Commentary Series
7:55 a.m. and 5:55 p.m. Weekdays on VPR
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Friday January 4, 2008
The Ice Storm Anniversary
This weekend marks the tenth anniversary of the Ice Storm - a destructive weather pattern than gripped the northern part of our region for several days.
The images of broken trees and fallen power lines stayed with us for many months after the storm passed. Commentator Tom Slayton says the even 10 years later, the Ice Storm still has an impact on him:
(SLAYTON) "Vermonters are used to bad weather in January -blizzards and bone-cracking cold. But the ice storm of 1998 was different, and somehow more ominous.
I didn't really think too much about it when the big storm first blew into town - I guess I'd heard too many "storm of the century" stories. Montpelier, nestled down in the Winooski Valley, had been largely spared, but other parts of Vermont were not so lucky.
But elsewhere, ice damage was heavy. Mountainside forests were a chaotic shambles. It took the Green Mountain Club months to reopen all the trails that the storm had barricaded. Power lines, especially over in the Champlain Valley were trashed, and some families didn't get electricity back into their homes for days. People I worked with had to evacuate their homes, which had become little more than nicely appointed campsites - no heat, no running water (hot or cold) no kitchen appliances, no flush toilets.
The storm had effectively sent a lot of Vermont back into the 19th century - maybe the 18th!
I was happy that my home was undamaged, still in the 20th.
A couple of days after the storm, I drove over Appalachian Gap, and was shocked at how the ice had trashed the high-level forests I saw there. It looked like a bomb had gone off in the woods -several bombs, in fact. I drove through downtown Burlington and was saddened to see trees that I remembered as old friends from my UVM days bent and broken, unlikely to recover.
But perhaps the most disquieting feeling of all, in retrospect, was the uneasy knowledge that something -something big and something new - was happening to the weather. It was getting weirder - warmer and weirder.
Now, 10 years later, the weirdness is much more obvious. Not only are winters shorter and stranger - they're more extreme. We've had snowless winters followed by huge blizzards that dump three feet of snow overnight. Last December's snow drought is eclipsed by this December's record snow, which may well be melted by next week's freak warm spell.
The forests trashed by the big ice storm of 1998 have largely recovered. The power lines have been reconnected. The back roads have long been cleared and repaired.
But the gnawing uncertainty that the storm brought us has not gone away; it's gotten worse.
Our weather is changing, we tell ourselves, wishing we hadn't noticed. The uneasiness hardens like ice in our hearts and refuses to go away."
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