A friend of mine plows private ranch roads in a mountainous area that gets regular large snowstorms like this. Years ago they gave up on pickup trucks with plows destroying themselves in just a season or two. They use a couple of old road grader all-wheel-drives with blades and front-mounted butterfly plows and a used 4WD front loader with a blade attachment that clamps to the bucket. Those machines were over a decade old when they bought them used and they've been using them for close to 20 years now and they're still going strong. My long time mechanic told me that one season of plowing with a pickup is equivalent to 10 years of normal wear on a pickup driveline, suspension, and engine.
Thanks for reaching out...I agree on your assessment! We have an older road grader in the works as we also realize that we are pushing our truck too much...being a non-profit, this is all we had to use but I agree that older commercial machines are the way to go.
Here in FInland we use farmtractors with adjustable blade and blower, 6x6 Volvo etc. dumptrucks with front and belly blades and graders. We don't play at all with pickups (there is like few thousand registered in whole country). Small caliber equipment is basically nonexistent. Even private roads like in this, majority have some old tractor with a snowblower. I'm not saying it is wrong to use a heavy duty pickup especially like this on a private road, but we just don't get it, my home road is 5km private and our own maintenance and we simply do it with a 80's 4x4 Farmtractor (Fiat agri). Now in christmas 21, in less than two days we got 60cm of snow and it takes like 20 minutes to plow one lane, it is technically 2 lanes but just 4,5m wide and the blower is 2.5m wide. Those are lot cheaper than any car, and lasts forever, i got mine, used, 10 years ago for about 4000euro, ie. 6000 canadian dollars. First 4x4 tractor we had was a Soviet made Belarus from the 60's with 2m wide blower. That did the job for 40 years, and it was dirt cheap in the early 80's :) We don't even have any else use for them, they were just for keeping the road good. Fuel consumption is also a fraction. Only better side in Pickups is comfort. These tractors are quite horrible that are made 40+ years ago.
I plowed the roads many years in Maine and I find you can not have any heat in the cab when the temperature is real low. Dress warm and keep the windshield cold. If you do the snow flies over the windshield and does not stick. Wet windshield builds ice.
I just watched your promo video on your website. I love it. The world needs more Dave's like you! One trick I learned to stop my windshield from freezing up and also causing ice on the wipers when snow is falling is to not use defrost. Keep the hot air off your windshield. Heat the truck with the dash or floor vents. When the windshield is cold the flying snow does not melt on it. Your ministry is awesome. Keep up the great work Dave!
Pull your sun visors down close to the windshield. It captures enough warm air to keep your windshield clear. I used to freeze up bad on the open prairies until I started to flip my visors. Your going slow enough it should help to warm the glass.
Good video, I used to drive a grader in Canada to open roads & also cut down the high banks , bull blade on front (width of machine) 14ft moldboard , 14ft wing ,set the bull blade about 4” of road , mold about 2” for first pass & if high banking , carry wing about 12-18”, depending on high of bank , about 10mph full throttle . As someone mentioned a grader or front end loader is best . If you watch many snow plow vids , Sweden , Norway , etc , you will see that they use front end loaders & tractors with various attachments, & they put the hammer down & roll the snow back & when they use plows that can change direction always roll the snow down the mountain
Great insight, we do have a grader in the works...no wing but it does have the moldboard and a V-plow attached that is 11'wide and 8'high. This will dramatically help our snow removal process. Thanks for reaching out!
@@MentoringTimothy local inventor/hydraulic shop owner made a machine the township used , giant ~8' across snow blower on a truck if i recall. our township used it, total beast. my wife wrote a book , his life story, good read and this was a highlight in my mind
I appreciate you plowing as a ministry! I did that for years living in Willow Alaska and then in South Haven Michigan. I had a Dodge 3500 with a heavy steel10 foot BOSS VPLOW. I had the absolute pleasure of never taking money except for one client who really did have an extensive job on his property. Money wasn't tight for them so I reluctantly accepted gas money. For me it was just a passionate ministry! Now I live in Myrtle Beach South Carolina so the plowing days are done but for 13 years I was all over it! And both the truck and plow served me well! Great times!!
I've always thought that the "snow plow prep package" should include a heated windshield, wipers, washer and a defrost switch that doesn't shut off. Or they should have a upgraded "commercial/extreme" prep package that does.
People that haven’t experienced true cold don’t understand how windshields can build ice. They think you should be able to turn the heat on full blast and put it on defrost. It doesn’t work like that when it’s really cold outside. You’re actually better off leaving the heat nearly off and dressing warm. Prevents the melting snow from instantly melting and forming ice. When the windshield is hit enough to instantly melt the falling/blowing snow... it will build layer upon layer of ice and you can end up with a big problem in a short time. It’s tricky to learn how to balance the melt/refreeze issues but once you’ve gotten a few northern winters under your belt... you’ll get it. Lol
@@jefffletcher1695 from my 40÷ years of experience, it's very much situational and conditions dependent. If it's super cold with a dry, blowing snow, keeping the windshield cold is best, but if it's hovering around the freezing mark anyway, the heated elements of that system are effective. But if 8 don't have them and can't get them, you can't pick what works best for the conditions.
@@TsunauticusIV 40+ years in Maine plowing snow. Trust me, I know the difference between -10 wind- blown and 33 degree cement dump snow falls. Having the options and knowing when to use them is key. There is a vast difference between plowing roads at 15-20mph and plowing driveways/ lots around and under trees and obstructions that also wildly change the dynamics. If you don't have the equipment, you don't have the options. But you're right, having the options also allows you to make the wrong choices... that's where experience comes into play.
Wow, our situations are so similar! I have to plow 8 miles of forest service road to get to my off grid home. I even have the same plow! And yes, I have to stop every mile or so to remove the snow buildup under the wiper blades. The floor heat with a window cracked as mentioned in the comments doesn’t work, but I might try installing heated wipers. At 5400 elevation, we get similar amounts of snow. The berms got so high that there was nowhere to put the snow until we eventually got snowed in and could not get to town. (We have supplies.) Even before watching your video we made plans to purchase a snowblower for our skid steer next season. Glad to hear that is what others are doing!
Thanks for reaching out and sharing...the challenge is real and our roads are narrow in spots and shaded so the snow stacks up...but, the beauty, the rawness of the land and having lots of challenges is truly a blessing to us. Stay in touch and thanks again for sharing.
I’ve done a fair bit of snow plowing and a old guy gave me the tip that he turns off the defrost before he starts plowing. As long as the windshield and wipers stay cold it won’t ice up. The snow doesn’t melt on windshield and the wipers push it off easily. Turn heater to warm your feet only and crack a window to prevent fogging. Hours of plowing never having to stop to deice windshield and wipers.
Heated wipers are fairly easily bent up out of some fuel or brake line. They suck up a ton of engine heat too, though. You'll want valves on them. Check out pics of piston bullies and prinoth snowcats. Pickup trucks have shit defrost capabilities
Amazing Winter Landscape ! I'd hear "Vinterland - Welcome to my last Chapter" all day whileas plowing snow, or "Paysage d'Hiver - Im Wald", and shooting these cool Winterlandscapes with my camera, making a few stops for that. \m/
My dad used to put metal tracks over our skid-steer tires. It looks and sounds like an military tank. The tracks chewed through tires but we never got stuck.
Not a big deal defrost wind shield helps ! The rest was amazing! Best job for helping family ! Satisfying! In San Diego 70 degrees dreamy but wish I was there one week a mother ! Your pro end of story:)
Just had you pop up in my suggested feed and I'm glad you did especially with the Light shining through your words! Love finding fellow Believers on UA-cam! And your strategy about a plow and then a skidsteer with a blower is exactly what ill be doing!! Gonna binge watch your channel now!
I used to plow for a major newspaper in cleveland ohio as a on site contractor. No excuses for the parking lots and the garage roof parking to be covered in snow. Challenging and fun times. Kept a spray bottle of washer fluid in the cab just in case it would be freezing rain.
Man I need to move there. That’s amazing! Definitely have to depend on yourself and your neighbors!! You can’t make it alone out there. That must be awesome to live there!!
Neighbors are very important and a blessing when you are in trouble! It truly is a blessing to live here...lots of hard work but an incredible setting!
Looking at what you are doing there, and considering how far you are going, I would want to have a serious pair of snowshoes in that truck. A pair that would keep you up on top of that fluff. Take care. Thanks for the video.
Just a thought I do when plowing long roads. I would dump to the down hill side of the road. Make it for that you don't load the uphill side. More snow storage on the downhill side. Also if the plow catches, it pushes you into the hill over off the edge.
my mother told the story of a local guy in Kennebunk Maine using his own Diamond T truck to plow snow for the town in area west of town where the snow was so deep he lost track of where the road was and just plowed a new " road" out through the pucker brush. Hey, it was level ground.
very nice video. Shoot, at that point for inroad length. Might as well have a sled set for deep snow with a wide skis and deep paddles to take into town. I know it would stinks to have to bundle up for every trip... and other issues that could arrise.
I live up in northern Canada and plow up here . When I saw you chain up that truck I thought " chains really? " . Then near the end of the video when you were in the deep stuff I though " Ok I get it now ." Wow that some deep snow .
I always change my wiper blades right around the first snow fall and keep the old ones in the truck for spares. If you tear one it can make a big vis problem. Even if you run the good one on the Driver's side you will score the windshield. It's cheap insurance.
Thanks, not easy at times but young men need older men to speak into their lives. The snow has been coming heavy this November, it will likely be a huge year of snow for us!
I see you have the same problem as I have when plowing. Windshield freeze up as well as the wipers. My next plow truck will have heated mirrors. I can deal with the snow but freezing rain makes backing up impossible. You do a great job plowing uphill.
moved from ohio to atlanta 14 years ago. Used to plow with my brother and Dad sometimes all night taking turns in an old Ford. Aah I miss those times and I miss Dad.
Get a Unimog with a double auger 8 foot blower. I have a single auger 8 foot blower on my tractor that works really well as well. The Unimog you could drive to other jobs if you were clearing several roads.
@@TheDirtyBirchTrails It’s not always about finishing fast, some guys are all about finishing fast…🤦♂️. A blower doesn’t leave berms and ridges on the side of the road or driveway, if you have a long snowy winters those berms only encourage drifting. A blower gets the snow away from the road or driveway…it may be a bit slower but it’s definitely worth the the time.
Greetings from alaska, having seen your video this reminds of when I plowed up to thirty miles of borough roads here in alaska. All I used here was cat 12F graders aka gear jammers manual transmissions cheep on fuel these machines had a 14 ft moboard, belly blade I also put front push blades on the three that I had. You could buy these graders for 6 to 12 thousand all day long here, I think this would be a better bet than wearing out your new truck. a dam site cheaper for sure, all & all I love your video it brings back good memories thanks.
Thanks for reaching out. We were donated a 79' 12G that we will be using this year. It came with a massive V-plow but we will likely only need to use the 14ft moboard. Did you chain up all 6 tires? Thanks for your kind comments and glad it brought back some good memories!
to add the grader is valuable of maintaining the road after winter and before etc. belly dump gravel at 20 mph and follow with the grader for a finish that's hard to beat.
@@MentoringTimothy I use a small AWD 8,000 pound 18 foot long motor grader with 10 foot front blade and 10 foot mold board. I angle the front blade one way and the mold board the other way to offset each other and it plows very straight for the first center pass. It will digest about 2 feet of heavy wet on the first pass. The front blade takes down the first half one way, then the mold board takes the second half the other way. Max forward tilt on both blades to roll the snow. Then finish up with a pass down each side with one side of the grader on the dry road center and both blades angled to the same side of the road. I don't need chains, yet. I did put large caster gauge wheels behind each corner of both blades for gravel roads. I plow at about 10 mph. Cutting down the massive V-plow might be a good option.
I live in Eastern Canada, with lots of wet heavy snow, yours is not as heavy to push, but with snow that deep most contractors use front end loaders or heavy back hoes with 10ft snow blades to push or pile for a job that big. Pick ups your size are usually used for parking lots, and even then the maintaince for front end parts alone, usually sets you back thousands of dollars per season. In fact I am putting ball joints and u joints in a 2500 like your's now for this winter. private drive way! Must be hard on the truck when those chains load up. Cheer's H
I plow my own drive as well, but not 8 miles. When we had our Wyoming ranch it was 10 miles of wind blown hell most winters. Live in the northern Michigan unfortunately n use my bobcat with chains on back. Ice build up on hills ca n be nasty. I really like your plow, n nice n warm to boot.
The snow plow packages should have electric heaters, like rear window defrosters, under the area of the windshield where the wipers rest. A friends Mercedes has an electrically heated windshield that would be a great option.
I've got over 20 years of snow plowing experience heavy duty municipality be it state or County plowing on paved roadways as well as mountain roads and it's best not to windrow your snow on the uphill side any more than absolutely necessary because once it's there you can't move it always pull away from the bank and throw to the downhill side is generally your best option it's not always possible but that is something that is a highly advisable but eight and a half miles that's a good push with a pickup plow you can still do a heck of a lot
And having the blades leading edge angled on the downhill side could be a accident waiting to happen if the corner bit catches something it could pull the front end hard to the right and it’s over the edge you go, not much time to react at 30 mph or faster.
@@bluethunder1951 Ya, I didn't like that plow angle at all. I've had my extended cab long box with ice breaker chains on thrown right off the road before because of that.
@@69jbr69 for sure, my driveway is a mile long with a 10% grade down a steep river valley with a 3-1 steep slope on the road side, so I always blade from the high bank side to the river side, it’s to easy to catch a frozen edge and get pulled over the edge.
@@bluethunder1951 Can you explain what you mean about the plow angle? I didn't understand from what you said but I'm curious if ever I have to do it I don't want it to happen to me.
There are variables, but ALWAYS begin plowing a storm in full V, in heavier storms you'd want to be in full V with the plow lifted a little off the ground....higher off the ground for more snow......less high for less snow. If you plow starting just with the blade angled to one side and the road is less than 2 blade widths wide, you end up with more snow on that side and it's much harder on the truck, more chance of the rear of the truck shifting sideways, more chance getting stuck, more chance to hurt the transmission/transfer case etc. You can bias being a little left or a little right of center depending on the slope of the terrain. Ideally you'd want to bias being a little closer to the uphill side so that most of the snow you plow would end up on the downhill side. A lot of the snow you are plowing you are pushing on the upslope side which is pinching a lot of snow to that side, the snow won't have anywhere to go. That size pickup and plow can only windrow so high and then the road will be forced over to the downslope side. That makes no sense. Full V, keep on the left side of the road for most of what you see in this video, then turn around at the top, angle the blade full left and come down at a decent clip and most that snow will windrow way off the road. That way if any crazy snow events come, you've made room for it. Also having the snow banked up on the downslope side acts kind of like a guardrail. That downhill side of the slope you'd want to plow when traveling down hill. Windshield will freeze less if you have it on full defrost, full hot, fan close to high and keep the wiper speed up. You want at least 800 pounds of counterweight. Counterweight is ballast that is behind the rear fulcrum which is the rear axle. All counterweight is ballast, not all ballast is counterweight. Great video.
This is good info, but I would add that the full V keeps the truck straight because equal pressure each side, less chance of hitting’ the banks and getting stuck. Really, this is the whole purpose of having a V. I’d look for heated wipers too.
Interesting. My Tundra cannot have chains on font wheels! You are spot on about the skid steer though. We have a 7ft blower on ours, the two negatives being slower speed and gravel which plays havoc n the second stage f you don't keep it off the ground. Having both plow and blower is perfect.
@@justinmartin8887 The owners manual specifically states 'no chains on the front tires'. I believe it is because there is not enough clearance between the tire and brake components but not sure.
Yes pull sun visor down to hold heat on windshield. I cut convoy belts an put them on top of the plow to stop the spray just bolt to top edge an an let hang over
Been thinking of buying a snowblower too for my roads in Vermont. Don’t quite have the elev you guys got there but run out of room in a hurry with the snow banks. But woowee, they dont give skiddy snowblows away! But cheaper alternative than a beast dump truck or a loader. Giving that Ram a helluva workout there! Last year we got 247” of the white stuff. Skiing was unreal, snowmobiling a touch treacherous
So glad I finally got a snow blower for our tractor over previously plowing our 1/4 mile drive with a 1/2 ton PU. It does a sweet job and the snow need not ever be touched again. (Maine)
I only had to chain up the left front tire when it was very slick. Sounds like that 12G will do the job, note the circle reverse gear is weak an can strip if turn while under load.
You need heated wiper blade. When i drove a semi they were a life saver. Turn defroster on high heat med fan and roll window down alittle so you don't get too hot.
I want to publicly thank you for not being afraid to acknowledge and praise God for the provisions He has given you. You are an inspiration. Keep up the good work brother.
What works for me when traversing through white out conditions.. wearing polar sunglasses makes it easy to see your path easily. That looks like yeti country
Joel The past 2 days I saw our Tractors being Spotted around for winter , Big V Plow and a Cover wrapping the Driver . Short axle Shafts and Tall Tractors , It has worked great for Decades .
Many residents on my street (5 miles past me) deal with this type of road every year! One of the lower homes set up a lean-two for the others because they finally decided to get tracked SXSs (or snowmobile). And they drive that and park at either end. This is in the Idaho Panhandle. I'm getting ready for it now....but I'm never in it this bad.
Rain-X is good in the summer as far as keeping water just flowing off your windows but it’s even better in the winter; been plowing for decades and always start the season with a good couple of coats of Rain-X on the outside and their anti-fog on the inside; I also run their anti-freeze and don’t have issues regardless of the temp or if I’m plowing with a the windows up or one down. The skid-steer or a track-steer with a snow plowed is great for clearing a road or just clearing some shoulder space; one note I would have, if you have the option, would be to go with a Volvo or JCB as both offer side door entry as going over, or under, an icee snow blower can lead to a dangerous condition. And make sure you have high flow hydro lids otherwise you’ll always be behind the 8-ball with a snow blower. I like a 4-in-1 bucket as you can both plow and move snow quite easily and it can put a lot of power in a small area to allow it to even handle ice piles.
I have only been snow plowing for about up to 15 years. I have the Boss snow plows. They are about 20 years old, I have one v plow and one straight blade, I have had older straight blade Western plows which are quite light compared to the Boss plow, the Boss plow is heavy enough it stays down on the road without jumping up. Watching your video going up to the top, if it were me I would have the v plow in A V pushing a little bit uphill to the left and a little bit to the right which would be down hill. Then when you are going down from the top of the mountain push the rest of it straight down to the left which would be down the mountain which would keep the driveway open all winter and you could keep pushing it down that way to the left going down the mountain. In the video it looks like you're going up the mountain and pushing it all to the left to the high point of the road. Shove all of it that you can down the hill .
I have an 04 ram 2500 & the defrosters are too far back. The wipers freeze a lot, Might get heated ones some day. Just one more thing i do is put a sealable drum of sand in the back for ballast & if you get in a jam you have sand on hand.
Nothing beats up a truck more than Snowplowing . Any truck . Towing is a breeze . Pushing a heavy steal weight against the ground does damage eventually. Especially commercial plowing parkin lots etc. Forward reverse over and over .
Thanks for your comments! Plowing is so hard on a truck, especially remote logging roads like ours, We are trying to take good care of it so it will last a long time!
yeah we have 2 diesel ones 3500 and 5500 the best better then a piece a junk fords i see fords broken down with a plow on it and rear end of it down to the ground with the spreader on it wich we allways laugh when we see it and where glad we use dodge wich has the gutts,glory,ram lol
You have me beat, I push 5 miles of snow out to the county road here in Colorado. The wife drives a school bus so I'm out making a pass at 04:30 so she can make her route on time. FYI- I also do our summer road maintenance with my JD road grader. I do sometimes push snow with it chained up but without all wheel drive the 12ft blade at a angle tends to 'walk' the front end off the side of the road if I'm not paying attention. Go AWD if your wallet can take it...
Hi I heard you mentioned a skid steer with a snowblower before you purchase you should rent and try it out. I think you will be looking for something else after doing that with that amount of snow you don't have the horsepower get the job done. Guessing it would probably take you one day to go 8.5 miles. Snow blowers to move at any speed need large amounts of horsepower. A four-wheel-drive farm tractor with chains and a plow will go through quite a bit it looks like you need a snow wing also. That will push them large banks a snow back without falling in the ditch. You have lots of options road graders with plow and wing. County trucks with the same. I don't know how a two-wheel drive would handle those grades though even with chains. Just like the old days keeping some weight in the back of that four wheel drive truck will make a difference also on what you can do.
Thanks for the insight...I agree regarding the slow speed of the skid steer. Have thought of a tractor also. There is a grader in the works...more to come
Obviously you have never ran a high horsepower track skid with high flow. We have a takeuch tl 250 high flow and it pushes a 96 inch blower just fine. We're in the mountains of wv so we know snow as well. By the way we are all ready spring
Wrap some copper tubing around the exhaust and run it for your washer fluid... and most importantly keep about 2K+ of weight in the bed of the truck and you'll go though anything. I hated running chains. I've got the 3500 SRW version but with a little louder exhaust.
@@CGrahamWorks You know there are rigs that the copper tubing thing comes from the factory like that... there are also rigs that come with heated pads at the bottom of the washer tanks or they go though a small 12v heater. But the copper tubing thing is simple and works.
Having good winter tires with big lugs or cleats helps. When all else fails change work. Not sure what size 1 ton you have make sure you have enough weight in the tail end for traction
@@billvandorn5332 its an F450, we have our sanders on and they always full, so plenty of weight. Here in NW oregon where I work our snow is generally wet and heavy
A friend of mine plows private ranch roads in a mountainous area that gets regular large snowstorms like this. Years ago they gave up on pickup trucks with plows destroying themselves in just a season or two. They use a couple of old road grader all-wheel-drives with blades and front-mounted butterfly plows and a used 4WD front loader with a blade attachment that clamps to the bucket. Those machines were over a decade old when they bought them used and they've been using them for close to 20 years now and they're still going strong. My long time mechanic told me that one season of plowing with a pickup is equivalent to 10 years of normal wear on a pickup driveline, suspension, and engine.
Thanks for reaching out...I agree on your assessment! We have an older road grader in the works as we also realize that we are pushing our truck too much...being a non-profit, this is all we had to use but I agree that older commercial machines are the way to go.
Absolutely !!!
Here in FInland we use farmtractors with adjustable blade and blower, 6x6 Volvo etc. dumptrucks with front and belly blades and graders. We don't play at all with pickups (there is like few thousand registered in whole country). Small caliber equipment is basically nonexistent. Even private roads like in this, majority have some old tractor with a snowblower. I'm not saying it is wrong to use a heavy duty pickup especially like this on a private road, but we just don't get it, my home road is 5km private and our own maintenance and we simply do it with a 80's 4x4 Farmtractor (Fiat agri). Now in christmas 21, in less than two days we got 60cm of snow and it takes like 20 minutes to plow one lane, it is technically 2 lanes but just 4,5m wide and the blower is 2.5m wide. Those are lot cheaper than any car, and lasts forever, i got mine, used, 10 years ago for about 4000euro, ie. 6000 canadian dollars. First 4x4 tractor we had was a Soviet made Belarus from the 60's with 2m wide blower. That did the job for 40 years, and it was dirt cheap in the early 80's :) We don't even have any else use for them, they were just for keeping the road good. Fuel consumption is also a fraction. Only better side in Pickups is comfort. These tractors are quite horrible that are made 40+ years ago.
@@SergeyPRKL Your Wise . Smart !!!
nothing beats a road grader.
Now that's some deep snow! Good on ya for helping your neighbor out! ❄️ ☃️
I ended getting winter blades after constantly having to clear the ice buildup.Well done!!
Great job! Have fun.
I plowed the roads many years in Maine and I find you can not have any heat in the cab when the temperature is real low. Dress warm and keep the windshield cold. If you do the snow flies over the windshield and does not stick. Wet windshield builds ice.
Interesting.... I suppose if you dont thaw the snow it cant re-freeze on the windshield so that makes sense.
Same here man! Usually cracking the window even when it’s negative out just to stop from sweating 😅
Heated wiper blades
@@1STGeneral If you got them use them, if you don’t then run a cold windshield when you have cold temperatures and dry snow.
EXACTLY. Someone knows what’s it’s like. Lol
I just watched your promo video on your website. I love it. The world needs more Dave's like you!
One trick I learned to stop my windshield from freezing up and also causing ice on the wipers when snow is falling is to not use defrost. Keep the hot air off your windshield. Heat the truck with the dash or floor vents. When the windshield is cold the flying snow does not melt on it.
Your ministry is awesome. Keep up the great work Dave!
Thanks for your insight and encouragement! This ministry is why we are here!
Winter wipers also come in handy
Pull your sun visors down close to the windshield. It captures enough warm air to keep your windshield clear. I used to freeze up bad on the open prairies until I started to flip my visors. Your going slow enough it should help to warm the glass.
Genius
Good info!
Try to keep heat off your windshield then no snow melts on it
I do the same! He’s correct!
Cold on those prairies i hear....Went to Minnesota and the cold is a whole different thing compared to Maryland
I like how you give glory to God and that it is reflected in your language. Be blessed!!!
Thank you!
Great video!! Check out the heated wiper blades… they work wonders! By far my favorite update to my plow truck for conditions like this. 👍
Thanks! Will do!
That is one badass Ram!
By far the best plowing video I've seen. That rig impressed the hell out of me.
Thanks!
Good video, I used to drive a grader in Canada to open roads & also cut down the high banks , bull blade on front (width of machine) 14ft moldboard , 14ft wing ,set the bull blade about 4” of road , mold about 2” for first pass & if high banking , carry wing about 12-18”, depending on high of bank , about 10mph full throttle . As someone mentioned a grader or front end loader is best .
If you watch many snow plow vids , Sweden , Norway , etc , you will see that they use front end loaders & tractors with various attachments, & they put the hammer down & roll the snow back & when they use plows that can change direction always roll the snow down the mountain
Great insight, we do have a grader in the works...no wing but it does have the moldboard and a V-plow attached that is 11'wide and 8'high. This will dramatically help our snow removal process. Thanks for reaching out!
@@MentoringTimothy local inventor/hydraulic shop owner made a machine the township used , giant ~8' across snow blower on a truck if i recall. our township used it, total beast. my wife wrote a book , his life story, good read and this was a highlight in my mind
I appreciate you plowing as a ministry! I did that for years living in Willow Alaska and then in South Haven Michigan. I had a Dodge 3500 with a heavy steel10 foot BOSS VPLOW. I had the absolute pleasure of never taking money except for one client who really did have an extensive job on his property. Money wasn't tight for them so I reluctantly accepted gas money. For me it was just a passionate ministry! Now I live in Myrtle Beach South Carolina so the plowing days are done but for 13 years I was all over it! And both the truck and plow served me well! Great times!!
We love living up, thanks for reaching out!
I've always thought that the "snow plow prep package" should include a heated windshield, wipers, washer and a defrost switch that doesn't shut off. Or they should have a upgraded "commercial/extreme" prep package that does.
You don't wanna heated windshield, it will turn into water and make ice and then you will be constantly scraping ice
People that haven’t experienced true cold don’t understand how windshields can build ice. They think you should be able to turn the heat on full blast and put it on defrost. It doesn’t work like that when it’s really cold outside. You’re actually better off leaving the heat nearly off and dressing warm. Prevents the melting snow from instantly melting and forming ice. When the windshield is hit enough to instantly melt the falling/blowing snow... it will build layer upon layer of ice and you can end up with a big problem in a short time. It’s tricky to learn how to balance the melt/refreeze issues but once you’ve gotten a few northern winters under your belt... you’ll get it. Lol
Oh and if you think a wire heated windshield would be a benefit... it isn’t. We tried that already. Lol
@@jefffletcher1695 from my 40÷ years of experience, it's very much situational and conditions dependent. If it's super cold with a dry, blowing snow, keeping the windshield cold is best, but if it's hovering around the freezing mark anyway, the heated elements of that system are effective. But if 8 don't have them and can't get them, you can't pick what works best for the conditions.
@@TsunauticusIV 40+ years in Maine plowing snow. Trust me, I know the difference between -10 wind- blown and 33 degree cement dump snow falls. Having the options and knowing when to use them is key. There is a vast difference between plowing roads at 15-20mph and plowing driveways/ lots around and under trees and obstructions that also wildly change the dynamics.
If you don't have the equipment, you don't have the options. But you're right, having the options also allows you to make the wrong choices... that's where experience comes into play.
That is real ministry! God bless and keep you safe up there. There is little room for error. Godspeed!
Thanks for your comments!
Wow, our situations are so similar! I have to plow 8 miles of forest service road to get to my off grid home. I even have the same plow! And yes, I have to stop every mile or so to remove the snow buildup under the wiper blades. The floor heat with a window cracked as mentioned in the comments doesn’t work, but I might try installing heated wipers. At 5400 elevation, we get similar amounts of snow. The berms got so high that there was nowhere to put the snow until we eventually got snowed in and could not get to town. (We have supplies.) Even before watching your video we made plans to purchase a snowblower for our skid steer next season. Glad to hear that is what others are doing!
Thanks for reaching out and sharing...the challenge is real and our roads are narrow in spots and shaded so the snow stacks up...but, the beauty, the rawness of the land and having lots of challenges is truly a blessing to us. Stay in touch and thanks again for sharing.
I hope you have lots of emergency food and severecold weather gear in your truck plus satalite transmisster.
I’ve done a fair bit of snow plowing and a old guy gave me the tip that he turns off the defrost before he starts plowing. As long as the windshield and wipers stay cold it won’t ice up. The snow doesn’t melt on windshield and the wipers push it off easily. Turn heater to warm your feet only and crack a window to prevent fogging. Hours of plowing never having to stop to deice windshield and wipers.
Heated wipers are fairly easily bent up out of some fuel or brake line. They suck up a ton of engine heat too, though. You'll want valves on them. Check out pics of piston bullies and prinoth snowcats. Pickup trucks have shit defrost capabilities
Amazing Winter Landscape ! I'd hear "Vinterland - Welcome to my last Chapter" all day whileas plowing snow, or "Paysage d'Hiver - Im Wald", and shooting these cool Winterlandscapes with my camera, making a few stops for that. \m/
That is one awesome rig, works extremely well!!! Thanks for sharing!!!
Thanks! Having the extra power with a diesel when needed has helped us move snow in tough locations!
Beautiful snowy country!
Nice truck and plowing job!!
dude u are such a nice neighbor. plowing people out and leaving some anti freeze for the neighbor.
Extreme plowing. You have your work cut out for you that's for sure. Great video.
Thanks 👍
My dad used to put metal tracks over our skid-steer tires. It looks and sounds like an military tank. The tracks chewed through tires but we never got stuck.
Not a big deal defrost wind shield helps ! The rest was amazing! Best job for helping family ! Satisfying! In San Diego 70 degrees dreamy but wish I was there one week a mother ! Your pro end of story:)
Just had you pop up in my suggested feed and I'm glad you did especially with the Light shining through your words! Love finding fellow Believers on UA-cam! And your strategy about a plow and then a skidsteer with a blower is exactly what ill be doing!! Gonna binge watch your channel now!
Thanks for your kind words...it is all about HIM and not us...privileged to live where He has us.
@@MentoringTimothy Amen brother! HE determines our steps for sure!
All things have been done in the wisdom of Him who knows all things
As an ex-pat Canadian living in the Philippines you brought back some chilling moments. Thank you and stay warm and safe!
Glad you enjoyed it and enjoy some mangos for me!
I drive a 99 ram 3500 with a 9-1/2' hiniker v-plow on our 3 mile road in north Idaho. Does a great job.
I used to plow for a major newspaper in cleveland ohio as a on site contractor. No excuses for the parking lots and the garage roof parking to be covered in snow. Challenging and fun times. Kept a spray bottle of washer fluid in the cab just in case it would be freezing rain.
Man I need to move there. That’s amazing! Definitely have to depend on yourself and your neighbors!! You can’t make it alone out there. That must be awesome to live there!!
Neighbors are very important and a blessing when you are in trouble! It truly is a blessing to live here...lots of hard work but an incredible setting!
Ya'll should add a backwards-facing camera to see those nice lines run through the snow. Keep up the good work!
Good idea, thanks for sharing!
You’re a good man and it looks like an adventure.
Thanks!
I'll tell you this! You got the right truck for it.
You may try a cold weather bib for the grill, it should help your defrost on the windshield.
Looking at what you are doing there, and considering how far you are going, I would want to have a serious pair of snowshoes in that truck. A pair that would keep you up on top of that fluff. Take care. Thanks for the video.
You are correct...snowshoes are with me when the snow is deep. Thanks for the comment!
Rough access man, sturdy bastard that could keep this up year after year...
Just a thought I do when plowing long roads. I would dump to the down hill side of the road. Make it for that you don't load the uphill side. More snow storage on the downhill side. Also if the plow catches, it pushes you into the hill over off the edge.
That is the way we do it most times...the road was closing in and I was looking for all the additional room I could make by dumping on both sides.
Awesome snow plowing footage! Looks like a fun place to be up in the Mountains!
Thanks, it is a beautiful setting!
my mother told the story of a local guy in Kennebunk Maine using his own Diamond T truck to plow snow for the town in area west of town where the snow was so deep he lost track of where the road was and just plowed a new " road" out through the pucker brush. Hey, it was level ground.
Yessah
This was fun to watch. Thanks.
Glad you enjoyed it!
Hey, from NH and you have summer wiper blades. If you get winter blades there on where ice can build up man. You need em plowing for sure
very nice video. Shoot, at that point for inroad length. Might as well have a sled set for deep snow with a wide skis and deep paddles to take into town. I know it would stinks to have to bundle up for every trip... and other issues that could arrise.
This is best plow truck commercial ever. Better than that fake shit we see on tv now!
Very impressive!
I live up in northern Canada and plow up here . When I saw you chain up that truck I thought " chains really? " . Then near the end of the video when you were in the deep stuff I though " Ok I get it now ." Wow that some deep snow .
I always change my wiper blades right around the first snow fall and keep the old ones in the truck for spares. If you tear one it can make a big vis problem. Even if you run the good one on the Driver's side you will score the windshield. It's cheap insurance.
Neat plow. Sounds like you have a pretty awesome ministry.
Thanks, not easy at times but young men need older men to speak into their lives. The snow has been coming heavy this November, it will likely be a huge year of snow for us!
Great video thanks
I see you have the same problem as I have when plowing. Windshield freeze up as well as the wipers. My next plow truck will have heated mirrors. I can deal with the snow but freezing rain makes backing up impossible. You do a great job plowing uphill.
Thanks for your comments!
Plowing so hard on trucks, thanks for the video
Yes it is...larger, commercial equipment is much better with our road conditions and the amount of snow.
moved from ohio to atlanta 14 years ago. Used to plow with my brother and Dad sometimes all night taking turns in an old Ford. Aah I miss those times and I miss Dad.
Sorry for your loss, glad the video brought back some good memories
that truck is a beast
Get a Unimog with a double auger 8 foot blower. I have a single auger 8 foot blower on my tractor that works really well as well. The Unimog you could drive to other jobs if you were clearing several roads.
Wrong, plowing is the fastest. I plow 10foot v blade and long driveways. Tried everything. Plowing is byfar the quickest for these types of roads.
@@TheDirtyBirchTrails It’s not always about finishing fast, some guys are all about finishing fast…🤦♂️.
A blower doesn’t leave berms and ridges on the side of the road or driveway, if you have a long snowy winters those berms only encourage drifting. A blower gets the snow away from the road or driveway…it may be a bit slower but it’s definitely worth the the time.
Nice rig! Need to invest in some Anco winter wiper blades.
Greetings from alaska, having seen your video this reminds of when I plowed up to thirty miles of borough roads here in alaska. All I used here was cat 12F graders aka gear jammers manual transmissions cheep on fuel these machines had a 14 ft moboard, belly blade I also put front push blades on the three that I had. You could buy these graders for 6 to 12 thousand all day long here, I think this would be a better bet than wearing out your new truck. a dam site cheaper for sure, all & all I love your video it brings back good memories thanks.
Thanks for reaching out. We were donated a 79' 12G that we will be using this year. It came with a massive V-plow but we will likely only need to use the 14ft moboard. Did you chain up all 6 tires? Thanks for your kind comments and glad it brought back some good memories!
to add the grader is valuable of maintaining the road after winter and before etc. belly dump gravel at 20 mph and follow with the grader for a finish that's hard to beat.
@@MentoringTimothy
I use a small AWD 8,000 pound 18 foot long motor grader with 10 foot front blade and 10 foot mold board. I angle the front blade one way and the mold board the other way to offset each other and it plows very straight for the first center pass. It will digest about 2 feet of heavy wet on the first pass. The front blade takes down the first half one way, then the mold board takes the second half the other way. Max forward tilt on both blades to roll the snow. Then finish up with a pass down each side with one side of the grader on the dry road center and both blades angled to the same side of the road. I don't need chains, yet. I did put large caster gauge wheels behind each corner of both blades for gravel roads. I plow at about 10 mph.
Cutting down the massive V-plow might be a good option.
I live in Eastern Canada, with lots of wet heavy snow, yours is not as heavy to push, but with snow that deep most contractors use front end loaders or heavy back hoes with 10ft snow blades to push or pile for a job that big. Pick ups your size are usually used for parking lots, and even then the maintaince for front end parts alone, usually sets you back thousands of dollars per season. In fact I am putting ball joints and u joints in a 2500 like your's now for this winter. private drive way! Must be hard on the truck when those chains load up. Cheer's H
Your part of the country is seeing more precipitaiton due to a warming climate and the AMOC sending up warmer water from the Equator.
Great Video! I want to go buy a Ram now!
Love it! That Ram slammed right through it!
Thanks!
I plow my own drive as well, but not 8 miles. When we had our Wyoming ranch it was 10 miles of wind blown hell most winters. Live in the northern Michigan unfortunately n use my bobcat with chains on back. Ice build up on hills ca n be nasty. I really like your plow, n nice n warm to boot.
@Corey OBrien Hey Corey, where abouts are you? I'm outside Gaylord, but was a Wyoming guy for most of my life. Just got our first snow last night.
Taka zima jest piękna
Chain all 4...that's serious !!!
You need to get heated wiper blades, yup they make them and they work great!
Thanks for the insight!
If you knew the man on the camera. What a stud.
The snow plow packages should have electric heaters, like rear window defrosters, under the area of the windshield where the wipers rest. A friends Mercedes has an electrically heated windshield that would be a great option.
Cummins diesel is the powerplant of choice for plowing & towing
ANCO makes great winter blades that never get snow caught up. I even use them in Arizona. 😂
Thanks for the insight!
I've got over 20 years of snow plowing experience heavy duty municipality be it state or County plowing on paved roadways as well as mountain roads and it's best not to windrow your snow on the uphill side any more than absolutely necessary because once it's there you can't move it always pull away from the bank and throw to the downhill side is generally your best option it's not always possible but that is something that is a highly advisable but eight and a half miles that's a good push with a pickup plow you can still do a heck of a lot
And having the blades leading edge angled on the downhill side could be a accident waiting to happen if the corner bit catches something it could pull the front end hard to the right and it’s over the edge you go, not much time to react at 30 mph or faster.
@@bluethunder1951 Ya, I didn't like that plow angle at all. I've had my extended cab long box with ice breaker chains on thrown right off the road before because of that.
@@69jbr69 for sure, my driveway is a mile long with a 10% grade down a steep river valley with a 3-1 steep slope on the road side, so I always blade from the high bank side to the river side, it’s to easy to catch a frozen edge and get pulled over the edge.
Could not agree more.
@@bluethunder1951 Can you explain what you mean about the plow angle? I didn't understand from what you said but I'm curious if ever I have to do it I don't want it to happen to me.
There are variables, but ALWAYS begin plowing a storm in full V, in heavier storms you'd want to be in full V with the plow lifted a little off the ground....higher off the ground for more snow......less high for less snow. If you plow starting just with the blade angled to one side and the road is less than 2 blade widths wide, you end up with more snow on that side and it's much harder on the truck, more chance of the rear of the truck shifting sideways, more chance getting stuck, more chance to hurt the transmission/transfer case etc. You can bias being a little left or a little right of center depending on the slope of the terrain. Ideally you'd want to bias being a little closer to the uphill side so that most of the snow you plow would end up on the downhill side. A lot of the snow you are plowing you are pushing on the upslope side which is pinching a lot of snow to that side, the snow won't have anywhere to go. That size pickup and plow can only windrow so high and then the road will be forced over to the downslope side. That makes no sense. Full V, keep on the left side of the road for most of what you see in this video, then turn around at the top, angle the blade full left and come down at a decent clip and most that snow will windrow way off the road. That way if any crazy snow events come, you've made room for it. Also having the snow banked up on the downslope side acts kind of like a guardrail. That downhill side of the slope you'd want to plow when traveling down hill. Windshield will freeze less if you have it on full defrost, full hot, fan close to high and keep the wiper speed up. You want at least 800 pounds of counterweight. Counterweight is ballast that is behind the rear fulcrum which is the rear axle. All counterweight is ballast, not all ballast is counterweight. Great video.
Appreciate your insight!
This is good info, but I would add that the full V keeps the truck straight because equal pressure each side, less chance of hitting’ the banks and getting stuck. Really, this is the whole purpose of having a V. I’d look for heated wipers too.
Interesting. My Tundra cannot have chains on font wheels! You are spot on about the skid steer though. We have a 7ft blower on ours, the two negatives being slower speed and gravel which plays havoc n the second stage f you don't keep it off the ground. Having both plow and blower is perfect.
Why no chains on the front?
@@justinmartin8887 The owners manual specifically states 'no chains on the front tires'. I believe it is because there is not enough clearance between the tire and brake components but not sure.
Yes pull sun visor down to hold heat on windshield. I cut convoy belts an put them on top of the plow to stop the spray just bolt to top edge an an let hang over
Been thinking of buying a snowblower too for my roads in Vermont. Don’t quite have the elev you guys got there but run out of room in a hurry with the snow banks. But woowee, they dont give skiddy snowblows away! But cheaper alternative than a beast dump truck or a loader. Giving that Ram a helluva workout there! Last year we got 247” of the white stuff. Skiing was unreal, snowmobiling a touch treacherous
Thanks for sharing! We now have a road grader with a 11'x8' V-plow.
So glad I finally got a snow blower for our tractor over previously plowing our 1/4 mile drive with a 1/2 ton PU. It does a sweet job and the snow need not ever be touched again. (Maine)
For that kind of snow the 18” deflector keeps most of the snow off the windshield. Worth every penny.
Thanks for the insight, mine are 12" I think
I only had to chain up the left front tire when it was very slick. Sounds like that 12G will do the job, note the circle reverse gear is weak an can strip if turn while under load.
You need heated wiper blade. When i drove a semi they were a life saver. Turn defroster on high heat med fan and roll window down alittle so you don't get too hot.
I want to publicly thank you for not being afraid to acknowledge and praise God for the provisions He has given you. You are an inspiration. Keep up the good work brother.
Thanks for the encouragement...what we do is not about us but about Him.
What works for me when traversing through white out conditions.. wearing polar sunglasses makes it easy to see your path easily.
That looks like yeti country
I have also found that to really help!
Good job 8.5 miles with a truck Dodge should use you for a sales commercial .
People forget to clear those vents near the hood. Plus Rainx fluid helps. Good job!!
Thanks, there is always an opportunity to learn new things!
Tractor with cab and front mount snow blower and you are good!!
Joel The past 2 days I saw our Tractors being Spotted around for winter , Big V Plow and a Cover wrapping the Driver . Short axle Shafts and Tall Tractors , It has worked great for Decades .
Many residents on my street (5 miles past me) deal with this type of road every year! One of the lower homes set up a lean-two for the others because they finally decided to get tracked SXSs (or snowmobile). And they drive that and park at either end. This is in the Idaho Panhandle. I'm getting ready for it now....but I'm never in it this bad.
Thanks for your comments...the panhandle gets snow like we do
Rain-X is good in the summer as far as keeping water just flowing off your windows but it’s even better in the winter; been plowing for decades and always start the season with a good couple of coats of Rain-X on the outside and their anti-fog on the inside; I also run their anti-freeze and don’t have issues regardless of the temp or if I’m plowing with a the windows up or one down.
The skid-steer or a track-steer with a snow plowed is great for clearing a road or just clearing some shoulder space; one note I would have, if you have the option, would be to go with a Volvo or JCB as both offer side door entry as going over, or under, an icee snow blower can lead to a dangerous condition. And make sure you have high flow hydro lids otherwise you’ll always be behind the 8-ball with a snow blower. I like a 4-in-1 bucket as you can both plow and move snow quite easily and it can put a lot of power in a small area to allow it to even handle ice piles.
Thanks for sharing and your insight, appreciate it!
I have only been snow plowing for about up to 15 years. I have the Boss snow plows. They are about 20 years old, I have one v plow and one straight blade, I have had older straight blade Western plows which are quite light compared to the Boss plow, the Boss plow is heavy enough it stays down on the road without jumping up. Watching your video going up to the top, if it were me I would have the v plow in A V pushing a little bit uphill to the left and a little bit to the right which would be down hill. Then when you are going down from the top of the mountain push the rest of it straight down to the left which would be down the mountain which would keep the driveway open all winter and you could keep pushing it down that way to the left going down the mountain. In the video it looks like you're going up the mountain and pushing it all to the left to the high point of the road. Shove all of it that you can down the hill .
Thanks for your insight!
Beautiful country
Thanks, we love it here!
Deicer in your windshield sprayers works wonders
Beautiful...
Thanks for watching
So cool 😎
My boy got the wheel fr 😂
I have an 04 ram 2500 & the defrosters are too far back. The wipers freeze a lot, Might get heated ones some day. Just one more thing i do is put a sealable drum of sand in the back for ballast & if you get in a jam you have sand on hand.
I like the idea of a sealable drum, I currently have nearly 1000lbs in sand bags but they freeze making it hard to remove if needed.
Nothing beats up a truck more than Snowplowing . Any truck . Towing is a breeze . Pushing a heavy steal weight against the ground does damage eventually. Especially commercial plowing parkin lots etc. Forward reverse over and over .
I agree!
Awesome video and what a great plow truck! Take care of it and it will plow for many more years.
Thanks for your comments! Plowing is so hard on a truck, especially remote logging roads like ours, We are trying to take good care of it so it will last a long time!
That rams a beast !
yeah we have 2 diesel ones 3500 and 5500 the best better then a piece a junk fords i see fords broken down with a plow on it and rear end of it down to the ground with the spreader on it wich we allways laugh when we see it and where glad we use dodge wich has the gutts,glory,ram lol
@@michaelmactavish1728 I was always a Ford guy, then i bought a 2019 Ram 1500 with the hemi Love the truck !!
Damn that's some snow
You have me beat, I push 5 miles of snow out to the county road here in Colorado. The wife drives a school bus so I'm out making a pass at 04:30 so she can make her route on time.
FYI- I also do our summer road maintenance with my JD road grader. I do sometimes push snow with it chained up but without all wheel drive the 12ft blade at a angle tends to 'walk' the front end off the side of the road if I'm not paying attention.
Go AWD if your wallet can take it...
Hi I heard you mentioned a skid steer with a snowblower before you purchase you should rent and try it out. I think you will be looking for something else after doing that with that amount of snow you don't have the horsepower get the job done. Guessing it would probably take you one day to go 8.5 miles. Snow blowers to move at any speed need large amounts of horsepower. A four-wheel-drive farm tractor with chains and a plow will go through quite a bit it looks like you need a snow wing also. That will push them large banks a snow back without falling in the ditch. You have lots of options road graders with plow and wing. County trucks with the same. I don't know how a two-wheel drive would handle those grades though even with chains. Just like the old days keeping some weight in the back of that four wheel drive truck will make a difference also on what you can do.
Thanks for the insight...I agree regarding the slow speed of the skid steer. Have thought of a tractor also. There is a grader in the works...more to come
Obviously you have never ran a high horsepower track skid with high flow. We have a takeuch tl 250 high flow and it pushes a 96 inch blower just fine. We're in the mountains of wv so we know snow as well. By the way we are all ready spring
I wish you hadn't sped through that chain install. I'd bet a lot of people in a different climate would like to see how we do it.
My experience plowing deep snow with an older truck is that chains on the front axle can snap the u-joints and axle.
So true!
I would look at a small road grader with a v plow. It can also be used to crown the road and grade in the summer.
This is currently in the works...
Wrap some copper tubing around the exhaust and run it for your washer fluid... and most importantly keep about 2K+ of weight in the bed of the truck and you'll go though anything. I hated running chains. I've got the 3500 SRW version but with a little louder exhaust.
get -55 wiper fluid with deicer in it and no need for something so home made
@@CGrahamWorks You know there are rigs that the copper tubing thing comes from the factory like that... there are also rigs that come with heated pads at the bottom of the washer tanks or they go though a small 12v heater. But the copper tubing thing is simple and works.
@@georgesimpson3113 I will be honest I have never seen or herd of that, something neat to look into because just living where i am that be usefull
Nice dodge truck and boss plow
Thanks 👍
куртка зачетная!!!
I'm impressed how that 1 ton pushed. I run an F450 when I plow and it doesn't push like that. I might have to break a chain up one of these days
Having good winter tires with big lugs or cleats helps. When all else fails change work. Not sure what size 1 ton you have make sure you have enough weight in the tail end for traction
@@billvandorn5332 its an F450, we have our sanders on and they always full, so plenty of weight. Here in NW oregon where I work our snow is generally wet and heavy
@@dougcooper5740 your snow is usually rain, i road bicycle to school for 4 years in that crap lol salem
@@galehess6676 its not rain on the mountain
@@dougcooper5740 just joking. The regular 40F and rain stood out in memory. I did not live on Hood, too windy