
And now I have lived through the second and third biggest snowstorms ever recorded in these parts, and I can safely say they were the biggest and second biggest in any of our lifetimes. When the snow stopped falling and the sun came out Monday afternoon (and the wind did not quit until well into the night), 33 inches of accumulation had been measured in Sturgeon Bay and 26 inches in Green Bay — I am located exactly between those fine cities. In recorded history only the Great Blizzard of 1888 left more snow in its wake.
If you have to endure a monster snowstorm, it may as well be a historic one. This way I can tell future young whippersnappers, “I remember back in ’26, the snow and the wind got so wild they had to pull the snowplows off the road.” Yep, it was that awful on Monday morning. By sunset, though, we could actually see the sun in the sky as it went down.
About 1,200 homes did lose power in the storm, but summer windstorms have taken the electricity from tens of thousands in the past, so most of us have much to be grateful for now that we’re through the storm and into cleanup mode.
As if perhaps to remind me not to be glib about reaching the other side, I did have a couple of sump pump issues that kept me busy Monday afternoon and evening and may or may not be solved — I’ll know more by dawn’s early light.
Clearly I needed a reminder that two and a half feet of snow and bitter cold can wreak havoc with our cleverly designed devices like homes and roads and such.
God has granted us a few days above freezing to start melting this mess, but not until Wednesday. One day with a high of 20 and two nights in single digits will be more in line with the Wisconsin tradition that winter rarely departs until after the first day of spring, and then some.






