Even longtime Alaskans taken off guard by deep freeze
by Tim Mowry /tmowry@newsminer.com
Nov 17, 2011 | 166792 views | 73 73 comments | 204 204 recommendations | email to a friend | print
A sundog is seen from Graehl Landing Park as temperatures dip well below zero Tuesday afternoon, November 15, 2011. Eric Engman/News-Miner
A sundog is seen from Graehl Landing Park as temperatures dip well below zero Tuesday afternoon, November 15, 2011. Eric Engman/News-Miner
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A pedestrian makes his way along Cushman Street as temperatures dip well below zero Tuesday afternoon, November 15, 2011. Eric Engman/News-Miner
A pedestrian makes his way along Cushman Street as temperatures dip well below zero Tuesday afternoon, November 15, 2011. Eric Engman/News-Miner
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Fairbanks cold records continue to fall; air quality alert issued


FAIRBANKS - A mid-November cold snap seems to have caught even seasoned Fairbanksans off guard.

“I don’t think anybody was really expecting this,” 43-year-old Shawn Ross, a lifelong Fairbanksan, said. “This came out of the blue.”

For the second time in three days, Fairbanks set a new low temperature record on Thursday. A temperature of 41 degrees below zero — the first 40 below temperature of the season — was recorded at Fairbanks International Airport at 6:29 a.m., according to the National Weather Service in Fairbanks. That broke the old record of 39 below set in 1969.

The cold air settling in the flatlands has concentrated air pollution. The Fairbanks North Star Borough issued air quality advisories on Wednesday and Thursday because particulate matter was above the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s standards and rated as unhealthy for sensitive groups.

Fairbanks set a new record of 35 below on Tuesday and the temperature bottomed out at 39 below on Wednesday, two degrees shy of the record.

Thursday’s record low of 41 below marked the sixth earliest 40-below temperature recorded by the National Weather Service in Fairbanks since 1904. The earliest it’s ever hit 40 below in Fairbanks was Nov. 5, 1907, when it hit 41 below.

The last time Fairbanksans saw 40-below temperatures in November was in 1994, when temperatures of 45, 43 and 45 below were recorded on Nov. 24, 25 and 30, respectively.

The bitter, early season cold had Interior residents wondering if somebody turned the calendar ahead a month or two.

“This sort of thing is certainly more common in December and January than November,” meteorologist Dan Hancock at the National Weather Service in Fairbanks said. “We can go through an entire winter and not get this cold.”

Ross, who has owned Badger Towing for 11 years, said even he wasn’t prepared for a cold snap this severe so early in the season.

“I didn’t have all my trucks on the road,” he said Thursday as he scrambled to keep up with demand for his services from motorists stranded by shredded tires and frozen engines. “I had one driver who had to run down to the store to buy some winter boots because he was still wearing fall boots. He said he’d just wear another pair of socks, but that doesn’t do it.

“Twenty or 25 below is tolerable, but past 30 below it’s a whole different ball of wax,” Ross said.

Several record low temperatures set more than 40 years ago were broken overnight Wednesday in the Fairbanks area.

Eielson Air Force Base reported a low of 43 below early Thursday morning, which broke the previous record of 40 below in 1969. It was the second day in a row a new record was set at Eielson. It was 42 below there on Wednesday morning.

The coldest temperature reported Thursday morning was a record 54 below in Manley Hot Springs. A temperature of 49 below was recorded at KNJP radio station in North Pole, also a record.

Other low temperatures around the Interior on Thursday morning were 46 below in Fort Yukon, 45 below in Nikolai, 42 below in Nenana and Tanana and 40 below at Bettles.

The forecast calls for extreme temperatures through the weekend, though not quite as teeth-chattering as the past few days.

Highs today are expected to be 15 to 25 below with lows of 25 to 35 below. On Saturday, the forecast calls for highs of 10 to 15 below and lows of 25 to 35 below. Sunday might be a little warmer, with highs of 10 to 20 below and a low of 30 below.

The record low temperatures for Friday and Saturday are 33 below on both days, which means there is a decent chance for more low temperature records at the airport.

“High temperatures are going to remain well below zero but there will be some cloud cover and a somewhat warmer air mass will move in,” Hancock said.

As for how long the cold snap may last, forecasters said there’s a chance even colder air could move in early next week. How cold it gets will depend on how much cloud cover there is.

“There’s some inconsistencies in the models right now,” meteorologist Julie Malingowski said. “If it does clear out, we’re doomed.”

The cold temperatures are already affecting life for residents in Alaska’s second-largest city.

The Nordic Ski Club of Fairbanks canceled races scheduled for Friday night and Sunday at Birch Hill Recreation Area that were expected to attract top racers from around the state, though the club is still hoping to hold a race on Saturday if the temperature warms up to the 15 below range, John Estle, the club’s racing coordinator, said.

For people like Ross, at Badger Towing, the cold temperatures mean brisk business.

“It’s probably multiplied five times since it got cold,” he said of business at his towing company. “There were a lot of cars not prepared for this.

“People are not checking their tire pressure,” he said, adding that tires lose air when it gets cold and then are more susceptible to going flat. “I’ve picked up five today along sitting on the side of the road with flat or shredded tires.”

While it’s still too early for buried water and sewer lines to freeze, Kirk Krause at Bigfoot Pumping and Thawing said he’s had several calls for frozen water lines inside houses.

“Plug in your heat tape and turn the heat up,” Krause advised. “A lot of people turn their heat down (to save money on heating oil) and it’s going to cost them more in the end” when pipes freeze.

With only a foot of snow on the ground to provide insulation from the cold, Krause said it won’t take long at these temperatures to drive the frost line down to the point where it will threaten buried lines.

“It helps, but it ain’t nearly enough, not if the weather stays like this,” he said of the thin snow cover. “With the lack of snow and this cold, it’s going to push that frost down pretty fast.”

Record Lows

Several record low temperatures were broken overnight Wednesday:

• Manley Hot Springs — 54 below

• North Pole (KJNP) — 49 below

• Eielson Air Force Base — 43 below

• Fairbanks International Airport — 41 below

• University Experimental Station — 41 below

• UAF West Ridge — 40 below

Earliest 40 Below

There have been five times when a temperature of 40 below or colder was recorded in Fairbanks earlier than it was this year.

• Nov. 5, 1907 — 41 below

• Nov. 10, 1989 — 42 below

• Nov. 14, 1956 — 41 below

• Nov. 16, 1969 — 41 below

• Nov. 16, 1956 — 40 below

• Nov. 17, 2011 — 41 below

Contact staff writer Tim Mowry at 459-7587.
Comments
(73)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
Jasonn
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November 19, 2011
Can meteorologist Julie Malingowski clear something up for me? Is "doomed" what happens when it gets cold enough to freeze your brandy? ; )

Bet it would be REALLY cold if it wasn't for all that pesky global warming!
clbarkley
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November 19, 2011
Care to make a bet on what the temperature will be next Sarurday? I doubt anyone who has any experience watching the weather report would be willing to put money on the weatherman's predictions a week out. So how in the world do you expect the country to turn their lives up-side-down based on your guess of what the temperature will be 100 years from now? No matter how smart you think you are and how stupid you think everyone else is, you can't even tell me what the temperature will be next week, much less next year, next decade, or next century. No matter how smart you think you are, you can't fathom all the variables that contribute to our weather and climate. Weather is a system of chaos. How do you know that there is not a negative feedback system for the climate whereby cooling temperature activates a warming mechanism? I am not going to live in oppression because of people who call me stupid while claiming they are omnipotent geniuses who know the temp next week or next year.
BudO_Fairbanks
|
November 19, 2011
Just another winter in Alaska...never seen 2 in a row that were the same. It gets cold and things freeze.

I consider it a good winter when a minimum of MY things freeze and/or need repair.

I think 100 years from now- no, wait- 1000 years from now- people will be talking about how the weather is changing....AND THEY'LL BE RIGHT....the weather is ALWAYS changing.

Deal with it.
Afterburner
|
November 18, 2011
Global warming carbon loading climate change has created micro-climate anomalies of rapid retrograde patterns ( localized pockets of global cooling) discernible through computer mathematical computations that are now indisputable to all with the exception of psudo-scientists who are established and supported by those agencies that owe the most in carbon dollars.

People actually get paid for writing non-sense like that.
sonofchulio
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November 19, 2011
Do the proponents of man-made global climate change work for free?
kefka.pelazzo
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November 18, 2011
I spent the last decade of my life in South Carolina but I had my winter gear ready and stowed in my vehicle before it hit -25F. See, most real Alaskans won't ever take the winter gear out of their vehicles. This is just proof that most of the people living in Alaska these days, aren't genuine Alaskans. My grandfather has lived here four decades and would tell you the same. You can see who is and isn't Alaskan when the temperature drops below freezing. All the new transplants, all the guys that thought they'd move here to have a chance with Sarah Palin ... they run around in sweaters, long pants, and Columba jackets in what real Alaskans consider tee shirt and shorts weather.

IMO, the same kind of people that believe localized cooling disproves climate change. If we're setting new records then the weather is abnormal. Some people just aren't intelligent enough to realize global patterns don't effect local patterns in different ways. Just can't wrap their brains around complexity.
kefka.pelazzo
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November 18, 2011
Some people just aren't intelligent enough to realize global patterns don't effect local patterns in different ways.

Should read as ...

Some people just aren't intelligent enough to realize global patterns effect local patterns in different ways.

Pfff, I just woke from a four hour nap, whats your excuse?
sonofchulio
|
November 19, 2011
Oh brilliant one--

"I spent the last decade of my life in South Carolina but I had my winter gear ready and stowed in my vehicle before it hit -25F."

Are you writing this posthumously? Does it often get 25 below in South Carolina?
AggressiveProgressive
|
November 18, 2011
With the new industrial hemp resolution passed, (THANKS LLOYD!) maybe we could be heating our homes with clean fuel by next winter. Four kinds of superior, sustainable, CLEAN fuel - oil, ethanol, coal, and wood type pellets. Fuel farms will put Alaskans to work in jobs that will last longer than the boom and bust of the petroleum industry, and if we had an oil spill, it would be good for the animals that ate it, and it wouldn't harm the environment like the toxic crap we're stuck with now. Oh, and growing the kind of biomass we'll need will help heal the atmosphere as well. Hemp-The Wonder Weed! It's a win-win-win situation! :-)
sonofchulio
|
November 18, 2011
Drudge picked up and linked to this article.
LadyNYC
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November 18, 2011
Then that explains the one hundred forty-eight TstHOUSAND web hits so far. Wow.
Samm_redux
|
November 18, 2011
It is noteworthy (or not) that the low temperature records that we just broke were set in 1969. That was the only cold weather during the winter of '69/'70. It was the warmest winter of the entire sixties decade.

Not that that means anything for the rest of this winter...
aksala
|
November 18, 2011
-5 up in the hills outside of Fairbanks at 1 pm. Not a cloud in sight and yet the temp is seasonable. Stay warm down there. Wonder if the borough will increase the tax assessment because we have a warmer temp whe Fairbanks has an inversion going. Heck they try and tax for the view.
fantomas
|
November 18, 2011
teapartpatriot, your comment on automatic transmissions give a good reason for having vehicles with manual transmission. Manual transmissions also allow you to downshift on ice to come to a stop without breaks.

Oddly, these vehicles are getting harder to find. I replaced my old small truck last March and the only place offering a manual transmission was Kendall. Gene's has discontinued the Dakota. Lithia had no Colorados.
5smoothstones
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November 18, 2011
Global warming-perhaps. But well within earths normal historical temperature range variations. A simple fact check shows CO2 is only .03% of atmosphere. Less than 10% of that is generated by burning fossil fuels. Water vapor is by far the greatest amount of greenhouse "gas" in our atmosphere. I was always taught " you can't control mother nature". What rational person could believe otherwise? Anthropogenic Global Warming, AGW, seriously? Utter snake oil fearmongering. If I believed I could influence earths climate I'd start boiling water!!! Stay warm.
fantomas
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November 18, 2011
If you drive out to 4.5 mile Badger Road and go to the neighborhoods north and south of the road, you'll see wood smoke coming from stacks but bright clear air. I see no ice fog. I smell nothing in the air walking on the road.

Perhaps the air quality in Fairbanks (which has already banned hydronic heaters) might be due to everyone idling their vehicles, the power plants, or other factors.

And to those of you paying $3.80/gallon for heating oil, you could have set your place up for wood heat, even though is it much more work. It is, however, considered carbon neutral and better for the planet than oil heat.
Crotte
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November 18, 2011
Damn that global warming!!!!!! It must be melting all over Alaska and the polar bears are dying of heat stroke.
2good4U
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November 18, 2011
fairbanks = hell frozen over
teapartypatriot_2
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November 18, 2011
If you leave your vehicle out over night in this cold, be sure to let the transmission warm up after starting it. Do not start off in reverse but drive a little bit forward first. A sure way to tear up a automatic transmission is to take off in reverse before letting the transmission warm up. It costs about $2,000 to rebuild a transmission after it breaks by taking off in reverse. After two time I know.
aj35
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November 18, 2011
The weather is cold. Stay safe by being prepared. Bring your cold weather gear with you everywere you go. Even if you are going a couple of blocks.

Glockmod23
|
November 18, 2011
It's So Cold up here (Yesterday And today) -44 Below 0....Even the Alaska Rip-Off, Bad Politicians ARE asking "To Go To Hell, where it's warmer!
glenp827
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November 18, 2011
didn't the global warmists just tell us there is a HUGE increase in greenhouse gases?
Boodrow
|
November 18, 2011
There has been an increase in CO2. Temperatures have not followed.
1TarBaby
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November 18, 2011
My Electric bill increased by $ 40.00 last month, and i'm single with an occasional roomate.If the temps stay the same how is GVEA going to deal with families not being able pay their bill.

Boot those free loaders out of the park and they can go get a job and pay the "poor's" electric bill for them them

Since they care about the "poor", homeless, etc.
1TarBaby
|
November 18, 2011
-13 this am because we have a warming spell thanks to overnight global warming caused by mother nature.
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