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Tuesday, February 11, 2014

PRUDEN: The end of the snow job

PRUDEN: The end of the snow job

Mugshot

While Lauren Berthiaume, right, shovels her sidewalk, her 17-month-old daughter Rylie Bartusek prefers eating the snow, Wednesday, Feb. 5, 2014, in Worcester, Mass. (AP Photo/Worcester Telegram & Gazette, 

Steve Lanava)

Some of our snow is said to be missing, though you couldn’t tell it if you looked around in one of the harshest winters in decades. The sky has been falling nearly everywhere, and 67 percent of North America now lies under a blanket of white. It’s a thin blanket in places, but it’s almost twice the size as this time last year.

Life is particularly tough on the Great Lakes. Lake Superior is 92 percent frozen over, breaking the February record set two decades ago, and it’s getting worse, unless you’re an ice fisherman, in which case it’s getting better.

They’re expecting even more ice this week in a region where winter is always miserable. The coyotes apparently like it, however, and were seen strolling on the ice on Lake Michigan last week, just off Chicago. Perhaps they were stalking deer.

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