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In like a Lion
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<blockquote data-quote="Logan52" data-source="post: 1798279" data-attributes="member: 32879"><p>What a strange winter here in central Kentucky. Cold early with bitter cold and and snow on Christmas. Since then it has alternated between cold and warm with no snow. Plenty of rain but a major wind event about once a week. A drive across the area reveals numbers of large trees down, along with several barns, many a hundred years old or older.</p><p>Despite the plentiful rain the ground stayed drier than normal due to the wind and I was able to feed without the normal mudholes and damage.</p><p>Grass greened up in February (much earlier than normal) but freezes and cold nights have prolonged the period of winter feeding. It was 85 degrees here earlier in the week, now raining in the 40s. Still windy.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Logan52, post: 1798279, member: 32879"] What a strange winter here in central Kentucky. Cold early with bitter cold and and snow on Christmas. Since then it has alternated between cold and warm with no snow. Plenty of rain but a major wind event about once a week. A drive across the area reveals numbers of large trees down, along with several barns, many a hundred years old or older. Despite the plentiful rain the ground stayed drier than normal due to the wind and I was able to feed without the normal mudholes and damage. Grass greened up in February (much earlier than normal) but freezes and cold nights have prolonged the period of winter feeding. It was 85 degrees here earlier in the week, now raining in the 40s. Still windy. [/QUOTE]
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