- the battery in your outdoor thermometer freezes
- icicles form on your scarf after just 15 minutes outside
- a high of 5 degrees Fahrenheit sounds warm
- there is a duck in your kitchen (again)
- it takes you a half hour to put on/take off the layers you wear when you go outside
- chicken eggs chip the cement when you throw them against it - but the egg doesn't break
- water droplets tossed from a mug bounce when they hit the ground
- breathing through your mouth makes you cough and through your nose freezes your nostrils shut
- your cat won't move from her box near the radiator
- a 5 mile per hour breeze feels like gale-forced winds
- the soles of your boots don't bend with your feet like you're used to them doing
- you have to turn your whole body to look for something that is a bit to your right, just so you can see it (consider the scarf, hood, etc...)
- even the sun dogs are trying to get inside
- you can almost see the needle on the home's propane tank go down (but that might be the icicle growing on your eyelashes)
- you can actually feel the difference between -30 degrees F and -20 degrees F
- what you thought was the sound of a bird chattering away was just its knees knocking together
- baling wire breaks when you try to bend it
- you feel better only after you remind yourself of the winter you spent in Duluth where the temps didn't get above zero for the whole month of January...
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If you want to see a story in our farm newsletter that describes what we experienced during our one Duluth winter - try this link
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