Thursday, May 29, 2014

Sprinkles to buckets: Farm fields welcomed rain

Sprinkles to buckets: Farm fields welcomed rain


Tuesday's hit or miss storms delivered 1.65 inches of rain at the Janesville Wastewater Treatment Plant while the National Weather Service reported readings of only 0.05 inches in Milton and 0.5 inches at Beloit College.


Arch Morton Jr. was starting to get a little worried when recent rains kept missing his farm fields southeast of Janesville. Then Mother Nature dropped 3.5 inches of rain on his farm Tuesday.

JANESVILLE--Arch Morton Jr. was starting to get a little worried when recent rains kept missing his farm fields southeast of Janesville.
Then Mother Nature dropped 3.5 inches of rain on his farm Tuesday.
“It's really good timing to get a good rain right now,” he said.
He finished planting soybeans Friday.
“It's really going to help those come up—not only to get going but to come up,” said Morton, who farms corn, soybeans, alfalfa and winter wheat in the towns of La Prairie and Harmony. “The ground was starting to get dry.”
Tuesday's hit or miss storms delivered 1.65 inches of rain at the Janesville Wastewater Treatment Plant while the National Weather Service reported readings of only 0.05 inches in Milton and 0.5 inches at Beloit College.
Morton's neighbor got 4 inches while a neighbor two miles away only got 2 inches, he said.
“It's very common in summer thunderstorms that some people get a lot of rain if they're right under the cell but places even a mile or two away don't get nearly that much,” said Bob McMahon, meteorologist at the National Weather Service in Sullivan.
Parts of Dane and Rock counties saw more than a couple inches of rain while the Dane County Regional Airport's 1.46 inches set a record for the day, McMahon said. Walworth County reports ranged from 0.23 inches in Delavan to .03 inches in Elkhorn and Lake Geneva.
Precipitation in the Madison area was only slightly below normal before the storms, McMahon said. The 11.75 inches for the year is 0.43 inches above normal, he said.
“With the cold weather and the frost being in the ground, farmers want to work the fields,” he said. “If you have crops in, rain is good. If you haven't gotten them in and the fields are wet, you can't work them, and that's not good.”
The showers left some standing water in Morton's fields, and it was still too wet for him to check out Wednesday, he said.
Pleasant, sunny weather over the next few days will help dry any standing water in fields, McMahon said. The forecast calls for a high of 77 today and the low 80s Friday and Saturday, with no rain until Saturday night or Sunday.
The timing of Tuesday's showers was key, Morton said. Before the rain, the extended forecast didn't look promising, he said.
“For most everybody, they'll say it was a really good rain,” he said.
Farmers are better off getting an inch of rain, then more a few days later, he said.
“But you can't always get it exactly when you want it,” he said.

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Tuesday, May 13, 2014

Despite heavy rain to the north, only minor flooding expected along Rock River

Despite heavy rain to the north, only minor flooding expected along Rock River

By Neil Johnson
May 13, 2014
JANESVILLE—Widespread, gully-washing rains on Monday dumped between 2 and 6 inches of rain into the Rock River basin, but weather forecasters expect only minor river flooding in Rock County.

On Tuesday, river gauges on the Rock River at Afton and Lake Koshkonong showed water levels within 6 inches of reaching minor flood stage. Forecasters expect the river to peak Friday at 9.1 feet at Afton and 10.3 feet at Lake Koshkonong.

That means low-lying farm fields along the river likely will get swamped with floodwaters.

More rain is expected later this week, but unless the area sees continued heavy rainfall, forecasters say it's unlikely flooding this spring could approach anything close to floods of 2008 and 2013.

According to National Weather Service data, Rock County had 2.3 inches of rain Tuesday. Areas along the Rock River farther north, such as Watertown, saw nearly 6 inches of rain.

All that water is moving downhill toward Rock County, but Rudy Schaar, a meteorologist at the National Weather Service's Sullivan office, said the Rock River can mostly handle it.

“We were lucky. The river has been on the high side, but it was mostly within its banks before the Tuesday rain event started,” Schaar said.

He said rains expected later this week are factored into the predicted crest later this week.

“If we get the next round (of rain) that's predicted on Thursday, if we get some thunderstorms that cause a few more gully washers in the basin, it could get more significant, but right now, it's nothing major,” he said.

Rock County residents have been getting accustomed to the annual threat of floods.

In April and May 2013, Rock County had 13 inches of rain, most of which happened in a span of about two weeks in early April. That caused major flooding in Rock County, where floodwaters on the Rock River reached 11.5 feet at Lake Koshkonong and Afton.

So far this spring, Rock County has only seen about half that amount of rainfall.

In 2008, when the Rock River surged to a record high 13.5 feet at Afton, 21 inches of rain fell between April and June. That came after a winter during which the area recorded 84 inches of snowfall.

“That year, the snow melted rapidly. Then, there was a very wet spring and early summer. Basically, the whole area started out as very saturated, and river levels were high to start with. There was no place for the water to go," Schaar said.

This past winter, Rock County had 60 inches of snow, but Schaar said the snow melted much more slowly.

Rock County Chief Deputy Barb Tillman said the sheriff's office plans to have patrols monitoring river levels every day this week.  

“You look at past history of flooding, but you have to go out and look in the field to get firsthand knowledge,” she said.

Weather patterns may be different every spring, Tillman said, but what doesn't change is the fact that water runs downhill.

“We're kind of watching Jefferson County to see how (heavier rains there) could impact Rock County,” she said.

Tillman said the sheriff's office emergency management department has planned to meet with officials in the town of Milton, town of Fulton and Afton on Wednesday to form a plan in case any areas along the river need sandbagging.

“As it stands, we're in good shape. We've got a supply of sandbags on hand, and we're working with the town chairs to make sure we can meet all their needs,” Tillman said.

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Sunday, April 27, 2014

Newville's 'Break in the Weather' party a rite of spring

Newville's 'Break in the Weather' party a rite of spring

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Neil Johnson
April 26, 2014
NEWVILLE—It didn't matter that the Rock River was an icy 43 degrees on Saturday.

That's a lot warmer than the air temperatures during many days of this past winter.

And if you jumped in the frigid river, as five people did during a belly-flop contest at Anchor Inn in Newville on Saturday, you weren't worried.

You got a double-shot of liquid courage beforehand: a sip of cinnamon-flavored whiskey, and cheers from 1,500 people who were celebrating the color of your undies and the start of a new spring.

The belly flops and other southern Wisconsin revelry—beer, brats and live bands playing 1970s and 1980s classic rock—went on Saturday at the Anchor Inn as part of the tavern's annual Break in The Weather party.

The long-running event in Newville—and its heralded Rock River belly-flop contest—is as familiar to Edgerton-area residents and Lake Koshkonong vacationers as the Groundhog Day woodchuck “Punxsutawney Phil” is to Punxsutawney, Penn.

For residents and Lake Koshkonong vacationers, the Break in the Weather party, which runs from noon until after midnight, is an annual rite. The ice is finally off the Rock River, and the season of fun has returned to Newville.

“Look at the buds popping out on that thing,” a tattooed man in a leather and denim motorcycle jacket said to his friend. He was pointing to a tree on the riverfront veranda at the Anchor Inn. “Isn't it nice to see that?”

It was an unexpected Walt Whitman moment for a motorcycle dude, but hey—it has been a long, nasty winter.

Anchor Inn owner John Kinnett smiled from the tavern's deck, which overlooks the river. On the back lawn, people sipped Leinenkugel beer, a group played beanbag toss and two Walleye fisherman putted past in a boat. The sky was blue and the temperature 60 degrees.

Not a heat wave, but compare it to the weather Jan. 26, just three months ago: a low of 7 below with 3 inches of snowfall.

“This, today, is a true break in the weather,” Kinnett said. “Even this spring, we haven't been able to string two warm days together. Yesterday was a good warm up. I bet the folks will pour in today.”

Kinnett said the annual party used to bring in 5,000 people, but now crowds have leveled off at about 3,000. Though floods have threatened the event, which has been run by different owners for 41 years, it has never been canceled, Kinnett said.

The crowd ranges from motorcyclists to locals to Lake Koshkonong vacationers returning to the area.

“It's great. This now is when you see all the usual groups come out. It's the first time we've seen many of them return from the winter. They're waking up,” Kinnett said.

Four Machesney Park, Ill., women stood under the tavern's big, white tent and danced to a classic rock cover band Pink Houses tear into a guitar, tambourine and fiddle breakdown cover of “Will the Circle Be Unbroken.”

The women's brightly-colored toenail polish set off their new flip-flops and spring tops. They couldn't hear a word a Gazette reporter was trying to shout to them: something about a church song being played at a tavern tent revival.

The women just smiled at the reporter.

One town of Fulton police crew and three Rock County Sheriff's office squads were assigned to the party, which at one point in the afternoon had about 2,000 people.

In the past, the Break in the Weather Party has netted a handful of arrests, and on one occasion a man died when he tried walking home intoxicated from the event. A drunk driver hit him, said Rock County Sheriff's Deputy Greg Niles, who was on patrol Saturday.

The most common offense in the past, Niles said, has been people leaving the event and carrying their beer with them.

“It's mostly no big deal,” Niles said.

Jason Johns, a native of Oregon, Wis., the party Saturday was a big deal, though. Water dripped from Johns' head in beads after he belly flopped twice into the Rock River, once with a dollar bill stuck to his forehead.

Johns, an Iraq War veteran who was injured in action, said the cold river and the people at the Newville party made him feel alive.

“It's s---t like this that reminds me I've got nothing in the world to complain about. It's about living life,” Johns said.

- See more at: http://www.gazettextra.com/article/20140426/ARTICLES/140429756#sthash.m63071Rg.dpuf

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Monday, April 07, 2014

Nice Aerial View of Frozen Koshkonong


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Friday, March 21, 2014

How Cold Was It...


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Tuesday, March 04, 2014

Comparing Lake Levels

TODAY - 775.83
2013 - 776.84 (a foot HIGHER last year)
2012 - 776.81
2010 - 776.34
2009 - 778.1 (2+ FEET higher than today)
2008 - 777.82


In EVERY example, the gates, ALL gates were, and HAD BEEN, 100% WIDE OPEN.

Funny how Mother Nature works, eh?

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Winter had most days at or below zero--ever

It seems that weather rankings are in the eye of the beholder.
The National Weather Service has gauged this season’s chills, in part, by noting the number of days with subzero temperatures from the start of November through the end of February. By that measure, the allegedly just-ended season had the fourth-most days with the mercury below zero.
But add in days when the temperature sunk to exactly zero, and suddenly, this season is Chicago’s new No. 1.
“It looks like overall this winter has had the most zero or below,” said weather service meteorologist Richard Castro. “So it’s not just perception that it’s felt particularly brutal this year. The numbers say it.”
Monday morning’s low of minus-2 degrees puts Chicago in fourth place by the narrower measurement.
Reframing the numbers to get to a No. 1 requires the addition of three days when the city’s low temperature was right at zero, making for 26 total when it was that cold or colder. The previous record-holding season, 1884-85, had 25 subzero days and none right at zero.
Castro said temperatures likely will not reach zero or below again this season, as the nights are getting shorter and the Earth tilts toward the sun. However, this season’s overall severity could still worsen when considering cold along with snow, Castro said.
“The combination for the two is definitely the most severe winter since the ’70s,” Castro said.
Chicago’s 73.4 inches of snow so far this season, which the weather service counts as autumn through spring, stands at the fourth-most since 1884. That’s slightly less than during 1969-70, which saw 77 inches. The only two years above those were in 1977-78 at 82.3 inches, and in 1978-79 at 89.7 inches total.
However, the weather service predicts more snow will hit Chicago on Tuesday night and possibly over the weekend, Castro said. That could push the city’s snowfall total into second place, Castro said.
“We’re within 10 inches of second place,” Castro said, “So if we can get some snow out of these next couple of events ... you can’t rule it out. And it doesn’t really look like we’re going to break out into another much warmer pattern any time soon.”
As far as average temperatures go, Chicago is at its third-coldest season on record, at 18.8 degrees for “meteorological winter,” or December through February. But widen the time frame to include November and March, Castro said, and who knows how cold the season would be.
“November through March periods would be something to look at this year to compare to previous seasons,” Castro said. “We’ve never done that before. We’ve never had to. Meteorological seasons stood for themselves.”

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Sunday, January 26, 2014

Deep Freeze - On Lake Koshkonong

Deep Freeze

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Friday, January 24, 2014

Near whiteout conditions, ice plague area highways

Near whiteout conditions, ice plague area highways

Strong winds are whipping snow into a frenzy in Dane County and south central Wisconsin, causing near whiteout conditions and icy pavement.
A dispatcher at the Dane County 911 Center told Madison.com the blowing snow is making driving difficult.
"It's blowing pretty good," the dispatcher said.
Winds were strong enough to take a prefabricated house off a flatbed trailer heading east on Highway 18/151 near Blue Mounds and depositing the house, upright, in the westbound lanes.
The State Traffic Operations Center said the "house in road" incident happened about 9 a.m. The house was removed from the highway lane by 10:15 a.m. but was still alongside the roadway.
The State Patrol told Madison.com Interstate 39/90/94 north of Madison was starting to ice up because of the blowing snow.
"We have a couple of vehicles in ditches," a dispatcher said.
The state road conditions map  shows many stretches of snow-covered or slippery highways all across the state, so drivers are advised to take it easy on the road.

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Friday, January 17, 2014

Eagles in Newville







Bald eagles can be seen...fishing near the Indianford Dam or nestled in the high branches of old oaks near the river in Newville

 “We are seeing more and more eagles,” Buenzow said. “Everywhere there’s a dam, there’s at least one eagle waiting for fish for dinner.

He remembers when no eagles were anywhere on the river.

 “Today, we have several pairs breeding in Rock County,” Buenzow said. “They’ve been on Lake Koshkonong for about 10 years. It’s a great wildlife comeback story.”

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Thursday, January 16, 2014

6 Years Ago - It Began

Jan 16, 2008 = 779.2
Jan 16, 2104 = 775.93

39 1/4 inches HIGHER then, than now.

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Wet 2013

During the summer and early fall of 2012, southern Wisconsin experienced a challenging period of drought.  In sharp contrast, the first half of 2013 has experienced very wet conditions with precipitation amounts now incredibly running up to 15 inches above normal through June 26th.

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2013 Jan thru June - weather

3rd Wettest January – June Period On Record. I was a little surprised to see the reality of the first half of 2013: the third wettest (first 6 months of a year) going back 119 years, according to NOAA NCDC. It was the wettest January thru June period on record for Wisconsin, Iowa and Illinois, while California saw the driest first half of the year ever recorded. All or nothing.

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Monday, January 13, 2014

Road Salt in Rock River, Lake Koshkonong

Andrea Anderson
January 13, 2014

As public works directors rush crews to spread salt and keep winter roads safe for drivers, they're balancing another concern: the environment.
A teaspoon of salt can contaminate five gallons of water, and salt trucks spread about 300 pounds of salt per mile.
“Personally, in Rock County, we are concerned because runoff goes to some of our lakes and rivers,” said Ben Coopman, Rock County highway commissioner.
“I think that is a statewide concern. But the biggest reason it doesn't seem to cause anything to change is the economics of it. There isn't a cheaper, more environmentally-friendly product out there," Coopman said.
Counties and municipalities have a responsibility to maintain clear roads for drivers, said Kevin Brunner, Walworth County public works director.
“We are trying to minimize salt,” Brunner said. “It's a tough balancing act because the expectation is bare pavement … (People) expect right after a storm to be able to get to wherever they have to get to.”
Residents bear some of the responsibility because they demand snow-free roads, said Connie Fortin, owner of Fortin Consulting, a Minnesota based environmental consulting firm.
“When you call and whine because your cul-de-sac is slippery or you can't get to work in 10 minutes, those guys just dump on more and more salt,” Fortin said. “Most homeowners have no idea what is happening to the lakes, rivers and ground water, and they don't know there is a negative side to complaining.”
THE IMPACT
Road salt affects water density and nutrient levels, causing changes in aquatic animal and plant life expectancy.
A study published in 2008 by the Ecological Society of America indicates road salt could travel up to 172 miles from a highway into wetlands, decreasing the survival rate of frogs and salamanders.
“It doesn't biodegrade, it doesn't break down, it doesn't go away,” Fortin said.  “Every winter we add this to our water and our lakes and our rivers and it has been accumulating for however many years we have been deicing.”
A 2010 study by the U.S. Geological Survey found that all streams studied in eastern and south central Wisconsin had elevated chloride levels that at some point in winter exceeded the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency chronic water quality criteria.
During the winter months, researchers found chloride levels greater than 10,000 milligrams per liter, higher than the water quality criteria of 230 milligrams per liter and acute water-quality criteria of 860 milligrams per liter. Aquatic animals begin to die when chloride levels are greater than 230 milligrams per liter.
“There isn't anything really out there yet that is environmentally friendly,” said Michael Sproul, Wisconsin Department of Transportation winter maintenance engineer.
“They are all chlorides of some sort, they all get into the ecosystem and pollute. The object is to use as little as possible, that is where we are trying to be more environmentally friendly. If we only use the amount of salt necessary to get the snow or ice in plowable form … then we're saving our environment," Sproul said.
THOUSANDS OF TONS
The amount of salt used each year is dependent on Mother Nature and pavement temperature. A salt truck typically drops 300 pounds of salt per lane mile. With the use of an additive, it goes down to about 200 pounds.
In the 2008-09 winter, Rock County and the municipalities it supplies used 1,612 tons of salt. The winter before, 8,685 tons were used. Last winter, 11,471 tons of salt were used, and this winter is shaping up to be about the same.
Rock County is responsible for maintaining 2,900 lane miles, the equivalent of a one-way trip to San Diego, Coopman said.
Until the mid-2000s, the county used a sand-salt mix. Now, it uses straight road salt, Coopman said.
Why not sand? Though the abrasive helps tires find a grip, when sand is mixed with salt, each reduces the effectiveness of the other.  Sand can be harmful, too. An Oregon Department of Transportation study in the early 1990s found 50 to 90 percent of sand applied to pavement remained in the environment after clean-up.
The rock salt sprinkled onto roads is effective until the temperature drops below 16 degrees. That's when additives, such as calcium chloride or magnesium chloride come in handy. They decrease the temperature that salt can melt ice to as low as minus 25 degrees.
The goal of deicing is not to melt the ice entirely but to break the adhesion between the pavement and the ice so plows can remove it later.
“In winter maintenance, the first priority is to plow,” Sproul said. “The goal is to only use the smallest amount of salt needed to melt and then be able to plow.”
So far this winter, Walworth County has used about 17,000 tons of its 30,000-ton salt supply, Brunner said. The county has an additional 2,750 tons on order.
County crews are responsible for maintaining Interstates, state highways and county roads. Town, village and city roads are the responsibility of the municipalities.
Walworth County is responsible for about 700 lane miles. That's compared to Whitewater, the county's largest city, which is responsible for about 50 lane miles, Brunner said.
THE ALTERNATIVES
The salt that county trucks sprinkle is pre-wet and has calcium chloride added. Pre-wetting helps the salt stick to the road.
“We pre-wet everything so it stays on the highway more,” Brunner said. “(We) found that by pre-wetting, about 30 percent more (salt) stays on highway.”
Public works directors, winter maintenance supervisors and environmentalists agree that 30 percent of dry salt broadcast onto roads bounces off and lands on road shoulders or nearby vegetation.
Salt that bounces onto road shoulders can kill trees and plants because they have a difficult time absorbing water with an increased salt content.
Pre-wetting cuts the amount of salt used about 25 percent because it has more melting power. It also reduces the bounce rate to 3 percent.
Only four counties in the state don't do pre-wetting, a method Sproul and Fortin recommend all counties use to protect their pocketbooks and the environment.
Area municipalities are coming up with creative ways to decrease the melting temperature and cut the costs of winter maintenance.
Beloit began adding beet juice to its salt several years ago. The juice is leftover after sugar is removed from sugar beets. Beet juice is used for deicing and anti-icing municipal roads.
Milwaukee is in the midst of a pilot program to use cheese brine, a product leftover from making cheese, to help pre-wet the roads and rock salt. Brine can be added to salt and then be applied before a snowstorm. It doesn't allow snow or ice to form a bond with the road, making it easier for plows to come through and clear the roads. Milwaukee sends trucks to Wisconsin's 140 cheese plants to pick up the brine. 
In Walworth County, county officials are taking a look at using Kikkoman soy sauce and mixing it with salt to make brine, Brunner said. Soy sauce has a high salt content that can expedite melting.
Fortin, who provides training for Minnesota and Wisconsin winter maintenance crews, understands that science has not come up with a complete alternative for salt, but she is adamant that there are practices that are better for the environment.
It starts with choosing plowing over salt and homeowners being proactive.
To minimize residential salt use, homeowners should shovel snow as it falls or before it's compacted by walking or driving, she said.
She also suggests homeowners use salt sparingly--no more than a half pound per 150 square feet. An average coffee mug can hold one pound of salt, and an average parking space is 150 square feet.

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Friday, January 10, 2014

Record Cold Temps - Chart



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Thursday, January 09, 2014

Koshkonong Shorelines Benefit

Deep freeze has some silver linings for the natural world
Associated Press
   TRAVERSE CITY, MICH.
   From a field station in northern Wisconsin, where the previous night’s low was a numbing 29 degrees below zero, climate scientist John Lenters studied computer images of ice floes on Lake Superior with delight.
   It may be hard to think of this week’s deep freeze as anything but miserable, but to scientists like Lenters there are silver linings: The extreme cold may help raise low water in the Great Lakes, protect shorelines and wetlands from erosion, kill insect pests and slow the migration of invasive species.
   “All around, it’s a positive thing,” Lenters, a specialist in the climate of lakes and watersheds, said Wednesday.
   Ice cover on the Great Lakes has been shrinking for decades, but this year more than 60 percent of the surface is expected to freeze over at some point—an occurrence that could help the lakes rebound from a prolonged slump in water levels.
   Even agriculture can benefit. Although cold weather is generally no friend to crops, some of southern Florida’s citrus fruits can use a perfectly timed cool-down, which they were getting as midweek temperatures hovered around freezing.
   “A good cold snap lowers the acidity in oranges and increases sugar content, sweetens the fruit,” said Frankie Hall, policy director for the Florida Farm Bureau Federation. “It’s almost been a blessing .”
   Scientists noted that subzero temperatures and pounding snowfalls like those that gripped much of the nation for several days are not unheardof in the Midwest and Northeast and used to happen more frequently.
   For all the misery it inflicted, the polar vortex that created the painfully frigid conditions apparently broke no alltime records in any major U.S. cities, according to Jeff Masters, meteorology director of Weather Underground.

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Wednesday, January 08, 2014

Rock River Freezes Over


   Top: An electronic sign on Milton Avenue in Janesville displays a noon temperature of minus 16 on Monday, but it's the flag in the background that really tells the weather story. Winds in the 20 mph range quickly turned the outdoors into a dangerous environment, and low temperatures are expected again today before things start trending up Wednesday.

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Tuesday, January 07, 2014

Polar Vortex Hits Koshkonong

Freakishly frigid
Locals hunker down as polar vortex grips region
Gazette staff
   JANESVILLE
   For Walworth County native Joseph Thomas, Sunday was the wrong night, the coldest night, to find himself homeless. Minus 18 degrees.
   After he’d had a falling out with the family of his f i a n c é , T h o m a s said he’d gotten a ride as far as Janesville. The sun was gone, the temperature was plummeting, and the wind was picking up.
   Thomas began to walk, nowhere in particular. His ears began to get cold. Then his fingers. Then his whole body.
   “It hurt,” Thomas said. “I’ve been homeless outside in the winter before, but this is the coldest I can remember.”
   Thomas said he went to a Janesville hospital emergency room just to warm up. From there he called the police for help. A Janesville officer offered him a ride to a church that is housing GIFTS, Janesville’s homeless shelter for men.
   At GIFTS, he got help, food—and most crucial—warmth.
   With dangerous cold weather settling in and wind chill temps as low as minus 45 expected through this morning, GIFTS has temporarily expanded its hours of operations around the clock.
   The shelter normally runs overnight and closes between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m., although it has daytime social services at a downtown service center that run from 8:30 to noon on weekdays.
   GIFTS got the go-ahead from Faith Community Church, which is housing the shelter this week, to keep the shelter’s doors open around the clock through today.
   The church is allowing GIFTS to house it social services in the church temporarily, and volunteers are making extra meals and driving the homeless men to appointments or work.
   GIFTS Executive Director Stephanie Burton said those measures are in place so none of the 25 homeless men at the shelter have to risk being in the brutal cold for the next few days.
   “We didn’t even want people walking ten minutes to a bus stop. Not in this weather. It’s just too cold—it’s too dangerous,” she said.
   Thomas said he’s been homeless other winters. He remembers once squatting in an abandoned house in Beloit for a few days to keep from freezing.
   Monday afternoon, he sat in a chair in the church’s foyer lounge, filling out a resume form given to him by GIFTS social workers.
   His fingertips were still red from exposure to the cold Sunday night.
   “I don’t have no money, no food stamps,” Thomas said. “Right now, this is my best option.”
   Warmth on the way
   Monday’s high temperature in Janesville was a skinfreezing minus 12. A low of minus 18 was expected Monday night, the same as on Sunday night.
   The National Weather Service is calling for a warming trend, with a high of 3 above zero today and a low tonight of minus 4.
   Temperatures are expected to rise through Friday, when the weather service predicts a high of 32 with a chance of precipitation.
   The Accu-Weather forecasting service is calling for 35 on Friday, which would be 53 degrees higher than Sunday night.
   Speedy delivery
   Janesville Postmaster Laura Coots and her two supervisors checked in on letter carriers Monday to make sure they were staying safe from the cold. They also dispensed coffee and hot chocolate
   “Today was our big concern day,” Coots said after making the rounds Monday afternoon.
   Visiting the carriers is standard procedure during cold snaps like this one, Coots said.
   Experienced letter carriers know to dress in enough layers to protect themselves, with a wind-resistant outer shell, Coots said. The postal service provides chemical warmers that can be activated and placed in gloves or boots.
   Coots noted it’s been a cold winter so far, but she said letter carriers have had no medical problems with the cold.
   Coots said on days like this one, they try to get the carriers off the street before it gets dark and colder.
   “If people are able to keep their sidewalks clear and paths clear, they can get their routes done quicker, and they’ll be able to get out of the cold sooner,” she said.
   Furnace fritz
   In the battle against Monday’s extreme cold, consider furnaces among the area’s biggest losers.
   At 10 a.m. Monday as temperatures held at minus 17, Janesville company Al Beyers Cooling and Heating already had 15 calls in the basket for furnaces on the fritz.
   “It is crazy today. We’re bundled to the max,” Al Beyers dispatcher Jaci McDonough said. “We’ve had at least 20 calls for no heat before nine o’clock this morning, and all four of our phones are lit up right now. I don’t expect it to let up.”
   Every technician the company has, including the owners and crews that normally only handle new furnace installations, were on call Monday. McDonough said workers at the company had residential furnace calls all over the map, including Beloit, Janesville, Milton, Fort Atkinson, Lake Mills, Cambridge and Stoughton.
   During extreme cold, there’s always a spike in calls for furnace problems, McDonough said. People tend to take their furnace for granted as the quiet heartbeat of the household when it’s 20 degrees and sunny.
   Put a minus sign in front of that temperature and add some serious wind chill, and people become super-tuned to every little furnace ping and murmur.
   “We’ve gotten a lot of calls with people saying they hear funny sounds, whistles. Everybody is on high alert,” McDonough said.
   Sometimes the problem is simple—an outside vent blocked with ice and snow, or a dead thermostat battery.
   Older furnaces are more likely to completely break down under the strain of constant running, particularly as people turn up the heat to contend with the frigid cold.
   “If a (furnace) heat exchanger is already on the verge of going out and you’ve got your heat set higher than normal in this cold—the length of time running … the furnace is running constantly. It’s not getting a break,” Mc-Donough said.
   McDonough said crews from her company likely would put in 15 hours or more Monday to stay caught up on furnace calls.
   “You can’t leave people hanging because it’s not just about people pipes freezing. It’s about people. This cold is really, really dangerous,” she said.
   Cold cranking
   Cars were as cranky as their owners Monday.
   When they started, many sent their drivers a dizzying array of dashboard icons that often translated into low tire pressure or indicated problems with stability control systems.
   Service manager Mark Erdman and his crew at Fagan Automotive in Janesville were fielding phone calls from car owners with both sorts of problems.
   “Lots of the calls related to tire pressure,” Erdman said. “Tire pressure drops in severe cold, and usually a drop of 5 pounds per-square-inch will trigger that warning.
   “It’s something you don’t want to ignore because it can present a safety issue, plus it affects fuel economy and is just hard on the tires.”
   Erdman said the dealership also was getting calls about cars that wouldn’t start, most of which were the result of weak batteries.
   Fagan, he said, doesn’t typically make service calls, but service advisors have been doing plenty of diagnostics over the phone.
   Wurtz Service Center on Racine Street does make service calls, and tow truck drivers there were plenty busy.
   “Most of it has been for no-starts,” said Paul Williams of Wurtz. “It’s also been for tire problems.
   “For safety reasons, it’s often not reasonable to change a tire on the side of the road, so the vehicle needs to be towed somewhere else.”
   Williams said most cars that won’t start are generally being towed to repair shops.
   “Cars are a lot better than they used to be, but if you’ve got a low battery, they’re easier to flood, and once they’re flooded, they’re probably not going to start until the sparks plugs are cleaned and the gas is drained from the oil.
   “If it’s not starting, it’s probably not going to start.”
   The extreme cold also creates glare ice on roadways, a combination that often results in a call for a wrecker, Williams said.
   “One thing people really need to realize is that they have to avoid cruise control in these winter conditions,” he said. “The road might look fine, but once you get on a hill with your cruise control on and hit glare ice, it’s all over ”
   
   In a wet hole
   It’s hard to think of a worst job on a below-zero day than crawling into a wet hole to fix broken water pipes.
   At least workers in the hole are protected a bit from the harsh wind, said Dave Botts, Janesville’s utility director.
   Water pipes break when temperatures swing, and the frequency so far this season has been “a little above normal” with the recent severe weather in December and early January, Botts said.
   He counted about 20 water main breaks in December. Two more were reported Monday morning. Botts said the city could have even more as temperatures rise later this week.
   Frozen pipes
   Plumbers were scrambling to help residents and business owners worried about frozen pipes. Rick Terrill of Terrill Plumbing already had answered five frantic calls by early Monday afternoon. Pipes are more susceptible with the blustery winds because the drafts blow cold air over pipes. Restaurants have issues in this weather because their venting systems have fresh air intakes that bring in cold air. People don’t realize many bathroom vent fans let cold air in when not running, Terrill said. He figures it will only get worse at the end of the week with the predicted thaw. “A lot of pipes are frozen and broken right now that nobody realizes because they won’t show up until they thaw out,” he said. “You do your best to try to figure out where they (pipes) would be frozen and try to get heat to it,” Terrill said.
   Sometimes, Terrill must open walls so warmer air can get to the pipes.
   Terrill Monday afternoon was on his way to winterize a home for someone whose house is on the market.
   Brent Steinke, service manager at Lloyd’s Plumbing and Heating, said the owners of five or six houses called him with frozen pipe issues Monday.
   To avoid frozen pipes, Steinke suggested residents turn on faucets periodically or allow a small stream of water to run. People should keep cabinet doors open under sinks, especially if it’s a sink on an outside wall. Stop outside drafts that might move cold air across the pipes because it doesn’t take much of a draft to cause freezing, Steinke said.
   Also, residents should make sure the outside hoses are not connected to the house.
   Mostly, problems show up in older homes where pipes sometimes were installed inside exterior walls. Frozen pipes in homes built in the last 20 years usually are the result of a draft or a hole, he said.
   If pipes freeze, residents can use heat guns or hair driers to melt ice in plastic pipes but should make sure the heat doesn’t melt the pipes. Plumbers can use thawing machines, but they can be used only on copper or steel pipes. Never use an open flame to warm a pipe, Steinke said.
   If a pipe is frozen, chances are it will burst when the water thaws, he said.
   Streets cleaned
   Janesville crews hit city streets Saturday in a race against the clock to mop up the best they could after Saturday’s snow but before the big freeze, said John Whitcomb, operations director.
   Crews worked from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
   “We wanted to make sure that our arterial and collector street systems were going to be snow free and then would dry enough before the very cold,” Whitcomb said.
   “We got lucky,” Whitcomb said. “I don’t think it got as cold as quick as the forecast. We’re in pretty good shape.”
   The new automated garbage collection trucks are running all right in the lower temps, although workers did have a few equipment issues Monday morning, Whitcomb said.
   The trucks started fine, but condensation is generally a bigger problem for diesel fuel when vehicles move from higher to lower temps.
   No cold injuries
   A Mercy Hospital and Trauma Center spokeswoman said one patient was treated last week in the emergency department for hypothermia, but no weather-related cases were reported Monday.
   No cold-related cases were reported at St. Mary’s Janesville Hospital, a spokeswoman said.
   False alarms
   Janesville police responded to an unusual number of burglar alarms late Sunday night into early Monday morning that appeared to be weather related, Lt. Terry Sheridan said.
   “It must have something to do with the cold and any little shift that could disrupt the alarm fields between the doors and windows causing them to go off,” he said.
   Police responded to all eight calls—some at the same location more than once—“because we never know the cause,” Sheridan said.
   Child care
   While many parents took to local Facebook pages to express relief about school being canceled, several area parents questioned why day care centers also closed. In one local mothers group, parents expressed frustration about having to work even though their day cares closed, while others said no child should be exposed to the outdoors for any amount of time.
   Heather Jenkins, owner of Alternative Childcare on Janesville’s west side, received a flood of calls and emails late Sunday from parents trying to make arrangements after the Janesville School District canceled school for Monday. Jenkins runs a drop-in, hour-by-hour day care center, and advertised her business on Facebook on Sunday for parents in a pinch.
   “I know a lot of parents are kind of frustrated because a lot of schools closed Friday and Janesville didn’t close until Sunday,” she said, which resulted in the Sunday night calls.
   She had eight kids Monday and had to turn down quite a few more. She expects to be just as busy today because it’s harder for parents to take off two days rather than one, she said.
   Cold pets
   By mid-morning Monday, the Rock County Humane Society had not responded to any calls of pets in distress.
   Executive Director Brett Frazier said most people take good care of their pets and the majority of past calls during cold weather have come from people concerned about outdoors animals. Because the humane society doesn’t conduct cruelty investigations, it encourages people to call local law enforcement to check out those problems.
   People who suspect “something is not quite right” with an animal can call the humane society at 608-752-5622, Frazier said.
   “We take overnight drop-offs from the city of Janesville and city of Beloit police and that’s where the majority of our strays come from,” he said.
   “Between the police and humane society we’ve got the capacity to help any animal in distress and put it into a safe situation,” Frazier said.
   Cold day to dig
   Cemetery workers dig graves all winter, but the city of Janesville’s Oakhill Cemetery lucked out by not needing any sites dug during this bitter cold, said Kathy Greenwell at the cemetery’s office.
   The cemetery had two burials last week and one is pending for likely later this week, she said.
   The frost was 4 to 8 inches deep last week, she said, with the snow providing a blanket to help protect the ground from freezing deeply.
   Workers need a two-day notice in winter to dig a grave, she said. They use a jackhammer or sometimes propane heaters to help get through the frost, she said.

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