Fern Winter storm 2026 (aka "Stahmageddon")

View attachment 123580

Your shoulders, neck and arms will think so.....
This is the Delaware River the picture of the bridge is where it crosses from New Jersey to Pennsylvania. 20 miles north you hit Washington's crossing where George Washington crossed in 1776. 15 miles south of the bridge you're in Philadelphia. Lord have mercy. Temperatures around here have been way below freezing. Whatever I wish I bought property in Florida like I intended to do 25 years ago. At concours, you could probably drive a snowmobile across that. If you keep the throttle up! 😀
 

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This is the Delaware River the picture of the bridge is where it crosses from New Jersey to Pennsylvania. 20 miles north you hit Washington's crossing where George Washington crossed in 1776. 15 miles south of the bridge you're in Philadelphia. Lord have mercy. Temperatures around here have been way below freezing. Whatever I wish I bought property in Florida like I intended to do 25 years ago. At concours, you could probably drive a snowmobile across that. If you keep the throttle up! 😀
Izzat the Ben Franklin? I worked a LOT in that area. Walt Whitman & Betsy Ross too...
DelMem as well

Edit: I couldn't wait. Had to search it.
 
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Izzat the Ben Franklin? I worked a LOT in that area. Walt Whitman & Betsy Ross too...
DelMem as well
No it's called the Burlington-Bristol bridge. It was built in the mid thirties. Everything you're talking about is further south. I remember when the Betsy Ross bridge was built in the seventies. Before it was open I walked up to the top and skateboarded into Philly with my cousin. Lol.
 
No it's called the Burlington-Bristol bridge. It was built in the mid thirties. Everything you're talking about is further south. I remember when the Betsy Ross bridge was built in the seventies. Before it was open I walked up to the top and skateboarded into Philly with my cousin. Lol.
No it's called the Burlington-Bristol bridge. It was built in the mid thirties. Everything you're talking about is further south. I remember when the Betsy Ross bridge was built in the seventies. Before it was open I walked up to the top and skateboarded into Philly with my cousin. Lol.
When you're going up to Delaware River once you get to Trenton the big freighters and boats stop under the Trenton makes and world takes bridge. No boats can pass that point small medium or large. There are big bunch of rocks there. At that point you could probably walk across the Delaware in neck deep water. Well in 1776 George Washington didn't have a problem crossing it in a boat to fight off the Hessian terrorist. Google George Washington State Park it's on both sides of the river
 
Ben Franklin ( Count Rumford) researched the power of lightning using a kite in his experiments. He also developed an efficient fireplace for that time period and the design went on to be known as the Franklin Fireplace
 
Ben Franklin ( Count Rumford) researched the power of lightning using a kite in his experiments. He also developed an efficient fireplace for that time period and the design went on to be known as the Franklin Fireplace
I'm quite surprised that he didn't invent the motorcycle... It was IN HIM.
 
Izzat the Ben Franklin? I worked a LOT in that area. Walt Whitman & Betsy Ross too...
DelMem as well

Edit: I couldn't wait. Had to search it.
My father’s Uncle Richard ( whom I was named after) was a sand hog ( caisson worker ) on those Philly bridges and ultimately died of Caisson’s disease from breathing compressed air . At the time they thought it was pneumonia.
 
My crossing point was always the Walt Whitman bridge out of south Philly headed to Wildwood or Ocean City. First you had to go over the Passyunk Ave bridge and if you were lucky Publiker distilleries, just below the bridge, would be cooking up a batch and you would get that wonderful aroma of cheap whisky being made.
 
Much better now, if youre headed north to New England to take the back way and cross at Frenchtown or Milford NJ. The Ship Inn makes for a nice stop...
 
My father’s Uncle Richard ( whom I was named after) was a sand hog ( caisson worker ) on those Philly bridges and ultimately died of Caisson’s disease from breathing compressed air . At the time they thought it was pneumonia.
Rt, I had to google a sand hog.. When you travel from Nj to PA on the Tacony Palmyra bridge you will see a train bridge crossing the Delaware to the left. Before the Betsey
Ross. My good friends Father operated the train bridge. Anyway they found him dead at the end of a shift. He died of an aneurism only to be found by the nexy shift.
 
Wildwood or Ocean City ? Oh - you mean Philly by the Sea …
Nothing like being 18 and just having to cross the bridge to legally get drunk. My father was born and raised in Atlantic City but even as kids we never went there much. One block off the boardwalk and its a whole different place. And not a good one.
 
It's a 23yo Simplicity.
11hp Tecumseh
32" cut
Those flatbars on the front are called "drift cutters"
Has a "torque shift pulley" on the engine, changes ratio under heavy load.
Sturdy formed channel handlebars
But, most importantly the HANDLEBAR HEIGHT was made for a FULL GROWN MAN.
All the others were small ergonomics that my back said: "NFW will I walk behind it crouching"

Fast & powerful.

Simplicity was a holdout to the MTD (and cheesy quality) scoop up.
Turns out Briggs & Stratton has since bought them, and implemented the expected cost (quality) reduction.View attachment 123537

It's a 23yo Simplicity.
11hp Tecumseh
32" cut
Those flatbars on the front are called "drift cutters"
Has a "torque shift pulley" on the engine, changes ratio under heavy load.
Sturdy formed channel handlebars
But, most importantly the HANDLEBAR HEIGHT was made for a FULL GROWN MAN.
All the others were small ergonomics that my back said: "NFW will I walk behind it crouching"

Fast & powerful.

Simplicity was a holdout to the MTD (and cheesy quality) scoop up.
Turns out Briggs & Stratton has since bought them, and implemented the expected cost (quality) reduction.View attachment 123537
This is a LawnBoy from the late 80's doing more "drift cutting".
20260206_112108.jpg
It has moved alot of snow. 10hp cast iron sleeve tecumseh engine which hasn't been touch other than carb fettling(never removed). They don't build them as tough nowadays
 
This is a LawnBoy from the late 80's doing more "drift cutting".View attachment 123675 It has moved alot of snow. 10hp cast iron sleeve tecumseh engine which hasn't been touch other than carb fettling(never removed). They don't build them as tough nowadays
I don't believe I've ever seen a lawn boy snowblower. The power equipment market was ao different then. The mowers were legendary quality, and I enjoyed using mine because the smell of 2-stroke smoke held me over until snowmobile season.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but wasn't Lawn-Boy an OMC owned company for a while?
That machine will last a long, long time.
 
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I don't believe I've ever seen a lawn boy snowblower. The mowers were legendary quality, and I enjoyed using mine because the smell of 2-stroke smoke held me over until snowmobile season.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but wasn't Lawn-Boy an OMC owned company for a while?
I don't know the Lawnboy history, but they are good snowblowers. I had a smoking Lawnboy 2stroke lawnmower at one time. It didn't want to quit running either. In fact it spun so fast it probably could have snowblown too
 
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