Monday, February 18, 2013

What I Learned From Four Days in Minnesota in February



 14-Feb-13

Well, I’m on my way home from the great white north on Delta, the airline whose hub is in Minneapolis due to its acquisition of Northwest Airlines some years ago.  Thanks for the direct flight Delta; you’re the best.   It’s Thursday evening now and I’ve been here since Sunday evening; time to get back to the wife, kid, tike and pooch (who is so depressed right now by my absence she should be in the drug commercial where everything is grey and the depressing classical music is playing in the background).

I’m looking out the window and all I see is white, white and more white with some patches of dark blue thrown in for what I presume are trees not yet completely covered with snow.  See, ever since I saw snow thicker than 1.5” for the first time in my life when I was 28, in the Cascade Mountains of Washington over Spring Break, I’ve wanted to experience a real winter.  Not our Texas winters with maybe a 0.5” of snow every other year and temperatures struggling to get below the mid-20s.  Nah, I wanted to experience a winter where you have to have a battery warmer on your car battery so your car will start in the morning.  I wanted to experience a winter where the walk between the office and your car makes you cry.  I wanted to experience a winter where I would see people going nuts for lack of sunlight.

Did I experience these things?  No, I did not.  However, I got snowed on and learned a lot.  Here is some of what I learned:

Snow plows are a fact of life during the winter.  What was my first sight upon looking out the airplane window upon landing in Minneapolis (MSP)?  About fifteen slow plows lumbering down the runway beside us in what appeared to be single file (though what I later learned was staggered), their huge headlights piercing the fog and snow like giant craft from some Aliens movie.  It seriously felt like I was on another planet looking at those things.  Come to find out everybody with a driveway owns a snow plow just like in Texas everybody with a lawn owns a lawnmower.  Unless of course you pay someone to do it for you.  And there’s a lot of that.  I kept wondering why I saw pick-up trucks with plow attachments on the front of them.  Were they contracted by the city?  Nope, they were making money plowing peoples’ driveways.  A lot of them were landscapers who of course don’t have as much to do during the offseason. 



There are three options to clearing your driveway.  The first and easiest is paying someone to do it for you.  The second is using your own snowplow, a contraption that looks fairly similar to a roto-tiller and requires, according to one of my shuttle drivers, at least a 15-year old to operate it competently despite the fact that it is self-propelled.  The third option is to bust out that old snow shovel and shovel the snow yourself, Charlie Brown-style.  This is ok if there is maybe an inch or two of snow but not for more than that and particularly now when the snow is ‘wet’ and thus heavy.  Yeah, there’s heavy snow and light powder.  

The really fun part about snow plowing is that it doesn’t just heat up the snow and evaporate it.  Nope, it just moves it from one spot to another.  Your snow plow blows the snow from your driveway onto your lawn.  The city snow plow that comes through your residential neighborhood blows the snow onto your lawn AND your driveway which of course is fun if you’ve plowed your driveway.  Actually, the city plows always hit the major highways first and then work their way down the major roads to the small ones.  So for your commute the toughest part is usually getting to a road that’s plowed, after which you’re probably golden.  Unless there’s ice caused by rain falling and then freezing.  Or black ice which forms when it’s so cold car exhaust fumes freeze and coat the road with an invisible coating.  While I was there there were small amounts of ice but not enough for people to be concerned about.  And thankfully, my hotel provided a shuttle that took me everywhere I needed to go so I didn’t have to cope with the stress of driving.

In parking lots, front end loaders seem to be the vehicle of choice for snow clearing.  Another fun fact about snow plowing is in the Minnesota winter the temperature doesn’t get above freezing that often.  Thus the snow plows must find places to stack the snow, usually the corner of a parking lot or, if it’s on a city street, in certain parking spaces.  In the parking lots during particularly bad winters, you might have a pile of snow that’s 45 feet high.  It’s been a mild winter for snow this year so far in Minnesota so unfortunately I didn’t get to see anything like that.



The lakes are frozen up here.  Yeah, even the big ones though apparently the ones that get the most wind are the last ones to succumb.  This allows of course for ice fishing!  Not your grandfather’s ice fishing where some schlub is sitting on an overturned bucket with one line.  No, people can now put ice fishing cabins out on the ice, complete with beds and cable television (and for all I know, space heaters).  Here’s an awesome article on it (may require a free subscription):


You can also drive out on the ice if it’s thick enough.  There are people whose job it is to drill test holes to determine whether the ice is sufficiently thick as the thickness is not necessarily uniform across the lake.  Sometimes there are specific ‘roads’ marked off for people to drive.  And sometimes people will drunkenly drive off those roads and into a soft spot in the ice, thus breaking through.  Under bridges are particularly tricky as they are usually the last places to freeze up.  One of the shuttle drivers told me four people have died this winter already for driving through the ice.  Yeesh. 

The lady sitting next to me is from Iowa and is flying down to Austin to visit her dog for the winter.  Yep, her dog is a snowbird, eh!  Actually, the dog is a labrador retriever that is being trained to retrieve ducks.  Since it’s difficult to train a duck to swim in a frozen lake, the dog gets sent down south with a trainer for the training.  Apparently this weekend there’s a test and since she hasn’t seen the dog, named Kyrie (sp?), since November, now was a good time to visit.  The dog is actually is down in Fayetteville just southeast of Austin and is two years old (six months is the minimum age to begin training).  No word on whether the dog will be nervous during the test, eh.

I didn’t really catch much in the way of different use of language up here.  Many people do have a bit of a north woods accent but nothing overpowering.  Disappointingly, I didn’t hear anyone say “You betcha” or “Oh geez.”  I got excited when a lady at the hockey game I attended called napkins “nappies” but when I asked the people in the office whether they used that word they looked at me like I was nuts.  Now I’m doubting whether I heard her correctly.  Darn.  They call soda ‘pop’ but that’s not exciting. 

Since I enjoy attending Texas high school football games, both for the game and the cultural experience, I absolutely had to attend a high school hockey game in Minnesota just to see what it was like.  My shuttle driver, who was amused that a hotel guest wanted to be taken to a high school hockey game, dropped me off outside the Richfield Arena.  There were two games to choose from: Shakopee vs. Holy Angels and St. Thomas Academy vs. Richfield.  St. Thomas Academy was ranked #1 in the AA division so I figured I’d watch them just in case they got upset (I didn’t find out until later that Richfield was something like 5-14-1 at the time). 

I bought a slice of pizza and a bottle of water, paid my $8 admission and walked into the small arena.  I passed the ‘Chuck a Puck’ table where you can buy a puck for a dollar and chunk it onto the ice during the second intermission.  Closest puck to the center of the ice wins a prize, probably a space heater.  I sat down in the Richfield section just in time for the teams to take the ice.  Richfield had two honorary squirts or something like that, kids who weren’t more than eight years old, skating out with the Richfield team.  Their last names: Gustafson and Mikkelson, ha!  Disappointingly there weren’t many names I identified as Scandinavian and even fewer people who looked like they stepped out of a Jack London novel.  Oh well. 



I knew it would be bad when the guy behind me said to another guy before the game, “Think they’ll spot us ten goals?”  Richfield was down 6-0 at the end of the first intermission.  I turned to my neighbors and half-jokingly asked if there was a mercy rule in high school hockey.  I was secretly hoping there was so I could leave and go over to the Shakopee game (which ended at a more respectable 7-1 as I found later, Holy Angels prevailing).  Unfortunately, the mercy rule is that in the third intermission there is a running clock.  My neighbors were actually the grandparents of the only benchrider on the Richfield team, a freshman.  Richfield had about thirteen kids which was the same number that tried out for the team.  Not good times for Richfield.  They had only two lines to go up against St. Thomas Academy’s three and the St. Thomas kids were skating rings around them.  At least their goalie was getting lots of good practice.

For those who haven’t been to a hockey game, there’s something really odd about it compared to other sports: the loud rock music.  They play heavy metal music before the games, during the play stoppages and during the intermissions.  It was playing so loud during the intermission that I could barely hear what my neighbors were saying (granted, my hearing isn’t the greatest but still...).  I also got tired of hearing Green Day’s “We Are The Enemy” every time there was a face-off after St. Thomas Academy scored another goal.  The music of the second period was, for some weird reason, Ben Folds Five’s “Rocking the Suburbs” (...just like Michael Jackson did!!!  Rocking the suburbs!!  ‘Cept that he was talented!!!!).  They even bleeped out the cuss words.

Watching a blow-out hockey game is more entertaining than a blow-out high school football game.  In a high school football blow-out, the underdog goes 3-and-out, 3-and-out, 3-and-out, over and over.  They never sniff the end zone.  At least in a blow-out hockey game the underdog gets a shot on goal every once in a while.  At least the St. Thomas Academy crowd didn’t cheer like crazy every time they scored; I thought it was rather polite actually.

The second intermission came around and Chuck a Puck began.  It was the most boring Chuck a Puck I’d ever seen.  No announcer, no enthusiasm, no yells of “that’s my puck!”, no nothing.  They didn’t even announce what the prize was.  It was almost like some weird ritual that an alien from outer space would presume is something religious.  At least they turned off the loud music for a little bit.  Afterward I snuck over to the Shakopee game but they wouldn’t let me in without buying a ticket because “the guy at your game isn’t letting our people in.”  So much for ‘Minnesota Nice.’  I headed back into the Richfield game which at this point had STA up 12-0.

STA quickly rang up four goals and then went into keep away mode.  Thanks STA coach, that was a bit late but still classy.  Richfield was thankfully good enough to steal a pass every now and again.  Also, the Richfield coach, finally realizing that garbage time started in about the fifth minute of the first period, let my neighbors’ grandson into the game for all of two minutes.

I managed to do a bit of walking around on the snow.  I had to watch out for ice as the temperatures were getting into the mid-30s during the day, melting the snow prior to the return to freezing temps during the night.  One thing I don’t like about snow is not knowing how deep it is where you’re stepping.  I presume some snow holds weight better than other snow but I wasn’t taking any chances, sticking to paved surfaces.    

Winters are long in Minnesota.  They can’t start planting their gardens until May at the earliest and are still at risk of a frost.  I was told by several people that winter is great until about Christmastime after which the cold and darkness just get depressing.  The sun may set as early as four o’ clock in the dead of winter but now in February sets around 5:30.  While I was here they saw the sun for the first time in two weeks.  I was so happy for them, eh.  I can’t wait until I talk to them in summer when Austin is into its 63rd straight 100 degree day.  They also claim that the mosquitoes start appearing exactly on July 4th.



So now I’m flying home and it feels like I’m on a starship leaving the ice planet Hoth.  I’ll see if I can swing coming back by next year and in particular plan the trip at the last minute based on a weather report, eh! 

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