Chicago has two seasons, winter and road construction.
@BossSpringsteen696 жыл бұрын
Tell me about it.
@vr6swp6 жыл бұрын
LOL truth
@tejashpatel94906 жыл бұрын
Chicago’s road construction never ends
@charkswitlazers6 жыл бұрын
good, the roads in IL are horrible. They have a long way to go.@@tejashpatel9490
@silaskuemmerle25056 жыл бұрын
I can personally vouch for that statement
@obnoxious-cackle Жыл бұрын
Watching this from Phoenix, Arizona and can’t imagine what these winters would be like 🥶🥶
@JamesGoetzke Жыл бұрын
I was in boot camp starting December 27th 1978 then into 1979. Great Lakes Naval base on the edge of lake Michigan. I remember well. We were shoveling the parade grounds at 4:00 am. We recruits weren't allowed outside without a Navy ski mask. I was 17 now 62. I'll never forget.
@oicfas45235 жыл бұрын
I was trapped on a bus on Lake Shore Drive during Snowpocalypse. I knew I should have taken the train, but honestly the snow came down so fast that when I left work in the Loop I thought I would be fine. Eventually, I walked across Lincoln Park with a group of people from my bus and we took shelter in a building for about an hour. Somehow they kept Clark and Broadway clear so we were able to take the 36 bus north to get home. I stopped at a 24-hour diner near my place and had a quite late dinner. The next day was work from home for everyone at my company. Later I sent a gift basket to the doormen at the building where they let us take shelter. I am amazed how quickly the city cleared up Lake Shore Drive, which was absolutely full of cars and snow the whole length. I think they had it cleared in about 24 hours.
@2miscme6 жыл бұрын
Winter in Chicago... always loved it as a child, always hated it as an adult. I wish I could find a happy medium. lol
@fredricardo32726 жыл бұрын
2miscme The median is your ability to rediscover the beauty of winter and not succumb to the peer pressure of hating winter, and you’ll be fine assuming you live inside and have heat.
@reallife8286 жыл бұрын
2miscme I feel the same way!!! You dont feel the pain of cold as a child. You just enjoy the fun.
@custosnocte15284 жыл бұрын
I agree. Was a street cop in the city for 28 years, hated the winter, long cold nights and lots of crashes, having to tow cars, etc.... That part sucked. As a kid in the 70s, those winters were brutal, but we were always outside. Chicago, what can I say...
@kofuzi7 жыл бұрын
i remember snowpocalypse. i left work early that day and found a space on what would be one of the last trains out of the loop that day, making it home before the worst of it hit. if i recall correctly, it took days to get all those cars off LSD.
@Jude746 жыл бұрын
kofuzi actually it took 12 hours.
@alfredoalcantar86916 жыл бұрын
kofuzi I hated that day Joliet was 🥶
@charkswitlazers6 жыл бұрын
the cars were on LSD? I haven't taken acid in years.
@alexrohner19846 жыл бұрын
@@charkswitlazers lake shore drive
@DbleWideSurprise6 жыл бұрын
Those cars were trippin balls
@bonecanoe866 жыл бұрын
I was born in Chicago but at the age of 10 I moved to Philadelphia. The winters are much more mild here, but the winter of 2013-14 made me feel like I was in Chicago again. My mom used to tell me stories about the 1967 Chicago blizzard.
@princeofcupspoc90736 жыл бұрын
I was 2 in 67. I remember running through a shoveled path in the snow that was taller than I was.
@wheeliewadethiesen29463 жыл бұрын
I moved to East Tennessee after 2014 enough is enough 😩⛄️
@jamesbriskin12993 жыл бұрын
I’m 60, I remember them all. Before the 76-77 winter ❄️ n one heard of snow days, school districts didn’t have “snow days” in the calendar yet . After lots of days off that winter , they added “snow days” to the school calendar
@7GtwNYkHYs6 жыл бұрын
I remember Chiberia CLEARLY because I plowed snow that season. It was -40F that day with a wind chill bringing the "real feel" down to -60F. Plowing snow for work is masochistic tier. That was the last year I worked plowing snow, it was surprisingly good money for the kind of labor it is but money isn't worth playing around in a polar vortex. Snowpocalypse and Chiberia were two unreal winters.
@DionysusAlS6 жыл бұрын
I remember the 70s winters as a kid. Talk about a character builder.
@heidiandmichaelnovak82456 жыл бұрын
I was born in 64,remember all except 83, still sucks. I don't know why people are against global warming 😎
@ConcurrenceTuttle6 жыл бұрын
We thought it was fun as kids. Snow days off from school, fun playing in the snow, being amazed at the walls of snow.
@bdfunke6 жыл бұрын
I delivered newspapers during the winters of the late 70s. It was... character building.
@princeofcupspoc90736 жыл бұрын
@@ChicagoAussie No we found them fine. IN THE SPRING!
@ronaldschallawitz71786 жыл бұрын
I was born in Chicago in 1949. I too delivered news papers in the 1970s. I graduated high school the night of the great blizzard of January 1967.
@Barb_Niquette6 жыл бұрын
bdfunke - I lived through all those snow storms in south suburban Dolton, IL. I delivered the Chicago Daily News on my bicycle (or sled) in the early 1970’s. Yes indeed - “character building.”😊☃️❄️💨
@ronaldschallawitz71786 жыл бұрын
I delivered the Chicago's American which was an evening news paper during the week and a morning paper on Saturday and Sunday. It ceased publication in the 1970s as I remember.
@peterpiperman95426 жыл бұрын
And then summer as a Cubs fan! I was in the same boat as you. Yes character building
@josephcastro90306 жыл бұрын
We just had a temp of -28° f with a windchill of -61°f last week in chicago, with a few feet of snow before that, gotta love chicago
@mimiwills86103 жыл бұрын
Loved this video. It brought back memories. And love hearing our adopted Aussie try to speak in frigid temps. 😊 Need more Chicago Aussie videos.
@DoingitWithjason7 жыл бұрын
Perfect timing! It's snowing right now!
@neoma.a6 жыл бұрын
A blizzard just happened last night 💀
@notsosobermama88506 жыл бұрын
It's snowing rn 😫😫
@gregq556 жыл бұрын
You right it’s 2019 now and it’s snowing and windy and cold.
@markhollander27317 жыл бұрын
Jack - just wanted to say that I love your channel and you have more knowledge of the city than most people who have lived here their whole life. Great work.
@neils55396 жыл бұрын
I was 11 during the big snow of 67. It was just flat out fun for a kid. We could climb on the garage roof and jump into huge drifts. One of my childhoods best memories.
@boomer15796 жыл бұрын
Shelby & Chicago Aussie, I was also 11 in 1967. Being off school was indeed fun, and rare for my sister and I. It seemed that, through the winters, we were forever listening to WIND or WGN for school closings that never came for stubborn St Catherine of Genoa. Alas! 1967's Big Snow afforded us a few days off! I was a working adult in 1978, just as happy to "call in" to say my Blue Island street hadn't been plowed yet. Jammed along with some tunes on the drums, watched movies, had hot chocolate, etc. That being said, in 1967, I ended up in a pit my sister Cindy and I dug in the snow, in our 129th & Parnell back yard. I had boosted her out, and told her I'd join her and Mom inside soon. I wasn't; the snow turned to ice and I had to wait till Mom figured out I was stranded. Funny now, not so funny then. Gloves were wet, fingertips burning. God bless! -Steve
@AWWx27 жыл бұрын
I love all the research you put into your videos. It's great how you integrate clips from other sources. Well done !
@TylerBedgood7 жыл бұрын
Love it. I remember snowmageden. I helped shovel a cab out of the snow near my apartment. Luckily I did not have to drive that day. Love the sound effects, and the text font!
@TylerBedgood7 жыл бұрын
If it happens we gotta go out together and make a couple videos about it.
@gmaneis6 жыл бұрын
Lived in a Chicago suburb in Jan '67. Home from college. Decided to shovel parents' long driveway so Dad could get to work. Cleared a shovel-width path to the end of the driveway, and of course, found snow more than two feet deep in the street. We didn't leave the house for quite a while. Hilarious unless you were in an emergency situation. Then it was frightening.
@phyllishamilton1655 жыл бұрын
YES!!! I was also home from college at the same time -- I took my childhood sled to the grocery store, and it was hysterical to see the panicky people getting tons of "milk and bread" -- saw an actual airboat (or similar vehicle) going down Edens expressway -- we all just hunkered down and did fine -- my Dad said it was nothing compared to rural Iowa in 1910!!!
@charkswitlazers6 жыл бұрын
I'm a lifelong Californian. We get heavy snow here but only in high altitudes that are typically unpopulated. The rest of the state remains mild and dry year-round. I remember when I first started my career as a truck driver and went to IL during February. I was blown away by how literally painfully cold it was. After many (real) winters on the road, I truly began to appreciate Los Angeles weather. I went from loathing my home state to never wanting to leave. You can't beat the weather here. Just a cloudy day itself is rare, not to mention rain.
@jimjamthejammer49296 жыл бұрын
I remember December 1983, I had just moved from San Diego and had no winter clothing. My grandma had a winter jacket saved for me. I was six years old at the time and I was crying it was so cold.
@love.laughter.deaf.couple5 жыл бұрын
I've lived through countless Chicago Winters and it's always blistering cold, lots of snow and I enjoy it!😁❤️
@davidvlogs8707 жыл бұрын
I remember the winter of 2011. CPS would close school for few days
@alanfollett62427 жыл бұрын
Ah, kids these days have it easy [sound effects: senescent grumbling]. I attended Chicago public schools (Nettelhorst and Lake View) for 13 years, 1952-65, and I don’t recall a single weather-related closure.
@flyers6686 жыл бұрын
Yup, my first snow days ever.
@imcalledhaley6 жыл бұрын
Alan Follett LOL that’s where I was attending during the storm 5th grade was wild ladies
@scoobycarr55586 жыл бұрын
From 1976 to 1980, it was the greatest trio of winters in not only Chicago but also much of the midwest. A year before, Italy's Mount Etna erupted off of Sicily and that volcano promised the lowest of the low not seen since Mount Tambora in Indonesia caused the Year Without A Summer in the 19th century.
@jonard95563 жыл бұрын
Lived through all of those ... remember taking two days off work to shovel snow off the roof ... nine-foot drifts at the split-level; walked right off the roof and slid to the ground ... now in California, I won't even drive to the snow ... it's fun in your twenties ... but shoveling snow isn't for retirees ...
@itsyevette8366 жыл бұрын
Enjoying my Chicago winter right now ❤❤❤❤❤
@olliecrow35476 жыл бұрын
Our very mild winter...so far anyways.
@guadalupebaptista97576 жыл бұрын
@@olliecrow3547 until now....blizzard going on and frigid temperatures the next few days.
@olliecrow35476 жыл бұрын
@@guadalupebaptista9757 indeed. I'm loving it! Until the end of February anyways :)
@alisyncatenacci75516 жыл бұрын
Ha I think you regret saying that now
@olliecrow35476 жыл бұрын
@@alisyncatenacci7551 no regrets, but I cannot deny it's COLD!
@MikeB35426 жыл бұрын
Winter of 1976-77 was a beast...not much snow but miserably cold.
@MagicofKeelanWendorf7 жыл бұрын
The Polar Vortex was horrible, skin burned so much. The only thing I hate is being buried in snow to where you have to dig your car and somehow still make it to work.
@billykelly10136 жыл бұрын
Made a lot of extra money that winter. My best year of snow plowing
@davidmahon52696 жыл бұрын
Living on the outer edges of the city, I have the luxury of a garage for my car, but it opens on to an alley that the city does not plow and that the city does not allow commercial snow removal crews to plow. So I get to unbury from past my garage (turning radius) to the end of the alley. Basically, on heavy snow days, I work remotely, so I can spend a few hours out there with the snow blower.
@glynismorris21963 жыл бұрын
The front door froze! I couldn't get out.
@TheBelegur6 жыл бұрын
I was 9 years old in Chicago during the 1967 snow storm. My dad worked for the railroad and they filled every south bound boxcar with snow because Chicago ran out of places to put it. Kids down south got to see snow for the first time and Chicago got rid of some of it's snow surplus.
@ECStout6 жыл бұрын
Oh, I miss Chicago and it's beautiful winters! LOL -
@wwewewaeawdasdw6 жыл бұрын
Excuse me!?
@mckenna86636 жыл бұрын
I have moved to an area where we have 7 months of Summer , very short Springs or Falls, and Mild Winters. It's almost New Year's Eve right now and it's 57 degrees outside. But of those seven months of Summer... five of those months are up above 95 degrees and high humidity. Probably three months of that is close to or over 100 degrees. I hate summer dot-dot. But I hate these Summers with a passion. I would trade One Summer here for two Chicago Winters easily. I can't wait to move back to Chicago and have a decent Four Season year!! Someone mentioned that these Winters build character. That's absolutely true. I love Chicago ... even her Winters.
@michaelselz33894 жыл бұрын
@@mckenna8663 sounds like you moved from Chicago to Florida like me
@DoncasterA1Music7 жыл бұрын
I used to live in Oak Park right outside Chicago. Fun snow memories, even if the winter could make a big hassle. Fun fact, the townhouse I lived in even had a leaky roof! good video and I love your channel
@DoncasterA1Music7 жыл бұрын
Chicago Aussie Well thats sorta a plus and minus, lol Keep up the good work
@psychesomatic6906 жыл бұрын
Oak Park is still nice. But there's a lot of economic development that's shifting it from more of a suburban-vibe to metropolitan. I grew up in Oak Park but now live in Evanston - but still work in Oak Park. It's been a little sad watching the town transform from what I remember and found so nostalgic. In the past several years they have built a number of very tall condo complexes in the downtown area. I get it, Oak Park is great...everyone wants to live there.
@manny755866 жыл бұрын
God I remember 1983. The heat in our house broke down. We were SUPER lucky that we had a fireplace and wood in the house. It was still cold as hell in there though.
@susanbrown29096 жыл бұрын
For all technology with boilers,if they break down or there’s a power blackout and you haven’t a fireplace..it’s harsh. I’m glad I’ve got a back up system...but then I’m rather bias,l love my fire crackling in the hearth
@topnotchcoffee5 жыл бұрын
susan brown Here in Berwyn, we have a bunch of old houses with fireplaces.... that were filled with concrete.
@Sonic90786 жыл бұрын
In Canada where I live, throughout all winter, everyday is -30 Celsius, or -22 Fahrenheit, and we have no problem sometimes we fuck around and wear out spring jackets if we don’t feel like wearing much
@CoopyKat4 жыл бұрын
Great video! I was a kid when these late 70's winter storms of snowy hell happened - I lived 80 miles east of Chicago in Southwest Michigan - we had so much snow that we had to dig a tunnel from the house to the driveway (we lived in the country).
@seththomas91056 жыл бұрын
Remember those 70's and early 80's winters in Iowa too. We had a shitload of snow in 82-3-4, I remember some HUGE drifts.
@mckenna86636 жыл бұрын
In 1967, I was in 3rd grade and our grandmother was babysitting us (since my folks were vacationing in Mexico). The snow started falling when we were in school one day. And by the end of the school day, it was so deep that I was sinking down into drifts all the way up to my hips. The next morning, my grandmother said the coolest thing in the world. "Every kid needs a day off of school once in a while. I declare that this is your day. You get to stay home!" I went balistic!! Looking back on it as an adult, school might actually have been closed that day anyway... but in my mind, it was all my grandmother's doing. Knowing that my parents were out of town, all of the men on the block came over and dug out our driveway. They piled the snow next to the house. It reached the top of the roof, and if our grandmother would have let us... we, three kids, wanted to ride our sleds from the roof down to the lawn. Grandma was cool, but she was not crazy. No sleds were allowed up on the roof.
@SHAOLINSLUMSS6 жыл бұрын
ahh, to be a kid again...
@ericvondumb28386 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the memories. That was a time when all the neighbors helped each other out. Hell, I remember the men clearing out streets because the plows couldn't make it.
@cazgerald94716 жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing your story - I don't have any memories quite like that, but I have many happy memories your story helped elicit XD
@princeofcupspoc90736 жыл бұрын
People may wonder why Chicago is different from other areas of the Midwest. The answer is the Lake. Milwaukee is in the same boat, but for towns more inland, it's not as bad. The Lake adds that extra bit of moisture to increase the snowfall significantly. Buffalo sees this on the other end of the lakes. Also the lakes are flat with nothing to stop the wind, so cold air coming down from Canada hits the city full boar. (And yes, Canada gets it worst, and we stand in awe of anyone who can deal with even worst weather.) I remember the snow in the 70s, and the cold in the 80s. I just spent 8 years in California, so I missed these last few years of hell. But I'm back now. God help me.
@parmbirdhaliwal63116 жыл бұрын
Well explained.
@peterpiperman95426 жыл бұрын
But in the summer ... the people that are sweltering out in The Burbs don't have it like I do... two blocks from the lake! it stays nice and cool when everybody else is sweating bullets!!🌊🌊⛱🌞☀️🌝❗🏖🏊♀️🚴♂️🤽♂️🤽♀️🏊♂️🏄♀️🏄♂️🐟
@BrokebackBob6 жыл бұрын
Aussie folks and Chicago! Two things I love! New subscriber!
@roderickobriensr65046 жыл бұрын
I was born and raised in Chicago and remember the brutality of the winters. When I was 39 I was given the opportunity to move to New Jersey. I jumped at the chance because Jersey is generally 10 degrees warmer. I now live in California and do not miss winter at all. I really enjoy your videos and hope you keep on making them.
@mikesuzio25666 жыл бұрын
new Jersey feels like its 20 degrees warmer NJ feels downright tropical compared to Chicago
@Yorker19986 жыл бұрын
Haha, I was born in the Chicago area and then moved to Jersey when I was 2, making it where my first hometown ever was. Then I moved back into the Chicago area when I was nearly 7. Beautiful state!
@psychesomatic6906 жыл бұрын
I can't imagine living without seasons. It's worth the freezing winters and humid summers just to have them.
@clickbait73226 жыл бұрын
I LIVE IN CHICAGO AND JUST CAME ACROSS YOUR CHANNEL.. AND AM A NEW SUB...GREAT JOB..👌
@mikehughes49692 жыл бұрын
I was a kid during those winters in the 70s, and I'll never forget them, especially the blizzard of 79. But I'd have to say that the big snow of 67 had the biggest impact of my life. I was conceived during it.
@matthewstromer6 жыл бұрын
You have a great channel. Fantastic work. Been watching a ton of your vids with my son.
@racerj2.035 жыл бұрын
I am a native of Chicago, for seven years! My father began a job chasing career, and we began our southern trek. By the time I was eleven years old, we had settled in Charlotte NC. Snow is only a problem in the dead of winter. Usually because a days snow melts by night, and the next morning the roads and everything else is covered in ice.
@phoebecatgirl9335 жыл бұрын
So true, Keith. I'll never forget the January snow of 1967. Incredible! Just amazing - I was 16 (giving aay my age, here), and recall a time of both trouble with the snow, and fun (just because I was so young), and went out to shovel this amazingly deep snow. My Dad probably thought it was fine that I went out to do this, and I admit it was actually fun for awhile, (until I grew tired) but I sure wouldn't say that now! (I don't think I'm much likely to build a snow fort in the back yard these days).
@harryk86966 жыл бұрын
i live in australia and i literally cannot comprehend this. i freeze at 40F, which is pretty much the coldest it ever gets where i live but only at night. it would never be less than 50F at any time of daylight during the year.
@michaelross6996 жыл бұрын
I remember those day's I was born and raised up in Chicago. Was born in the 50's now living in Arkansas but I missed those snow day's at Christmas time I tried to watch all of the snow videos up in Chicago Well keep up the good work. Will be watching more of your video's
@Cyogesh567 жыл бұрын
I can feel you! I can see that it's very difficult for you to speak. I went out on Jan 1st when it was -22 degree Celsius. It was freaking freezing and windy! Hats-off to you for filming this outside.
@danielmanning23194 жыл бұрын
79.1” of snowfall might be double the average in Chicago, but it’s 57.16” less than the average in my town.
@larrybrennan14637 жыл бұрын
I remember the winter of 1978-9. I was up in Chicago for a meeting of the key staff of the Boy Scout camp where I worked in the summer. After the meeting, several of us went up to Boulder Junction, Wisconsin, for a few days, returning to Oshkosh, where I was on December 31st. I had an Amtrak train to catch in Milwaukee, with a connection to the train to Boston in Chicago. I got a ride with Don, one of the guys from Milwaukee, and we left early, about 8 a.m., for the 90 mile drive. It started to snow, and the wind was blowing the snow across the road like sand, and the plows were out. By the time we reached Milwaukee, only one lane of the highway was open and visibility was getting bad. Don remarked he had never seen it snow this hard. He dropped me off at the depot and I scurried inside to get out of the wind. My train left on time, and as we headed to Chicago I noticed it was "white out" conditions outside -- I could see nothing of the countryside we passed. In Chicago I learned that the Lake Shore to New York and Boston was delayed a half hour for a train from the west. I poked my nose out onto Clinton Street and immediately withdrew, as the snow felt like needles on bare skin. When the train left, I went to the vestibule to take pictures, but the snow was so thick there was nothing to see more than a track or two away, and the snow lay deep on the roofs of the cars. I walked back to my coach and heard a woman say, "I'm lucky I got this seat to New York. I called O'Hare this morning and they said they were shut down and didn't think they'd be open tomorrow, either." We were in Cleveland at midnight to welcome 1979. I stayed a few days in Boston, then went down to New Orleans, and a week later I returned to Chicago to catch the Floridian back to Jacksonville. (I like traveling by train.) I stopped in to see a friend on the North Side off Clark. I was amazed -- the main streets were open, but the side streets were unplowed. People had shoveled trenches on the sidewalks to reach their homes. There were huge mounds of snow along the curbs of North Clark, and narrow, deep canyons where the crosswalks and bus stops were. And everyone was blaming the mess on Bilandic. A far bigger storm hit later in January, the one you mention, but there were several big snows that winter of the "Bilandic Blizzards" and Jane Byrne capitalized on the hapless Bilandic, the accidental mayor. A postscript to this long comment: There was a piece in the Chicago Tribune in late July stating that the some of the snows of winter were still in the area. It had been dumped into abandoned quarries near Harvey, and against the south wall of one of these deep stone pits was a mound of dirty gray snow, protected from the heat and sun by being there. I went
@larrybrennan14637 жыл бұрын
Chicago Aussie Well, I was traveling by train. Rail tends to be less affected by weather, and I was traveling away from the blizzard.
@treedaddy42606 жыл бұрын
Not to start a pissing match, but the polar vortex in Minneapolis was -35 F and sub zero temps for most of January is common.
@sugarsalt66376 жыл бұрын
Snowmageddon was my last winter in Chicago(born here) before moving to Arizona- hoping to get back ASAP!!
@demisemedia5 жыл бұрын
So you want to move back to Chicago from Arizona? I'll be visiting Chicago in May to check it out (from Cali)
@Quast6 жыл бұрын
Germany also had the record winter 1978/79. Looks like the jet stream was pretty far south during the wintertime of the northern hemisphere.
@irmgardbaumannbaumann66486 жыл бұрын
I took a Flight in DEZ.24 1979 Form Frankfurt Tochter Chicago,a very bad Blizzard happen on O Hare,i arraived 12 hours later in Oshkosh Wisconsin. Never Seen so much Snow before
@tonygirard33076 жыл бұрын
On December 7 1967 my Dad moved us up to Chicago. We couldn't get in our new house because the locks were all frozen. The house was half covered with snow drifts. I was 7 and my brother was 6. Being from North Carolina we had never seen anything like this before. My Dad then drove us to Grandma's house on the near North side and we stayed there that night.Needless to say, I lived in Chicago 20 years before I moved to Atlanta. I still love Chicago and will always call it "home."
@drjjpdc19 күн бұрын
Well I remember those 3 winters in the late '70s. I moved to Chicago from NJ to become a Chiropractor.. NJ was not unaware of cold weather but I never felt anything like this!
@MZak-ng6wc7 жыл бұрын
I went cross country skiing and will probably do it again ! I also went on a 10 miles hike on an 8 degree day.....
@EnriqueJega6 жыл бұрын
wait five minutes it will change.
@wandmayeslupik63026 жыл бұрын
hahaha... sooooo true,!
@Dulcimertunes3 жыл бұрын
For the worse
@geom4046 жыл бұрын
Well done video. I lived through all those winters and your info is accurate. Xmas eve 1983 was about as cold as I can remember. Had to carry my little schnauzer out to the yard and watch over her. The wind was so terrible and I didn't want to lose her. Also, Feb 1, 2011 blizzard was forecast at least 5 days in advance. People driving on LSD were very foolish to be driving when the storm was predicted so far in advance. Winters of '77 through '79 were snowy and very cold and changed the city's political history. Many records were broken for cold in the midwest around Feb 1-3, 1996, also.
@monstersofthemidway71256 жыл бұрын
I have lived in Chicago since the 1950's and remember each one of these extreme winters. As they say, if you can't stand the heat, get out of the kitchen. However, if you can't stand the snow and cold, get out of Chicago.
@mariareyna22876 жыл бұрын
O
@peterpiperman95426 жыл бұрын
You're right I'm getting out of this state---- I'm going to Wisconsin
@monstersofthemidway71256 жыл бұрын
Peter the Piper Wisconsin is colder in the winter, has more snow, but fewer corrupt politicians.
@peterpiperman95426 жыл бұрын
@@monstersofthemidway7125 I was kind of joking about the weather but I went up there twice just for a day each and the people were very very nice as opposed to these cocksuckers
@What-wq4xy5 жыл бұрын
I couldn’t stand the idiot politicians in Illinois. So I left.
@migueloros8916 жыл бұрын
I was 9 years old for the 2013-2014 Chicago winter and I remember loving walking to school through a heavy blizzard of blinding snow then coming back home again to play in the backyard with the snow that reached up to my garage’s roof. I remember spending hours building a small cave in the snow and then spending even more hours pretending that by building this, this was me surviving in the North Pole. I remember a long car ride on lake shore drive looking out of the window to see snow falling on all of the tall buildings while listening to Let it Snow on the radio.
@mariocisneros9116 жыл бұрын
We had +40 days below freezing. Snow never melted but increased with each snow fall. In 78 ? Plus a bad 1 in 76 and a record in 79. . The snow was higher than a Ford Van .
@KenS12676 жыл бұрын
Everyone always seems to forget the Blizzard of 1999. I assume it's because it hit on New Years weekend and the city had an extra day to clear the streets. IIRC that one dropped 22 inches on the city. I do remember that the front door of my apartment building was completely blocked by snow.
@yello627 жыл бұрын
another job well done, youngen. i used to be able to say that i had lived through the worst weather in chicago history. i missed 2011, as i was in san diego at the time. i had a flight back to chicago scheduled for that week. i decided mid-50s would provide a better experience, then below 0.
@yello627 жыл бұрын
Chicago Aussie, as i recall, it was the correct move.
@mikeycarter7 жыл бұрын
Love your channel!
@standupG16 жыл бұрын
Well, I was there as a kid for the winters in the late 1970's--car locks freezing, etc. The best part was when spring started, followed by beautiful summers.
@naurrr7 жыл бұрын
during groundhog day snowmageddon, the chicago subreddit changed its banner to a snowy looking godzilla overtaking the city, and a giant snowball fight was planned for grant park. i went to that snowball fight briefly and it was fun! really hard to walk around with the snow reaching above my knees though.
@naurrr7 жыл бұрын
well, there's still time for a february blizzard. lol
@mariareyna22876 жыл бұрын
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@guilhermepta7 жыл бұрын
Hi! Where were you in this video? Chicago? I am from Brazil and I am living in here. It is an amazing city and your channel is very interesting..
@CLANDESTINEPLAY6 жыл бұрын
Iam brazilian living in utah add me so I can exchange inf with you!!!
@Hellefleur6 жыл бұрын
Today and tomorrow are competing for that title. Just cold though, no snow.
@paulsoxl77396 жыл бұрын
Thank you keep up the good work. We have brutal summers to
@miguels19096 жыл бұрын
As a Brazilian, I truly don't know why a place like Chicago is inhabited and so prosperous!
@kieferchafin23695 жыл бұрын
One reason that Chicago is prosperous is because they are and have been a shipping hub for for freight/goods being shipped on trains (in the 1800-1900s) and now planes. They prospered early on because geographically they are one of the first big cities outside of the Great Plains and so cattle/crops were being shipped/sold to Chicago and Chicago acted like an intersection to the rest of the north/eastern seaboard. As a side note, it is a fact that ethnicities/people groups historically originating from colder climates have higher IQ. Therefor they are more prosperous. The scientific arguement for why iq is higher in these people Is because colder weather naturally selects for higher IQ. Colder climates require human beings to be forwad thinking, have good planning skills and good survival skills by finding creative ways to survive. The pressures of the environment allow for them to hunt differently, make clothing, use different forms of housing and building material, etc.. average iq by region: goo.gl/images/8f2fJ8
@hunniibee227 жыл бұрын
Wow my travel anxiety just went to 100+ level watching this lol. I’m might to be traveling from San Francisco to NYC by train during early January 2019 and there is a 6 hour stop-over in Chicago but I think I might have to look into flying, that snow is making me anxious lol. Keep up the good work! I’ve been binge watching all weekend. Your videos are very educational and give great insight into this magical and mysterious city. 👍🏻😊
@psychesomatic6906 жыл бұрын
If your traveling through Chicago in January 2019, you should know that (with the exception of the years highlighted) our snowfall is pretty inconsistent in recent years. This year, it's only snowed enough to require shoveling twice so far. Mid-December 2018, and there's no snow on the ground. It's still cold, but you can get good food to eat and see some of downtown without spending much time at all in the cold. If you haven't been to Chicago, it's worth even a 6-hour visit for the experience of our city.
@williamschlenger15186 жыл бұрын
1976-1977.I worked for natural gas co.contractor.We worked almost 24-7 with broken mains &services. We had minus 6d.&snow in N.J. New York harbor was frozen over.😟
@louisbrizzolara72096 жыл бұрын
My two worst winters in Chicago, were April of 1975, and January of 1982. I was going to go to San Francisco on Saturday the 15th of April 1975. On the Wednesday before it stated snowing at 11:00am. We closed Pioneer Bank at noon. I lived 10 blocks away, it took 1 hour and forty-five minutes to walk home. In 1981 We had a wind chill of -60. I had bought a new Thunderbird, and all the wheel covers fell off that night.
@TheMotorGuyDirect6 жыл бұрын
I was just learning to drive during the polar vortex, prepared me for many future snow driving events!
@kentwalller48527 жыл бұрын
How do you not have more subs, your production value is to high for your sub count
@WirelessHotShot6 жыл бұрын
I hired on the railroad Sept 2013. I take trains to Chicago. The winter of 13-14 was bad. We got a huge increase in business and we had trains everywhere. Backed up all the way to the east coast waiting to go west. I was told by old heads that many years ago when there was a lot of snow in Chicago, the railroads and the city would work together. Dump a lot of snow into hopper railcars and send them south to melt.
@ckself3 жыл бұрын
Fun fact about that 1985 blast. Though not the worst in terms of duration, it was the coldest arctic blast for much of the southern U.S. The information from this video talked about January 20th when Chicago was -27F and Atlanta was 7F. But Atlanta dropped down to -8F the next day. Only February 1899 was colder at -9F. North Carolina had its coldest temperature ever at -34F at Mt. Mitchell with temps in the -10s and -20s common all across southern Appalachia. Twas quite the arctic blast.
@BossSpringsteen696 жыл бұрын
Seems like i've been in every major snow storm in Chicago from 1978 to present even though i live out of state a few times.
@faffy047 жыл бұрын
You’re churning some amazing videos!! Where are you shooting this video from?
@faffy047 жыл бұрын
Chicago Aussie sorry, I meant location
@larrydrozd27406 жыл бұрын
I've been in Austin, Texas since 1986, I was born and raised in Chicago. I lived through the '67 storm and all of the late 70's storms. Worst ever for me was January 1982.....it didn't get above zero from the 7th until the 17th. My band played The Cubby Bear on January 10th. That night it got down to -26 with a wind chill of -81.........screw that!!!!!! We were stuck there until the middle of the next day. I don't really miss it..... Seriously ....you can't even breath in that type of cold. It was DEADLY!!!
@thomasgriffin53406 жыл бұрын
The 70s and 80s winters were the best. Now it’s too warm for school closing fun. I was only aged 1 and in the hospital during the 1967 snow. My mother was stranded at the hospital and my father had to leave his car and walk.
@msr11166 жыл бұрын
I totally recall the Groundhog Day 2011 snowstorm. I prayed my power wouldn't go out, which in turn would have shut everything down, including the heat. Wind gusts felt like my all brick house was being body slammed by King Kong.
@theire4833 жыл бұрын
Wow...we went to school in those days, I remember all of those records.
@1456Sassy3 жыл бұрын
Dec 83 wasn't the only winter with -82 wind chill. I moved from Chicago in Jun 83. Winter of 82/83 was just as bad and shut everything down. I moved to AR and Dec 83 was the coldest winter I've ever known here in AR. The wind chill dropped to -54. Yes, I remember the blizzard of 67. Oh what fun for us kids. Blizzard of 78/79 I had 2 little ones and oops, it was so cold that winter, had another one by Nov.'s end! lol
@paulsoxl77396 жыл бұрын
78/79 winter was brutal my Christmas break lasted until mid to late January. I delivered the Sun-Times with a sled the memories so now I live in Florida hope I never see SNOW again
@reverendblkgrape16 жыл бұрын
The earliest blizzard I remember is the storm of 78/79. As a child it was a exciting but it was crazy.
@DesertHomesteader6 жыл бұрын
Some of those crazy Chicago snowfall days were my favorite winter days as a kid. Those were the days we were able to build giant snow tunnels in the snow drifts. We all wore snowsuits and barely noticed the cold. Of course, we weren't aware of the danger of frostbite or being crushed inside a snow drift by passing vehicles. Just for the record, I have never heard the term "snowpocalypse". The 2011 snow storm was always referred to as "snowmaggedon" by the news media and everyone I ever talked to in the western burbs.
@DesertHomesteader6 жыл бұрын
True enough.
@topnotchcoffee5 жыл бұрын
I remember the 2013-14 Winter. Even with it being so bad, my dad was forced to go to work at his trucking sites in order to make money during the winter. It was blowing really hard when he had finished work one day, but he had to buy something from the Target next to the Trucking company, so he did.
@emu50886 жыл бұрын
Just stumbled upon your channel! I love it and am excited to check all your videos out about Chicago! I hope you feel welcomed here :) Cheers!
@caturdaynite72176 жыл бұрын
The Winters in the late 70's were brutal. In 1979 I made a $100 shoveling snow. In one day. My arms felt like noodles. It took several days to recover. I was 16 years old. Back in the day!
@briansivley20017 жыл бұрын
I still remember that Groundhog Day Blizzard and the Polar Vortex they were torture😣😣😣. I remember having to take my mom who is in a wheelchair to get her check from this place out in Edgebrook and after stopping at Happy Foods to get my Quiche we took the long way home by taking Metra Milwaukee District North Line to Union Station and walking down to Ogilvie Transportation Center and take Metra Union Pacific North Line to Davis Stop in Downtown Evanston and take the CTA Bus going towards Howard Street to get back home. After that my mom stayed home during the winter lol.
@psychesomatic6906 жыл бұрын
I was commuting between Oak Park and Evanston during the Polar Vortex winter using public transportation (Metra/CTA, depending). It was hell in the beginning, but it toughened me up quick. Added benefit of getting some great arm strength from all the shoveling! lol
@markcolley19146 жыл бұрын
Great video ,,very informative, ,thanks
@aname47876 жыл бұрын
I remember in 2013 they didn’t call off school for some random reason and me and my friends had to wait outside for the bus. The temperature was about -5 °F but it felt as cold as -20 °F. Normally we had to wait about 5-10 minutes for the bus. That day we had the wait 40
@connellsassen80855 жыл бұрын
The 2019-20 winter definitely ranks on this
@ohboycheese36585 жыл бұрын
You mean 2018-2019?
@juanmaldonado40746 жыл бұрын
Winter of '67, the snow was piled so high in our back yard you could only see the roof of our garage. School was cancelled, so the back yard hosted many a spirited snowball fight for days. Winter of '76, while home for winter break at college in Ohio, I was foolishly walking between cars of a moving elevated train. A sudden jolt of the train caused my eyeglasses to fall from my frozen face and shatter to pieces. When I returned to school, there was more snow in Oberlin, Ohio than even the '67 blizzard had dropped on Chicago. Winter of '79, I was working in the Loop and, while the snow was bad, I never missed a day of work, due to the CTA managing to keep what is now the Red Line L running. Plus, I lived near the originating point of three bus lines, so I almost always got a seat if the L was running late. One evening while on a crowded bus heading home, I witnessed a poor woman step off the bus and completely disappear into a pile of snow. The quick thinking driver jumped off the bus and rescued her. And yes, I voted for Jane Byrne :) Winter of '82, I did some last-minute Christmas shopping on State Street. It was so unbelievably cold the space heaters that the department stores had set up to supplement the useless central heating barely made a dent in the cold. My heart went out to the folks having to work in those stores. For me, the lines were short or non-existent, so shopping was a breeze. Snowpocalypse 2013, well...I was and still am in San Diego, CA. The best thing about beating your head against the wall repeatedly is that it feels so good when you stop. :) Truth be told, I miss Chicago winters; they can be invigorating. And, there's still a pro football team there. :)
@johncerk26186 жыл бұрын
Hard to believe Chicago gets 33inches of snow.Milwaukee gets 48 inches and is only 90 miles away. I remember those late 1970's winter's.Chicago was buried in 1979.
@scoobycarr55586 жыл бұрын
And don't forget the terrific thundersnow that happened in the Groundhog Day Blizzard. Two huge lightning strikes hit Chicago's Willis Tower as the Weather Channel's Jim Cantore was interviewing someone stuck in the storm.
@benduhina42006 жыл бұрын
This is so amazing
@kentonkirkpatrick52256 жыл бұрын
Lived through the '78-'79 winter (actually, everything from 1953 to 2003). Yes, it was a nightmare. People riding the "L" in between the cars (outside). I predicted that if the mayor didn't muster every available city worker to clear the "L" tracks, there would be hell to pay -he didn't... Remember that -83 windchill as well. Needed to go to Dominic's (defunct super market chain). Put on two pairs of blue jeans, many top layers and trusty winter coat. Covered face with Vaseline. Made out O.K. -Beat the "Hawk". P.S. Funny thing about the '67 "Big Snow", -The day before it was close to 60 degrees, people riding in cars with the top down. I seem to remember it was closer to April than January. Oh well, they say the memory is the second thing that goes...
@kentonkirkpatrick52256 жыл бұрын
Not so much misspell as mispronounce: "Fitzpatrick" or just "Kirk". Is your wife related to the great Clayton Kirkpatrick (former editor of the Chicago Tribune from 1969 to 1979)? My people are from downstate (Marion and Sesser, IL). My Great-Uncle Dr. Dow Kirkpatrick was Pastor of Evanston Methodist church but got run out of town after hosting Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and letting Hippies crash in the church. Hope your luck in Chicago is better than mine was.
@mariareyna22876 жыл бұрын
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@KFilippi25256 жыл бұрын
I LOVE MY CHICAGO!!! SNOW AND ALL!! I was born here in 1967 and FONDLY remember the BLIZZARD OF'79😨 My siblings and I were jumping off our roofs into snow banks, it was the best!! Like I said "I LOVE MY CHICAGO!!"
@boomer15796 жыл бұрын
K Fillipi, You are wrong! Just kidding, my wife and I agree with you. We live in Phoenix and miss the four seasons we experienced for many years in Chicago. (Actually, Chicago SUMMERS can sometimes be more uncomfortable than winters there...from an adult's perspective.) Think we'll move to northern AZ where I can jam with another ex-Chicagoan (grade school alumnus).
@KFilippi25256 жыл бұрын
@@boomer1579 thanks!! And your absolutely right about our summers! But now this -27 is krazy!! Bet you dont miss it now😅!! Thanks again!!
@boomer15796 жыл бұрын
@@KFilippi2525 You're right again, thanks!
@lisaqmoon15 жыл бұрын
My husband was born & raised in highland park. His fathers mothers family owned land on ridge road that they lost most of in the depression. He sold the last of it 10 years ago. He misses it even the weather
@raymondfleming73496 жыл бұрын
Ahh, yes. The Big Snow. I had final exams the day after and made it downtown thanks to the Ravenswood "L" (the Brown Line) only to find out that the exams had been cancelled. I also remember all the storms and cold up to 1983. We moved to Dallas in early 1984.