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Another incredibly foggy morning this morning in Sparta. Crazy dense.
Like they say, the number of foggy mornings in August tells us how wide the stripes will be on the woolly worms, which means that's how many times we expect to see snow in the winter, which may or may not have any relation to how much, if any, snow actually falls.
Bring it on! But only as long as it doesn’t set us up for a big switch come winter and we torch.
More than not, extended summer into October usually is not a good signal for a cold winter. The coldest winters I could find had mostly BN temps. The winter of 1917-18 was just a ridiculous cool fall followed by a brutal December and January. Fall temps in 2000 (after the awful late summer torch) were BN and then led to one of the coldest December’s on record. Winter aside, it’s time for football weather and autumn colors for me.