Honey, you did a nice job on the path. Now you can start on the roof.
Blizzard 2019 Path.JPG
Honey, you did a nice job on the path. Now you can start on the roof.
Blizzard 2019 Path.JPG
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Email: [email protected]
Can't compete with the mountains. I know they have way more snow. I remember visiting Rocky Mountain National park years ago in June and even then snow banks were like 20 feet high. However, just about no one lives there. The area I'm from has over 25,000 folks if you include the surrounding communities and every day folks get up and get out to work.
I'm assuming the place you are talking about is Wolf Creek CO and the only thing that is there is the ski resort. Try living in 22 feet of snow.
https://www.currentresults.com/Weath...m-averages.php
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This is why we shovel our roofs.
http://www.mininggazette.com/news/20...ses-in-pelkie/
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When this country was first settled we were in the end of the little ice age. Elizabethan clothes had so many layers because it was cold in England then. The roofs of period buildings are very steep and have boards nailed near the bottom of the roof to hold a few inches of snow as insulation. I believe deeper snow simply sloughed off when it got deep enough. These period dwelling also had doors that opened to empty space on the second and sometimes the third floor because the snow got that deep back then and that became their first floor when there was 10 to 20 feet of snow on the ground. Now we very rarely see more than 2 feet of snow and some winters don't get much snow to speak of at all.
Do you see construction with very steep roofs designed to slough off the snow on the UP? What about doors that open to thin are from the second floor or higher?
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