981 and 1984 we lost four snowmobile manufactures; Arctic Cat, Scorpion, Kawasaki, and John Deere.
I guess what I am saying is this winter is closer to what I remember is the norm and the real cold and snowy winters are not the norm. We are letting the climate change alarmist control our reality. If you really think about it, you remember the heavy snow years more than you remember the normal/bad snow years and make that into your reality. I remember 2002 was a really bad snow year until March, when I was up in Mercer every weekend in March snowmobiling. Closed the trails that year.
I find it funny that most people say the winters are not like they use to be and snow was all over the place in 4 to 5 foot piles. I remember a few years that had lots of snow and the rest of them was marginal. I came across this newspaper article about Arctic Cats bankruptcy in 1981. It talks about the winters of 1980 and 1981 as warm and lean snow years and its effect on the entire industry. Here is a link to the article http://www.vintagesnowmobiles.50megs.com/PP15013.html . Between 1981 and 1984 we lost four snowmobile manufactures; Arctic Cat, Scorpion, Kawasaki, and John Deere.
I guess what I am saying is this winter is closer to what I remember is the norm and the real cold and snowy winters are not the norm. We are letting the climate change alarmist control our reality. If you really think about it, you remember the heavy snow years more than you remember the normal/bad snow years and make that into your reality. I remember 2002 was a really bad snow year until March, when I was up in Mercer every weekend in March snowmobiling. Closed the trails that year.