Emerson Aviation declares Ice-in
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This is the first time that I can recall that Emerson got it wrong. See post 38 here.
https://www.winnipesaukee.com/forums...d.php?p=366278 Alan |
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WMUR is stating that "ice in" is when the Mount's ports are frozen in.
Been up on the lake all my life, when did they change that definition? It's always been all iced over and ice out is when the ports for the mount are free. There have been years Ice In was never declared. Is this because of Global Warming? :laugh: |
They didn't. Ice-Out is when the Mount Washington can make all it ports.
It has been for some time very easy for at least one of the Mount ports to have ice over near the docking area much sooner than the declaration of Ice-in. That would be because Ice-in has always used the other standard. |
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Ice in, at least for my understanding from my grandfather when he was alive, and my father, who s still alive, has been when the entire lake has ice on it, doesn't matter how much ice even just a thin layer. Ice out is when the mount can go port to port (which is what you said, I agree) WMUR definition in today's report is :"The declaration means all five ports visited by the M/S Mount Washington are covered with ice." I have NEVER heard this before. If that was the case, there's been ice on the Weir's web cam and Wolfeboro's web cam and Center harbor's web cam. And the reports for Alton is 6". Don't know about Meredith, but seeing Weir's had ice, I would assume that Meredith would too. So what part am i missing if WMUR is correct? |
WMUR started confusing ice in as the counterpart to ice out a few years ago. There are many instances in my mind when the writers don't really know much about Winnipesaukee traditions. Nobody here refers to the Mount as the MS, and we rarely use the term, "the big lake". Both routine on WMUR. Ice-in could have occurred as Emerson posted and then re-opened. I sure don't know, but Slickcraft is very reliable too.
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Just remember
Just remember what you hear on WMUR newscasts: "Nobody covers New Hampshire like we do." Doesn't matter if it is factual.
Dave |
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When Emerson started declaring Ice-in, the lake mostly froze over everywhere... and of course now, if we have no declaration of Ice-in... they can never have one of Ice-out. So my guess is that Emerson updated his definition of what Ice-in requires. But I am not sure if he makes the flight every day. Not even sure who will take over when he is gone... so I am guessing at that point they will attempt to use the webcams and local determination at various locations. But yes, growing up here... and when Ice-in started, I remember it being the entire lake or at least the entire route that the Mount would take... so the Channel and portion near the dam wouldn't count. |
Always go to the source.
Attached is Emerson's post, which says that "ice-in...simply means the entire lake is covered in ice." In a response on that same thread, Emerson said, in response to reports of open water, that "wind must have broken [that section] up." So, the definitions remain the same—ice-in is the whole lake iced over and ice-out is the Mount being able to reach all her ports—but weather conditions must have led to a bit of open water after Emerson saw all ice. https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/202...d2bdad2c94.jpg Sent from my SM-G950U using Tapatalk |
So I'm not loosing my mind as much as I thought I was. That's all I wanted to know.
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