I love how the various residents were calling in to the radio station with their various problems, and the radio people responded by arranging to get them fixed! Love that community mindset.
@frankblank45043 жыл бұрын
I was 15 and me and the other teens went block by block shoveling out the sidewalks for all the old people in the area. No one told us to do it we just did it for free!
@jessicacanfield54082 жыл бұрын
That was wonderful
@leomusarra3837 Жыл бұрын
I wouldve done the same back then. Beats just sitting inside not doing anything at all. Not like you could distract your self woth your smartphone or xbox back then. Im from south so ive never seen snow like that but i wouldve loved it as a kid. But now i cant stand even the cold. And if we even get a inch of snow i hate it. Especially if it sticks to the road. But mostly well get snow on road then itll melt during day then freeze at night and snow more n more and keep doing it everyday for like a week. I remember not being able go to school for almost a month because it was just thick ice all over the streets and it was too dangerous to put kids on a bus down cou try backroads in them conditions. But hell we get 1 inch slow with little bit stuck they cancel school here because of country backroads. When i explain how easy it is for us to get a snow day to a northerner they find it crazy. All we have is trucks with plows and salt. Theres no chain tires or nothing because we dont get snow alot so people dont bother to be equipped for it. But usually atleast once a year if we do it will get bad. Not from snow but from ice that melts n refreezes over and over.
@jesusislord3321 Жыл бұрын
Most 15 year olds now, probably don't even know what a shovel is, or if they do, dont know how to use it. Finally.....help someone??? They are the most entitled people ever. Thank God you fellows were raised right, and had big hearts!
@1PlainOne Жыл бұрын
😊 Sweet🍯
@EdsterIII Жыл бұрын
See now THIS shows there were some wonderful people out there. Thank you for helping those less able. I spent over a decade taking care of my Mom who for the last 3-4 years was bedridden. I usually always try to help out people when they needed help. If I was able to help, why not just give and help out? Nowadays the world seems so greedy, so much more cruel than back when I was a kid in the 70's. I'm now in my middle 50's and have the same illness that took my Mom's life. Except I don't have any family left to help. I do have a great friend which I THANK God for. There are some good and wonderful people left out there. However it seems the bad and cruel do outnumber the good and decent. I have faith, I have hope, and I pray that someday soon people will realize that life is far too precious and to short to waste it on destruction and misery. Imagine what this world COULD become if we'd HELP EACH OTHER?!?!? IF we used our energies for helping one another instead of hurting and possibly killing one another. I'm NOT a Social Justice Warrior. The uses of social media by the cruel and politically correct people claim they use these things for good, yet they are more corrupt than the people they point fingers at. Blaming others, blacklisting people from jobs, calling people out for saying something foolish decades ago? Really? EVERYONE of us has made mistakes. Said something foolish when you were angry or upset. It happens to EVERYONE! Every person, every gender, every race, every orientation, every single nationality, EVERY SINGLE ONE OF US is GUILTY of saying and/or making a mistake. Yet some people see this as a way to make themselves feel superior by condemning those people who were caught making those mistakes. These social justice people have caused more harm than good.
@kennithmorella26933 жыл бұрын
A great blast from the past. I was 21yrs of age living in buffalo New York. I was waiting at a red light in my starsky n hutch Ford Torino and out of the sky it came with a vengeance. Spending the next 4 days helping others in need made me feel warm inside and outside. I’m still in buffalo and at 65yrs young still feel warm inside when able to help those in need. Stay safe and healthy. 😎🇺🇸
@jessicacanfield54082 жыл бұрын
Thank bn you for sharing your memory. It must have been scary
@jimbubar16912 жыл бұрын
😢
@danavanhorn4926 Жыл бұрын
i had a 76 starsky n hutch gran torino what a great car 26,345 miles original had firestone firehawk tires cb radio black carpet white vinyl seats white headliner black dash man i miss that car
@Daniel-xb1rl Жыл бұрын
Good job we always got lucky in Washington dc.
@richieb199011 ай бұрын
Why do I keep listening to this, absolutely love it
@joanbarrett853810 ай бұрын
I was 9 years old and remembered listening to CJRN. Seems like it was just a few days ago. Love how everyone worked. Fantastic
@sandyjones3534 жыл бұрын
It's been long time to hear this much compassion from citizens.
@LynxStarAuto3 жыл бұрын
My thoughts exactly
@ferdterguson1242 жыл бұрын
Shocking that there were looters
@eydie574 жыл бұрын
People taking care of each other. I was so happy to hear the mom and her kids got food and I know it was 40 years ago, but it made me happy how everyone is just pitching in.
@annmarie11142 жыл бұрын
this literally made me cry. the world can be so cruel, but people will always want to help each other. happy 2022 everyone, and let's make it a good one.
@jesusislord3321 Жыл бұрын
The world is still cruel, but, unfortunately, peoples hearts arent as kind as yours and mines. Most only look out for themselves now. Im 59, and grew up when your neighbors functioned as family. Boy do I miss those days.
@EdsterIII Жыл бұрын
@@jesusislord3321 I agree. 🙏 I have lived in small towns, and big cities. I've seen some harsh and cruelty as well as unbelievably decent and wonderful people. People are usually decent, but when you get them, especially younger people in groups, that's when they can and do become cruel and sadly sometimes violent. It's sad, very sad, and given that most people now strive for greed and not decency, this world will probably get worse before it gets better. I can only hope and pray that someday we come to out senses and stop the insanity.
@susanb201510 ай бұрын
Most people are not nice. Most neighbors are not friendly. It's a horrible world.
@itme9994 жыл бұрын
I love how much teamwork and generosity is shown by the people in this aircheck. ❤️
@rickmcrae87453 жыл бұрын
The passion that john Michael had...... I was a young boy back then was a great radio host he told it the way it was ..nice to here someone saved this moment in time
@silkeotd71943 жыл бұрын
I lived through that blizzard and have warm memories of listening to CJRN during the whole experience. :)
@edbouman50133 жыл бұрын
I remember the storm well, I drove a bread truck for Wonder Bread, out of the 19 Yale Crescent warehouse in St. Catharine's at the time.. Not many of our drivers made it back to the warehouse that Friday, and were stuck out on their routes for 4 to 5 days. On the Saturday, a coworker and myself went back out and delivered some bread to areas like St. Catharine's, Port Dalhousie, Merriton, Thorold, Thorold South and parts of Niagara Falls. I was gone a total of 14 hours on the Saturday of the storm, and made it back safely!
@edbouman50133 жыл бұрын
I remember back then driving for Wonder Bread, we were not allowed to have Cb radios in our trucks, but that Saturday that I went back out, I was allowed to hook one up temporarily for that day, when I got back home I hooked it up in our apartment with the antenna on the balcony. I know back in the 70s the Cb radio became a bad thing in the Niagara region, but during that storm all the Cber's came together and worked as a team of people relaying messages, it was a great thing to own one during that storm!
@jessicacanfield54082 жыл бұрын
WOW that had to be rough
@jessicacanfield54082 жыл бұрын
@@edbouman5013 why were they bad in your area? used to camp a lot with my parents and our friends and they all had cbs
@davidsiracuse66722 жыл бұрын
I was 11 years old and lived in Niagara Falls NY. The entire city shut down. No cars on the roads, snowmobiles delivering medicine and groceries. As a kid it's not so scary but as you get older you realize how bad this blizzard really was.
@shanghunter7697 Жыл бұрын
Same here as an 11 yr old on 99th in love canal. I remember (and have pix) of the snow drifts that faced north were 15 to 20 ft high. My dad had to dig us out at the back door and i walked from the back door right up to the top of the house. I remember getting yelled at for touching the tv antenna up there. Very best wishes to you and yours and Happy Holidays Dave.
@xrpfreak78812 жыл бұрын
The broadcaster is John Michael. Listened to that guy many years on CKTB. Wish there was an archive on his shows somewhere.
@garykendrick8851 Жыл бұрын
yes I wished that as well. John Michael had a great talk show CJRN and CKTB I listened for many years.
@pamelagilliam5928 Жыл бұрын
Oh God Bless team work I was the wonderful age of 19 oh how good and pleasent it is when Brethren dwell in unity
@ItsAlwaysRusty4 жыл бұрын
Wonderful memory of how radio was the main source of information.. Even then people couldn't stay in their homes. Had to be asked to stay inside. Crazy. Even had looting in minus 40 wind chill temps.. You can hear the genuine disgust in the announcers voice in just having to report the looting.. Not much different than this era's lovely citizens..
@factsoverfiction78263 жыл бұрын
The looting was in Buffalo, NY. Not suprising for America, where there's much more poverty /far fewer social programs than Canada.
@edjo4874 жыл бұрын
77 and 78 had those 2 deadly snow storms of the like we will never see again in our lives.
@jimmydcricket58933 жыл бұрын
Can you tell the future? It'll happen again like it did in 46.
@drscopeify3 жыл бұрын
It is one of those things always good to be prepared. Here in Seattle in 2012 it reached -22 or so which is really rare and caused major issues. I can only imagine what -50 is like.
@jessicacanfield54082 жыл бұрын
Didn't it already happen in Michigan or somewhere around there in the early 2000's. 22 feet of snow in a blizzard and then they got another one and the snow went above the houses and a lot of people had to tunnel out of their houses
@erlic19674 жыл бұрын
I was 10 years old living in Niles Michigan when this happened, I still remember it like it was yesterday.
@sgt.pepper55992 жыл бұрын
I lived through this in Kalamazoo. We were one of the snowmobile helpers. This one was bigger then the one in 78.
@Daniel-xb1rl Жыл бұрын
I love the old news broadcast of yrs gone past.
@timkruse4548 Жыл бұрын
And not one ad. Beautiful.
@arneservatius86864 жыл бұрын
We lived thru that on farm In Michigan snow was piled up to phone and electric lines🥶🥶
@l.tallmadge65362 жыл бұрын
Such human kindness!
@olaolga3 жыл бұрын
My, oh my how times changed!
@bobsit19454 жыл бұрын
From Niagara Falls NY and was in the US Navy and stationed at a Medical Clinic on the Subic Bay Naval Base in the Philippines at the time. Parents sent me clippings from the Niagara Gazette and the Buffalo Courier Express and I showed them to local employees at the Clinic and they had a hard time believing what they were looking at.
@bluebabex4204 жыл бұрын
We lived in Brooklyn when this blizzard hit.my father was in the Army. We ( three daughters) thought it was a holiday because Dad got to stay home. Hot chocolate was the drink of choice. These pictures are a blast.
@EdsterIII Жыл бұрын
Whoa in 1977 I was a 10 year old boy living in Franklin, Wisconsin. We had our share of intense snow storms as well. However not so bad where looting and other insanity happened. That's pathetic, but seeing how this world is now, not surprising.
@JamesSmith-op7yc2 жыл бұрын
When I think of snow, I think of bitter cold, hard work, dark days, huge heating bills, sliding around on the road in a work van running service at 2:30am.. name the misery of your choice. I was 16 yrs. old in 77'. I was running plumbing/heating service on my snowmobile for miles around South Lyon MI. I still live in Michigan Because I'm not sane and all the water is here but snow sucks. Thanks for the fond memories. (not)
@peteragersea3774 жыл бұрын
I was 14 at the time of blizzard of 78 living north of Boston shoveled my ass off saw bonfires in the middle of the road. I never forget the newish bronco coming up the street with its plow all the way up angled skipping from one side of the street to the other.it was unbelievable. I went on to plowing from 84 to 2015 saw some of the worst storms since and 78 was not on the worse list anymore maybe this Will be another good snow year like 2015 when I finally retired
@murkrow23163 жыл бұрын
Toledo for me....Mother Nature just went plain crazy.
@1Letter23Numbers.6 ай бұрын
Looting a grocery store or pharmacy is understandable, it's not ok, but you understand why someone might do it. Looting a jewelry store is just theft.
@Jeff_11B2 ай бұрын
The way they networked assistance on-air in real time for the citizens is amazing to hear. Wish we had more of that connection with our neighbors today. Connecting those in need with those with means during an emergency like this, such humanity, it's making me a bit mist-eyed...not gonna lie. Oh, how we have fallen as people. But what possibility for greatness.
@jalaneperry76434 жыл бұрын
Thank you Gord Bows For uploading this I was 13 years old And i lived through this I lived in Niagara Falls On main street 6180 I live in florida now Im 55 years old Great hearing this Brings back memories Of childhood
@theapplepapple9420 Жыл бұрын
Repent of your sins and trust that Jesus Christ died for you!
@rem1453 жыл бұрын
It’s hard to even get it below freezing in the winter these past several years let alone scenes like this
@guodade22393 жыл бұрын
The reason is to be found in the policies of Melbourne, Canberra, Abu Dhabi and Kuwait City, and the utter lack of resistance to them from the world’s lower classes back in the 1990s. If the world’s lower classes had been as serious about global warming as they had been about apartheid, then they would have demanded a rapid and total decarbonisation of Australia and the Gulf Cooperation Council countries at or before the date of the Kyōtō Protocol. With Australia and the GCC decarbonised, the rest of the world would gain economic opportunity (especially in agriculture after Australia’s wholly unsustainable farmland be converted to properly adapted native flora and fauna) while carbon emissions would free-fall globally. Instead, the rest of the OECD obeyed Australia’s corporate polluters’ demands without protests from their working classes. The Gulf Cooperation Council invested in preventing extremely vulnerable poor countries from demanding the requisite 100 percent emissions cut no later than 2005. It did so by uniting these poor nations on a religious basis despite vastly different and wholly incompatible ecology and economics. The result was that the countries who under a fair Kyōtō Protocol would have been set - and had enforced - a 100 percent emissions reduction by 2005 (which the 1990 ‘Environment, Capitalism and Socialism’ showed quite possible) were allowed carte blanche to emit whatever carbon their corporate polluters wanted. The costs, as seen in rainfall declines of fifty percent in Central Chile since as recently as 2005, are already alarming.
@zl1David3 жыл бұрын
Yes, and here in the northeast right now nearby ocean surface temperatures are several degrees above the long term average from 1981 to 2020....whichvin itself is higher than the prior 40 year average. But the local forecasters just gleam and praise mother nature for the plethora of above normal temperatures, as if it's not at all the by-product of a disturbing trend. Pandora's box has been opened, even if just by a crack.
@janetoconnor36362 жыл бұрын
@@guodade2239 Nothing to do with so called Global Warming. The thought back then was the return of the little ICE AGE all the scientists were saying this so were the radio or TV newscasters since both 1977 and 1978 were so cold.
@guodade22392 жыл бұрын
@@janetoconnor3636 There was talk about a new ice age in the 1970s. However, global rather than local temperature data would show that the 1976/1977, 1977/1978 and 1978/1979 Northern Hemisphere winters were overall hotter than the mean for the previous century, regardless of how cold and devastating they were in highly populated areas of the United States. A recent but obscene revelation is that even in 1980 Australiaʼs coal, road and aluminum industries knew exactly the impacts their planned expansion would have upon the global climate, yet the government did exactly what they wished - cut public transport, build more and more roads, and expand coal mining and aluminum smelting. Every community affected by these policies has a duty to sue Australia - who climate policy studies conclusively demonstrate as the worst offender regarding man-made global warming - and demand that its coal, aluminum and road-building industries pay the full cost of their policies, which were known even in 1980. In 1980, a rational and logical transport policy, as noted by the Democratic Socialist Party in their book “Environment, Capitalism and Socialism”, would have immediately ended all freeway or highway construction, abolished all freeway or highway “reservations”, and transferred every last cent from trunk road projects to expanding public transit beyond the standard of the best systems in Europe or Asia, with the goal of ending private motorised transport without mobility loss by 1990 or maximally 1995. “Environment, Capitalism and Socialism”, and the less radical Public Transport Usersʼ Association, demonstrated the possibility of enormous public savings from ending and ultimately banning the construction of freeways or highways. Instead, we got the horrific “Lonie Report” - not a professional study but a study done by the vested interests of the super-rich corporations of BHP and General Motors and their allies in the Country Roads Board. Although public pressure was sufficient to prevent all its recommended public transport closures being carried out, its recommendations for building uncalled for trunk roads have further affected public transport patronage and profitability. When a rational plan would have aimed for an increase in public transport share from less than ten percent to minimally 99 percent without mobility loss by 1990, the Lonie Report accepted the lie that declines in public transport modal share reflected public choice rather than building of roads that was exclusively in the interests of the corporate polluters and against the collective interests of 99.9 percent of Australiaʼs population. The cost of failing to end road building and massively modernise and expand rail - and then to close coal power, shift aluminum smelting to countries with reliable hydroelectric power, and revegetate Australiaʼs wholly marginal farmland - are resulting in one recent article saying that the climate is reaching a tipping point which must be attributed largely to the policies of Australia and the Gulf States.
@Tamka-d6h2 ай бұрын
Thanks for new info
@jules5064 Жыл бұрын
I was 9, living in SW Ohio...lived in small house...no central heat.. no fireplace.. .don't know how my parents kept all us 5 kids alive...
@davidsherman11652 жыл бұрын
Cool. I found this searching for "CJRN". I have several hours of recorded "CJRN non-stop music special" that I recorded in 1975 (at age 17) when they did these a half-hour at a time on (I think) Sunday mornings and afternoons. I still listen to them (converted to digital and now on my iTunes) - half hour nonstop of Glen Campbell, Olivia Newton-John, John Denver, Jim Croce, Tony Orlando & Dawn, Simon & Garfunkel, Carpenters. Some continue with the hourly news that got picked up until the cassette ran out - rather fun to listen to, including one speculation that Queen Elizabeth would abdicate within the next few years!
@EdsterIII Жыл бұрын
Even though I grew up in Wisconsin, I still find other States local 📻🎙radio🎙📻 & 📺📺TV📺📺 broadcasts to be extremely interesting and unique to listen to or watch. Hearing their local affiliates, businesses, etc helps to "take you there." Plus whenever you can listen to and about people actually being humane towards one another? That's a rare opportunity to find! As I said before, Mother Nature is a unforgiving and sometimes deadly lady. She can be vicious and brutal. But while we can't fight against her, we CAN always be there AFTER her attack. We CAN and DO something for others, helping them either with food, drinks, blankets, or even a place to stay safe and be warm. While there will ALWAYS be some people who try to take advantage of any difficult situations, there are others who will be there to help you out if you need it. Those people who did just that, they DESERVE huge 👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏 👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏 ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤ and the looters and thieves deserve 💩💩💩💩💩💩💩💩💩💩💩💩💩💩💩💩💩💩💩💩💩💩💩💩💩💩💩💩💩💩💩💩💩💩💩💩💩💩💩💩💩💩💩💩💩!
@wundawuman7476 Жыл бұрын
This is from a Canadian radio station
@viviennemcleggon34003 жыл бұрын
Sometimes I wish this would happen again, just so people can love and work together again.Put a little love in our ❤️ sssssssssssssssssssssssss
@janetoconnor36364 ай бұрын
Not me it was just too cold in our house and my hands got chapped since we had no heat in fact I would never want to go through 25 degrees below zero and 80 and 90 below wind chill
@micahlamilton54424 жыл бұрын
Fresh out of my tour in the Army, got a used, old snow blower and made a pile of money moving snow in South Williamsport, Pennsylvania.
@whackadooncopwatcher81153 жыл бұрын
I lived out in the country and the hero stories fr out there are endless
@scottw433621 күн бұрын
I needed allergy medication. We lived in millers....so my brothers friend took his snowmobile and went to Medina and back to get it for me. The best of humanity dwarfed the worst in this incredible year of '77🤙😎🤙
@emmygreen94213 жыл бұрын
My sister got me the book white death the blizzard of 77 for Xmas today... I wasn’t alive in 77 I was not alive I was born in 84 but this has alway intrigued by learn about it
@edbouman50133 жыл бұрын
Emmy Green, where can I find a copy of that book?
@toniwilson3827 Жыл бұрын
I was 17 during that 1978 snow storm & almost died in it Emmy Green , yes it was something , I don't remember the snow storm in 77 , I do remember the one in 78 , they said there was one in 76 also , I don't remember that one neither
@janetoconnor36369 ай бұрын
I lied through that winter and it as brutal in OH where the low was 25 below and while we still had power Not Much Heat. My hands got chapped in the house God knows what the indoor temp was likely below 50. The wind chill as between 50 and 70 below. I wish I was born in 84 like you but I was born in 1962 and I was 14 at the time. Furnace eventually was replaced.
@stevenporter19523 жыл бұрын
That was the year I moved to Houston in a 1972 Ford Maverick with no heat. I moved because of this blizzard.
@newbee5092 жыл бұрын
Still there?
@dcruz1253 жыл бұрын
loved the days off from school
@trombone1134 жыл бұрын
I was a young boy of 7 during this and was living in northern Virginia with my parents and 2 brothers. My younger brother was so upset because my mom wouldn't let him outside. As a brand new 5 year old, he was just too short. But my mom gave in and dressed him up like the little kid in The Christmas Story and literally threw him out on the front porch. He sank over his head and was instant waterworks. Then mom dragged him back in and said he couldn't go back out until it was below his chest. My older brother and I raced to the end of the driveway and back. He beat me of coarse, but it was 20 minutes before either of us was back. It was a 1 car driveway !! Good times. One thing about these broadcasts, it seems there was plenty of ANTIFA and BLM busy then too with all the damn looting.
@sherisoloway76632 жыл бұрын
The looting then as now was in and around large cities. Lived through the 77 and 78 blizzards in rural area, lots of human kindness NO LOOTING. Then hurricane Charlie, saw multiple stores open to the outside and no looting in the small town. Again the looting appears to be primarily an urban issue, maybe there is something to be said for those rural hicks cleaning to their Bibles and guns.
@janetoconnor36362 жыл бұрын
To my understanding looting has long been a problem in poor areas and then there was no BLM or Antifa active that just started in this 21rst century. Looting and arsons happened in July of that year when there was a lightning storm that knocked all the power out for 24 hours.
@suahcoco96853 жыл бұрын
We cared for each other then because we knew Jesus Christ. We had compassion and morals. But we have decided to do without God because we don't wanna offend the nonbelievers. Well here we r 40 yrs later
@richieb19903 жыл бұрын
Shut it churchy, praise be Allah!
@shanghunter7697 Жыл бұрын
@@richieb1990 You were raised well !!
@christinam.82434 жыл бұрын
This i would love to cast to the tv. I'm watching it on my small cell phone.
@Daavee283 жыл бұрын
thanks for sharing
@guodade22393 жыл бұрын
The strange but true fact is that this winter marks the start of runaway global warming driven by Australia and the Gulf Cooperation Council states and their mega-rich oil, coal and aluminum corporations. China, India and other industrializing economies are pawns in the power play of the likes of Gina Reinhardt and the Al Sabah. January 1977 was the coldest on record over the contiguous US and was beaten by January 1979. However, at a global level January 1977 was 0.37°C or 0.67°F hotter than the 1880 to 1974 mean, and January 1979 was 0.25°C or 0.45°F hotter than the 1880 to 1974 mean. The only Januaries between 1880 and 1976 hotter globally than January 1977 were: - January 1958 at 0.55°C or 0.99°F hotter than the 1880 to 1974 mean - January 1944 at 0.52°C (0.94°F) hotter - January 1942 at 0.46˚C or 0.83˚F hotter globally than the 1880 to 1974 average - January 1973 at 0.45°C or 0.81°F hotter - January 1926 at (also) 0.37°C or 0.67°F hotter Also hotter than January 1979 were (all relative to 1880 to 1974): - January 1882 at +0.34˚C or +0.61˚F - January 1932 at +0.30˚C or +0.54˚F - January 1941 at +0.34˚C or +0.61˚F - January 1945 at +0.28˚C or +0.51˚F - January 1946 at +0.31˚C or +0.56˚F - January 1952 at +0.27˚C or +0.49˚F - January 1955 at +0.29˚C or +0.52˚F In other words, out of 97 Januaries between 1880 and 1976, 84 were cooler globally than January 1979 and only four were hotter than January 1977! The five hot 1940s Januaries occurred before extensive aerosol pollution in the Northern Hemisphere reduced temperatures there.
@janetoconnor36362 жыл бұрын
@@guodade2239 No it was not warming being blamed but they said the result of the return of a ICE AGE. They said this on the news on radio and TV for both 1977 and 1978, even the severe 1983 Bone Chiller and 1985 were all blamed on the global cooling NOT warming that started after 1988.
@guodade22392 жыл бұрын
@@janetoconnor3636 That may be true, but even in 1977 figures indicated clear warming. Alaska had, in nine years, three Januaries warmer than any previously known, and runaway rainfall and runoff declines in southwestern Western Australia began at this same time. Between 1882 and 1974 only one year had less (actual or estimated) runoff into Perth’s dams (which were not built in 1882) than the average since 2006, and 1974 remains the last year to reach the average up to that year.
@Migmaw2 жыл бұрын
I remember this like it was yesterday, We lived in Port Rowan and on the way home we got stuck on the road, An elderly couple took us in for 4 days, my sister was 8 and all alone on the farm, Cousins went on skidoos to stay with her. When all was said and done I remember us leaving through the 2nd storey window and my dad and a few others dug out the truck which took two days, I remember standing on the snow looking down at the roof of the truck, I'm 50 now and laugh anytime someone complains about the snow we get now 🤣
@EdsterIII Жыл бұрын
I realize that my response to your comment is quite late, however I wanted to thank you for sharing your story with us. Mother Nature is/can be/will always be an unpredictable, powerful, cruel, and potentially dangerous/deadly force. I grew up in Wisconsin in the 70's. Born in the late 60's, 67 to be exact, I spent summers playing and freaking out over the nasty thunderstorms, and then spent all winters playing in the snow, sledding, tobogganing, building snow forts, having snowball fights, and just having F U N!! In Wisconsin our weather is extremely fickle. We've had 50⁰-60⁰ in December, and 10-15" of snow in April. Extremely 🥶☃️🥶☃️🥶 COLD🥶🥶🥶🥶🥶, frigid, and sometimes deadly windchill factors can get as low/cold as minus/negative -60⁰+. As I'm sure New Yorkers are also fully aware of, and usually completely ready for. Living in these areas will help prepare you for the possibility of having to spend days inside. Snowstorms, ice storms, frigid temperatures, and brutal and potentially deadly winds can prevent you from going anywhere. Most of the bigger storms will last for maybe one of two days. The Monsters however can cripple a city for a week, and IF your not 100% prepared for it, you could be in deep deep trouble. When your a kid, snow is fun! You wish for those huge storms just so that your school might get canceled. The parents however? Not so much. Not only does it make it so difficult for them to get to and from work, or get to the grocery store? Things that we take for granted, these storms can and sometimes do affect our electricity. Blackouts can and do occur. No power, no TV!??!!??! NOOOOOOO! LOL! It's unbelievable how many people, how many things can get affected by a storm, especially a severe winter storm. While for some people/kids, they can be seen as fun and more fun😂😂😂😂😂, once reality has kicked in, the fun ends, and the challenges begin.
@JerryFargo Жыл бұрын
I was 7 yrs old back then dam cold JERREY P FARAGO
@jerlewis4291Ай бұрын
My dad watched the weather the night before and he said, "You're not going to school tomorrow." Which was insane because that just never happened. I remember my mom and dad going to get food the day before because my dad was worried.
@steveib724 Жыл бұрын
Throttle cable for a 1970 Husqvarna 10 hp model number 12427 lmao 🤣 🤣🤣 how cool was that.not seeing that anymore!
@giathomas7454 жыл бұрын
Big snow storm 1977
@ms.maryellencasey76713 жыл бұрын
Connecticut got hit the following year with a blizzard.
@glen69453 жыл бұрын
TORONTO SENDS SNOW PLOWS TO HELP BUFFALO
@jennodine5 ай бұрын
I keep thinking about how the mom on welfare and her 3 kids were valued members of their community and how the announcer refused to forget about her predicament. I am sure it was a great comfort to that woman just to know he wouldn’t stop reminding the public about her until somebody helped her.
@emmabovary122821 күн бұрын
As soon as we started walking to the quick mart ( we wanted to smoke without getting caught!) every Mom on the block stuck their head out of the front door, waving money and grocery list. The snow was waist high. But we had sleds and backpacks. It took us over an hour and a half to walk 1/4 mile there and back. The sun was out and the temperature was in the teens. But every day we were out of school and had our snacks and a lot of fun playing games and having slumber parties.
@moemcgovern73452 жыл бұрын
We had this Blizzard in Philly as well.
@lynnleistinger854 Жыл бұрын
I was 15 at this time I lived in Utica and we always got nailed. Winter's always had 6ft.
@newempress256 Жыл бұрын
I was 3 years old. I dont remember a thing. I live in Vancouver now for six years. I really notice the accent in the radio announcer and even when I talk to my brother now. But ya, blizzard of 77 was a story I heard from many people.
@sharongoodsell9341 Жыл бұрын
Australia Had the best snow falls in 1977 , Thredbo i lived there
@wildbill991910 ай бұрын
Back then the Los Angeles Clippers were the Buffalo Braves.
@davidlewis66702 жыл бұрын
Operation Antifreeze.❄️❄️
@pornstarlivesmatter33193 жыл бұрын
LOL I JUST FOUND A TSHIRT THAT SAYS I SURVIVED THE BLIZZAED OF 77!!!
@murkrow23163 жыл бұрын
Frame that Shirt!!!
@shanghunter7697 Жыл бұрын
Give you 100 for it !!
@wandajames62343 жыл бұрын
An essential service before social media- but this announcer John rips into people for being on the road but then calls for a plumber-- how does he think first responders, doctors, nurses, staff, snow removal personnel, engineers, operators, media workers, suppliers, injured and ill going to hospitals, etc etc all got to where they were going or needed?
@jalaneperry76434 жыл бұрын
THANK YOU GORD BOWES+ God I miss this now i live in Florida now im 55 years old Canada was a wonderful place to live at that time too bad Trudeau Has fucked everything up now
@mikefoehr2353 жыл бұрын
Trudeau number 2 is finishing the job.
@theapplepapple9420 Жыл бұрын
Repent of your sins and trust that Jesus Christ died for you!
@OluchiArts Жыл бұрын
The actor who played Les Nessman on WKRP sounds a lot like John Michaels!
@jazzbo13 Жыл бұрын
He sounds like a more annoying Regis Philben, if that’s possible to imagine. It sounds like a 5w station in a town of 30 residents.
@robinmiller6831 Жыл бұрын
Can someone please tell me where all of this happened at.l am from Ohio and we had a Blizzard in 1978 and it happened in ohio.someone please answer me.
@RepentfollowJesus10 ай бұрын
NY I think
@jalaneperry76434 жыл бұрын
Gord Bows+ Our motel The landmark motor Inn Was burned down and it was Announced on CJRN opération Anti Freeze. It was owned by our family My dad just sold it
@theapplepapple9420 Жыл бұрын
Repent of your sins and trust that Jesus Christ died for you!
@LynxStarAuto3 жыл бұрын
Some of those calls had to be pranks! 30 days for shooting Spider Savage🤣
@toddbob553 жыл бұрын
This is why i was born in Arizona my Folks Fled Indiana they hated the Snowy weather.
@guodade22393 жыл бұрын
The weather in lowland Arizona is worse - and more polluting because of the huge costs of air conditioning - than even the weather in the Northeast (I do hate hot weather and prefer highs between 55°F and 70°F, so that to me summer in the Northeast is “very warm”).
@Moodymongul10 ай бұрын
Look into recently declassified cia files, about how (during the cold war), the ussr tested/used Scalar weapons on the US (possibly, others too?). With one, trying to effect the weather. By using a Scalar weapon that dropped the tempurature to zero (in a specific location). It'll wake you up, to a part of the 'cold war' you were probably unaware of (kept secret by disinfomation). These weapons can have various effects. One of them, is Time dilation. This isn't star trek, this is technology of the now. And many countries research it in secret ...
@heathenwolf49972 жыл бұрын
Q. Did this blizzard happen only in NY/Canada? Or other US states?
@janetoconnor36362 жыл бұрын
Jimmy Carter said in a interview that 11 states were affected but the worst was New York and Pennsylvania. Ohio where I am from had record low cold -25 with a wind chill of 80 to 85 below.
@candyhr4152 Жыл бұрын
Its 100 in texas
@jalaneperry76434 жыл бұрын
Chipawa i went to school there King George the 5th elementry school
@theapplepapple9420 Жыл бұрын
Repent of your sins and trust that Jesus Christ died for you!
@vickiemiller2979 Жыл бұрын
46your a go I was in school
@patrickcallahan95994 ай бұрын
Looters were????
@Kevin-wj4ed2 ай бұрын
I see we sill are a nation of criminals!!!!!!!!!
@memofrf2 жыл бұрын
Looting.
@patrickcallahan95996 ай бұрын
Did people used to care about anything
@toniwilson3827 Жыл бұрын
I don't remember the snow storm of 77
@glen69453 жыл бұрын
THIS WAS 67 N0T 1977
@robertyoung39923 жыл бұрын
this was 1977 you twit
@janetoconnor36362 жыл бұрын
The 1967 Blizzard hit the City of Chicago Illinois on January 26 1967.