we're gettin wholloped

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lenny

Guest
Been snowing hard today. Drove to Rhinelander and Eagle River and nothing down there, all LES I guess. School closed tomorrow because snow, cold and winds. Tomorrow I'll be plowing half day, work the other half and than go groom evening.
 

arcticgeorge

New member
Nice! Been snowing here too since around 5. Wind is really howling from the north, I was watching my power line and the transformer on the pole sway. No school again for my kids in Ironwood tomorrow.
 

Painter

New member
Semi hit a truck, smashed it up pretty good. The 2 kids that were in the truck were still walking......well , one of them was limping and had a broken nose. Don't really know how it happened but it did while I was inside eating a pastry......mmmm those are good
 

sweeperguy

Active member
A pastry or a pastie. Love hearing that snow accumulation were coming up this weekend.

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A pastry or a pastie
 

frnash

Active member
A pastry or a pastie [sic]. Love hearing that snow accumulation were coming up this weekend.

A pastry or a pastie [sic]
Just to be really, really picky: Let's not confuse matters even further! That would be:

"A pastry or a pasty" (pronounced "pass-tee"), plural: pasties (pronounced "pass-tees").

A "pastie" (singular, pronounced "pāste-ee) is something quite different — an item worn (in pairs) by strippers to conceal er… um… "certain portions of their anatomy"! <ahem!>:p

The plural forms share the same spelling, although the pronunciations differ.

Paraphrased from Wikipedia:
"The pasty is regarded as the national dish of Cornwall, is a baked pastry, a traditional variety of which is particularly associated with Cornwall, the westernmost county in England. It is made by placing uncooked filling typically of meat and vegetables, on a flat pastry circle and folding it to wrap the filling, crimping the edge to form a seal. After baking, the result is a raised semicircular food item.

"In the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, pasties are a significant tourist attraction, including an annual Pasty Fest in Calumet, Michigan in late June. Pasties in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan have a particularly unusual history, as a small influx of Finnish immigrants followed the Cornish miners in 1864. These Finns (and many other ethnic groups) adopted the pasty for use in the Copper Country copper mines. About 30 years later, a much larger flood of Finnish immigrants found their countrymen baking pasties. The pasty has become strongly associated with Finnish culture in this area, and in the culturally similar Iron Range in northern Minnesota."
That is the "standard of reference" in "da UP".</ahem!>
 
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lenny

Guest
Well, I woke up with much anticipation, looked out the door and was surprised to see a load of snow. Could be maybe the single most dumping we have had this winter. Now keep in mind the winds have been blowing so maybe it all accumulated by my door but I think not. Problem is, it's still falling and visibility is poor. Seems as though this merits pictures so let me get my tail out there to plow. I will try an post some pictures around chow time, that is noon to the layman in deezes here pots of da UP.
 
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lenny

Guest
this just in: false alarm! Wind was the culprit but still at least 5".
 
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