grimley1968
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Apr 2, 2005
- Messages
- 5,780
I had to go to Blaine, MN, just north of Minneapolis this past December 20 to purchase my Cessna 152 plane. I can attest that Minnesota is indeed quite cold for someone used to southern Kentucky weather. Granted, we can get below zero in s. Ky, but it's pretty rare (maybe once every 2 or 3 winters), but we don't stay that way for days at a time. Also, when I was in Blaine, it was flurrying the whole day we were there, and endangered my flight out of there slightly. Flurries in Kentucky usually don't add up to anything, but in Blaine it had been flurrying almost non-stop for days by that point, and the temps were cold enough that it all stuck. They had 7" of snow on the ground when I took off.
All that having been said, when we flew over southern Minn., and parts of Wisconsin, etc., I was blown away by the beauty of the tundra-like landscape. I saw tons of little ice-fishing cabins on the lakes there, some people skating on some of the ponds. It really was a sight. And I can see that right now the temps there are as warm or warmer than they are here. Some of the architecture I saw, even on little airport hangar buildings, is very unique to the area. We also ran across some very friendly people. I really think this would be a nice place to live, if you can handle some fairly extreme cold. One good thing about the day I was there was that there was very little wind, so it really wasn't that bad to me. It was about 15 degrees above zero and flurries. We can certainly have that here as well. But also realize I was there almost literally during the winter solstice, so I'm not giving Minnesota a fair chance.
All that having been said, when we flew over southern Minn., and parts of Wisconsin, etc., I was blown away by the beauty of the tundra-like landscape. I saw tons of little ice-fishing cabins on the lakes there, some people skating on some of the ponds. It really was a sight. And I can see that right now the temps there are as warm or warmer than they are here. Some of the architecture I saw, even on little airport hangar buildings, is very unique to the area. We also ran across some very friendly people. I really think this would be a nice place to live, if you can handle some fairly extreme cold. One good thing about the day I was there was that there was very little wind, so it really wasn't that bad to me. It was about 15 degrees above zero and flurries. We can certainly have that here as well. But also realize I was there almost literally during the winter solstice, so I'm not giving Minnesota a fair chance.