Archive for the ‘Snow’ Category

Too Cold to Exercise? Try Another Excuse

Monday, January 28th, 2008

So says Gina Kolata of the New York Times.

“The big question was, ‘Is it ever too cold?’” Dr. Castellani said. “The answer is no. People go to the poles, people are out there when it’s minus-50 degrees, people do incredible things, and safely. There really isn’t a point where you can tell people it is not safe anymore.”

Dr. Timothy Noakes, an exercise physiologist at the University of Cape Town in South Africa who was a reviewer of that position paper, even supervised a swimmer, Lewis Gordon Pugh, who swam 1 km or (.62 miles) in 19 minutes at the North Pole last July, in water that was between 29 and 32 degrees.

The problem with exercising in the cold, exercise physiologists say, is that people may be hobbled by myths that lead them to overdress or to stop moving, risky things to do.

Some worry that cold air will injure their lungs or elicit asthma symptoms. Or they are convinced that they are more susceptible to injury when it is cold and that they have to move more slowly — forget about sprinting or running at a fast clip.

But lungs are not damaged by cold, said Kenneth W. Rundell, the director of respiratory research and the human physiology laboratory at Marywood University in Scranton, Pa. No matter how cold the air is, by the time it reaches your lungs, it is body temperature, he explained.

Some people complain that they get exercise-induced asthma from the cold. But that sort of irritation of the respiratory tract is caused by dryness, not cold, Dr. Rundell said. “Cold air just happens not to hold much water and is quite dry,” he said. You’d have the same effect exercising in air that was equally dry but warm.

Dr. Rundell and Tina Evans, a Ph.D. candidate, showed this a few years ago in a study designed to dispel what Dr. Rundell called the myth that cold air can induce asthma. Volunteers with exercise-induced asthma, whose airways tended to narrow after exercise in the cold, breathed cold air or room temperature air that was equally dry. Their airways narrowed in response to the dryness of the air, not its temperature, Dr. Rundell said.

Another myth is that you have to acclimatize to cold, just as you do to heat. It’s true that peoples’ bodies adapt to hot weather and that adaptation makes people feel better when they exercise in the heat. It also improves performance. With heat adaptation, you sweat more profusely, your sweat is less salty and your blood volume increases.

But exercise physiologists find only modest adaptation to cold. The body’s main responses to cold — constricting blood vessels near the skin, shunting blood to the body’s core and shivering — do not improve if you spend more time in the cold. Nor are the physically fit any better at adaptation than the sedentary.

Snowkiting on Lake Calhoun

Sunday, January 27th, 2008

This weekend I had a chance to watch see what kind of outdoor sports folks around here like to do. I wasn’t planning to stop at Lake Calhoun, but when I saw all the kites I decided to see what was going on. Here I found a bunch of people snowkiting or kiteskiing/boarding or whatever they call it these days plus even more spectators and joggers. Several groups were on site giving lessons and renting equipment. Lake Calhoun is located just southwest of downtown Minneapolis. Apparently, motorized vehicles are prohibited on this lake.

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This dog was getting a lot of extra exercise pulling the skier.
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Outdoor water leak in the winter in Minnesota.
water leak

More pictures of Lake Calhoun here:

Snow-kiting on Lake Calhoun, 2008-01-26

Snow covered fire hydrant locator flags

Thursday, January 24th, 2008

I had heard stories about these flags, and now I can confirm that they do exist:

fire hydrant with flag

Conditions: +3 F with a -9 wind chill.

According to a friend of mine, the fire hydrant base is colored according to the fire department and the top indicates the water pressure. I’m sure this varies from location to location though.

  • Class AA (>1500 gpm) light blue
  • Class A (1000-1499 gpm) green
  • Class B (500-999 gpm) orange
  • Class C (0-499 gpm) red (a.k.a. find a better hydrant)
    colors/pressures

Real environmentalists walk to work

Wednesday, January 23rd, 2008

No, today isn’t the Twin Cities Bike/Walk to Work Day. That was May 18th when the weather was, I assume, pleasant. Although I wouldn’t describe the current conditions as pleasant, I would at least say that you won’t die if you have lots of layers of clothing on.

Also, according to the lady who cut my hair tonight, people here drive just as recklessly in poor wintery conditions as they do in Birmingham. A news report said there were 190 wrecks in the metro area on Monday when it was snowing. I’m not sure if they were rushing to get bread and milk or not.

Here are some pictures from our commute this morning. It was about -1 F and was supposed to hit 2 F for the high today! It will be interesting to see what it’s like tomorrow morning at -9 F. I think the answer is: add more fabric over whatever body part feels cold and then you’ll feel fine – i.e. add a scarf, etc. At least it is supposed to get up into the double digits tomorrow (11F). I’m glad I won’t be out in the -19 F weather tonight!

Dave, leader of the pack.
dave commute

The reality is that it’s actually warmer to walk since the vehicle is sitting outside freezing all night and doesn’t warm up any during the five minute drive. At least we can generate some body heat as we walk plus we get some exercise to boot! The day I drove and the others walked, they arrived at the same time I did.

You can’t see it in the picture, but there is ice forming on the outside of Sunil’s scarf over his mouth due to the moisture in his breath condensing and freezing on the scarf.
sunil commute

I’m 96% sure there is no retaining wall or hill of any sort behind this wall of snow the length of the parking lot.
car snow

It’s snowing everywhere now!

Tuesday, January 22nd, 2008

Even California is getting in on the action!

cali snow

From Yahoo/AP:  Hallie Faust, 5, of Palo Alto, Calif., plays during a rare snowfall in Saratoga, Calif., Monday, Jan. 21, 2008. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma)

Deep freeze hits northern states

Tuesday, January 22nd, 2008

It may be cold here in Minneapolis, but at least it isn’t -34 F !!!

Mon Jan 21, 12:26 PM ET

PORTLAND, Maine – Temperatures dropped to breathtaking levels, well below zero, in extreme northern sections of Maine early Monday.

Thermometers registered 34 degrees Fahrenheit below zero at Van Buren, 27 below at Presque Isle and 26 below at Allagash, the National Weather Service reported.

In the northern Rockies, Butte, Mont., registered 32 below at 8 a.m. — with a wind chill of minus 47, the weather service said.

Another of the nation’s usual cold spots, International Falls, Minn., managed only 16.1 below zero, but even after the sun came up its temperature of 14 below combined with 6 mph wind for a wind chill of 29 below zero, according to a weather service Web site.

As the cold air blew across Lake Ontario, it picked up enough moisture to produce 3 feet of lake-effect snow Sunday in New York’s Oswego County. The roof of a public works garage holding snow removal equipment collapsed early Monday in Fulton, N.Y., under the weight of 37 inches of snow, and the town declared a state of emergency. The region at the east of Lake Ontario often gets heavy lake-effect snow.

“We’re digging out,” said state police Sgt. Edwin Croucher in Fulton. He reported multiple accidents caused by the storm but no serious injuries.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080121/ap_on_re_us/bitter_cold_4

First day in Minneapolis

Tuesday, January 22nd, 2008

Even with the cold and snowy weather and working on a holiday, the day was wonderful.

Is this crazy guy from Alabama about to walk to work in the snow? It feels good for the first minute!
crazy guy
… maybe tomorrow …

The parking lot was still pretty clear in the morning, but you can see the piles of snow between the cars.
snow am snow between cars am

I could see the drizzling snow out the window of our classroom the entire day.
view from class w

Sunil; Dave (not teaching!); crow in the snow.
sunil in class dave in class crow in the snow

Nice heated stairway and walkway from the parking deck to the building.
view from class e

A little more snow by the end of the day.
parking lot PM

After writing my first Pascal program and dinner at the restaurant at hotel next door, Sunil and I ventured out to the Target to pick up a few things. I learned that the best way to drive in the snow is to not go very far (or very fast). That must be why they have so many Targets around here!

Kip’s; snow caught in the flash (looks like bright stars); the moon through the haze of the snow and clouds.
Kips stars moon
BTW, I had the “Bangers and Mash” at Kip’s, which was delicious.

This mound of snow is probably 8 feet high. There were several of these huge piles throughout the parking lot.
snow mountain at target

This one must be at least 12 feet tall!
snow mountain at target 2

Snow in Alabama today, a.k.a. “Winter Storm 2008″

Saturday, January 19th, 2008

The local NBC station proclaimed today’s snowfall “Winter Storm 2008.” While there was some snow and that was nice to see around here, it wasn’t the big deal they tried to make it out to be. I’ll find out what real winter weather is like tomorrow. The forecast is -6° F in Minneapolis Sunday at 8 PM, OUCH!

Snow in front yard
Snow in my front yard
If you need your own Ron Paul yard sign, let me know!

Snow on car
Snow on my house-mate’s car

Baxter
Baxter

Baxter in the snow
Baxter in the snow

Snowman at a neighbor’s house
Snowman at a neighbor’s house

Snow-critter on mailbox
Snow-critter

Snow-critter
Snow-critter

Winter Storm 2008 - Linda White
NBC’s “Winter Storm 2008″ reporter Linda White with a field of mostly melted snow in the background.

Locals on camera
Locals on camera. This guy kept making funny faces on camera as part of the live Winter Storm Coverage.