Ski it up, Michiganders!

Chris 360 Cross

Chris 360 Cross, photo by btwphotography.

Absolute Michigan has some cool resources for skiers from beginners that are summarized more or less neatly in today’s Michigan Skiapalooza Thursday which begins:

While Winter 2008 hasn’t been good for things like car makers, investments and national economies, it has presented us with some incredible conditions for skiing and snowboarding.

USA Today noticed that Midwest skiers have all kinds of options in Michigan where we have more downhill areas – 42 – than any state except New York with 200 chairlifts, 840 runs and 40 terrain parks!

There’s even a deal for beginning skiers for the whole month of January that you’ll definitely want to check out if you’re a novice without equipment!

You can see this photo (and many more) bigger and bolder in btw’s Nubs Portfolio slideshow (view set) or his Skiing – Nubs Nob slideshow.

Michigan Fox Squirrel

Got My Nut . . . I'm Outta' Here

Got My Nut . . . I’m Outta’ Here, photo by Matt Kedzior.

Wikipedia’s Fox Squirrel entry says that the Fox Squirrel (Sciurus niger) is the largest species of tree squirrel native to North America and are also sometimes referred to as the Stump-eared Squirrel, Raccoon Squirrel, or Monkey-faced Squirrel.

Fox Squirrels depend primarily on tree seeds for food, but they are generalist eaters and will also consume buds and fruits, cultivated grain, insects, birds’ eggs, and small lizards … In their regular diet of nuts, fox squirrels are classic scatter-hoarders that bury caches of nuts in dispersed locations, some of which are inevitably left unretrieved to germinate. (Matt says he watched this little guy dig around for a couple seconds in the snow and he came up with a nut that I assume he buried earlier)

Fox Squirrels are strictly diurnal, non-territorial, and spend more of their time on the ground than most other tree squirrels. They are still, however, agile climbers…

They are gregarious and apparently playful, often chasing each other up and down trees and across yards and clearings. They have a large vocabulary, consisting most notably an assortment of clucking and chucking sounds, not unlike some “game” birds, and they warn the listening world of approaching threats…

Fox Squirrels are also known for being living fossils, skeletally very similar to remains of the oldest-known squirrel, Protosciurus, from the late Oligocene and early Miocene epochs.

For more, check out the Animal Diversity Web pages on the Fox Squirrel and also Michigan DNR’s page on Michigan squirrels.

You can see this bigger in Matt’s slideshow.

Yeah, it’s cold outside…

Yeah, it’s cold outside… by Dale Treadway

After a brief reprieve from the chill over the weekend, winter has ridden roaring winds back to Michigan this morning.

He says you should probably view this photo large and on black, or you can see it and others larger in Dale’s Winter ’08 Series 1 set (slideshow) and try and stay warm!

More Sunrise This Morning

More Sunrise This Morning

More Sunrise This Morning, photo by jacalynsnana.

As she says: view large (or check this and a few other shots out in her slideshow).

More wintry goodness on the Michigan Winter Wallpaper page.

Michigan road salt & the Detroit Salt Mine

Salt Mountain, photo by otisourcat

In the battle against snow and ice that is waged every winter day on Michigan’s roads, salt remains and essential ingredient. MDOT records for 1991 show that 442,223 tons of road salt were applied to 10,000 linear miles of trunk line maintained under MDOT’s jurisdiction. The Wayne County Road Commission notes that a single salt run for a truck can use up to 12 tons of salt, depending upon the truck size. That page has several more bits of trivia including the fact that at temperatures below 20 degrees, salt begins to lose its effectiveness. It becomes almost completely ineffective at 0 degrees or colder.

The Salt Institute’s page on Michigan salt says that estimated salt deposits in Michigan are astronomical. In the Detroit area alone, it is believed that there are over 71 trillion tons of unmined salt. Geological studies estimate that 55 counties of the Lower Peninsula cover 30,000 trillion tons of salt.

Our largest salt mine is actually the Detroit Salt Mine, operated by the Detroit Salt Company (closed for a time but now re-opened, comes with an annoying & loud Flash warning) and I suppose is makes sense that in 1940 Detroit became the first major city to use rock salt for snow and ice control. The Great Lakes Radio Consortium’s Ann Murray has a great report titled Exploring a Great Lakes Salt Mine that takes you inside the Cleveland salt mine that extends under Lake Erie. The best exploration of the mine is via The ghostly salt city beneath Detroit in the Detroit News:

In a 1925 Detroit News article, miner Joel Payton told about his salt mine job. “The only dirty part of this job is going down to work,” Mr. Payton explained.

“I have to wear this old outfit because the big buckets that take us down get smudgy from the action of the sulphur water on the iron of the buckets.

“The mine itself is dry and clean as pure rock salt in a solid vein 35 feet thick is bound to be. The high vaulted rooms that we have hollowed out have sparkling white floors, walls and ceilings.”

Payton continued, “One reason we don’t have any rats in our Detroit mine is because the rats would have nothing to eat except the leavings of our lunch pails. And by the way, not only are there no rats or cockroaches or other living creature in our mine, but also no remains of living things from past ages. The salt vein is, of course, a dried up sea that once covered this section for hundreds of miles. You’d naturally suppose that some fish or vegetation would have been pickled or fossilized in the brine as it hardened. But I’ve never seen a single fossil or sea shell or any remains of that kind”

The photo above was taken at the Verplank salt dock, Muskegon and you can see more photos of otisourcat has taken of Michigan road salt.

frozen in motion: Michigan Winter Wallpaper Page

frozen in motion

frozen in motion, photo by Where’s Walden?.

This is part of Megan’s excellent Michigan Meanderings set (slideshow) and you can see some other sweet photos of ice she’s taken.

The blizzard howling out my window says to me that it’s time to shovel out the Michigan Winter Wallpaper page!

Michigan Winter Wallpaper Page

Abandoned Mill, Ripley, Michigan 1997

Abandoned Mill, Ripley, Michigan 1997

Abandoned Mill, Ripley, Michigan 1997, photo by Bill Schwab.

A number of years ago, I built a site for an excellent local photographer, Greg Seman. I remember him praising the work of Detroit photographer Bill Schwab.

It was a pretty cool feeling when I saw some lovely black & white photos roll into the Absolute Michigan pool on Flickr and realized that they were Bill’s.

This photo is part of Bill’s Michigan set (slideshow), but don’t stop there

Snowy Bud

Snowy Bud

Snowy Bud, photo by DarrylW4.

I think this photo does a perfect job of summarizing Spring 2008.

Canadian Freeze Ray encases Mackinac Bridge!

Canadian Freeze Ray encases Mackinac Bridge!

Canadian Freeze Ray encases Mackinac Bridge!, photo by farlane.

Unfolding details of this shocking story at Canadian Freeze Ray wreaks havok on Michigan!!

(and yes, we mention Kwame so it qualifies as news)

UP in Late Winter

Barn6637

Barn6637, photo by ETCphoto.

This photo of a barn near Paulding is part of Terry’s great Easter UP Trip ’08 set of photos (slideshow).

Terry took the trip to see some places he hadn’t seen in winter like Bond Falls, Houghton, Eagle Harbor, Marquette and Grand Island.

Do the slideshow if you have the time!