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A frozen morning along Lake Michigan
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Feb 10, 2021 18:13:50   #
CHG_CANON Loc: the Windy City
 
Thank you Tom, Runninglate, Jim, David, Vince, Mike, Jeff, Earnest, Ernesto, vcmestimator, Ballard, Bill, Susan, Mark, crafterwantabe, Moondoggie, joecichjr! There occasional is discussion of the changes in the winter weather in Chicago. I can speak only from 1990. The difference typically noted is the winter used to be an even blanket of 5+ inches of snow on the ground through the winter. I grew up mostly in states touching the Great Lakes, including Pennsylvania, New York, Michigan, Indiana and Ohio before moving to Chicago. Some of my places were "north" of the winter snow line, so it's hard for me to assess if things have changed in my 30+ years.

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Feb 10, 2021 18:47:51   #
Nitroclimber Loc: Nebraska
 
Just when I thought I couldn't feel any colder in Lincoln, NE your pictures did the trick! Excellent set!!

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Feb 11, 2021 10:46:25   #
CHG_CANON Loc: the Windy City
 
Nitroclimber wrote:
Just when I thought I couldn't feel any colder in Lincoln, NE your pictures did the trick! Excellent set!!


LOL and thank you Nitroclimber! We're getting some fresh snow as I look out the window.

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Feb 11, 2021 13:14:02   #
Sinewsworn Loc: Port Orchard, WA
 
CHG_CANON wrote:
Chicago’s longest string of subzero days is 10, logged more than a century ago in January 1912.

Frozen Lake Michigan by Paul Sager, on Flickr


Chicago is currently in a stretch of cold where temps are forecasted to stay below 40F well into late February 2021, a cold stretch we haven't experienced since 1985.

Frozen Lake Michigan


Ice balls can usually be seen in late December and early January when temperatures fall into the teens and single digits. Cold temperatures cause heavy lake-effect snow to form a layer of floating slush on the lake. Wave action sculpts the slush into spheres.

Frozen Lake Michigan


All images shared in this post were captured starting around 7:00am Saturday February 6, 2021 along the shore of Lake Michigan at Chicago's Belmont Harbor. The RAW images were processed in Adobe Lightroom 6 with an HDR effect from Topaz Adjust. The EF 70-200mm f/4L was used with an EOS 5DIII.

Frozen Lake Michigan


Chicago's Lake Park was renamed to Lincoln Park in 1865 after Lincoln’s assassination.

Frozen Lake Michigan


Archery exploded in popularity in the 1870s and several locations were founded in Lincoln Park. The Lincoln Park Archery Range has been located near Belmont Harbor since the 1930s.

Lincoln Park Archery Range


During the Great Chicago Fire, started on the night of October 8, 1871, the fire swept through the city along a four-mile corridor. Three hundred people died, 100,000 were made homeless and 17,500 buildings were destroyed. Chicago roared back to life following the disaster. The city centre was laid out on a new grid. New forms of fireproof construction went rivet-on-rivet with the latest building materials and components.

Frozen Lake Michigan


Charged with bringing their city back to life and pre-eminence, and to outdo New York, Chicago’s architects used the newest mass-produced, high quality, low-cost steel to build sky high. Until the mid-19th century, five stories had been the normal maximum height of commercial and residential buildings. The world’s first skyscraper was the 10-story Home Insurance Company completed in 1884. Chicago now has 52 building standing 600 feet or taller (183 meter). The former Hancock Tower is 100 floors and is now the 5th tallest building in Chicago and the 13th tallest in the USA.

Frozen Lake Michigan


Snowmen appear in European literature as far back as the 1300s. In North America they tend to have three spheres representing the head, torso, and lower body, while in the UK they tend to have only two.

Future so bright gonna need shades


These images are sized to fill your wide-screen display. Try using <F11> to maximize your browser window for the full effect. If the images overshoot your display, such as a laptop, just click on the image or the URL link and they'll resize to your screen from the host Flickr site. You can click a bit further into the image details on the Flickr page, if desired. EXIF data is available from the host Flickr pages as well. On the Flickr site, use your <L>key for Large and the <F11> for the full-screen.
Chicago’s longest string of subzero days is 10, lo... (show quote)


Great, Cold set! Wonderful colors and detail-thanx for sharing.

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Feb 12, 2021 06:58:55   #
Stephan G
 
CHG_CANON wrote:
Chicago’s longest string of subzero days is 10, logged more than a century ago in January 1912.

Frozen Lake Michigan by Paul Sager, on Flickr


Chicago is currently in a stretch of cold where temps are forecasted to stay below 40F well into late February 2021, a cold stretch we haven't experienced since 1985.

Frozen Lake Michigan


Ice balls can usually be seen in late December and early January when temperatures fall into the teens and single digits. Cold temperatures cause heavy lake-effect snow to form a layer of floating slush on the lake. Wave action sculpts the slush into spheres.

Frozen Lake Michigan


All images shared in this post were captured starting around 7:00am Saturday February 6, 2021 along the shore of Lake Michigan at Chicago's Belmont Harbor. The RAW images were processed in Adobe Lightroom 6 with an HDR effect from Topaz Adjust. The EF 70-200mm f/4L was used with an EOS 5DIII.

Frozen Lake Michigan


Chicago's Lake Park was renamed to Lincoln Park in 1865 after Lincoln’s assassination.

Frozen Lake Michigan


Archery exploded in popularity in the 1870s and several locations were founded in Lincoln Park. The Lincoln Park Archery Range has been located near Belmont Harbor since the 1930s.

Lincoln Park Archery Range


During the Great Chicago Fire, started on the night of October 8, 1871, the fire swept through the city along a four-mile corridor. Three hundred people died, 100,000 were made homeless and 17,500 buildings were destroyed. Chicago roared back to life following the disaster. The city centre was laid out on a new grid. New forms of fireproof construction went rivet-on-rivet with the latest building materials and components.

Frozen Lake Michigan


Charged with bringing their city back to life and pre-eminence, and to outdo New York, Chicago’s architects used the newest mass-produced, high quality, low-cost steel to build sky high. Until the mid-19th century, five stories had been the normal maximum height of commercial and residential buildings. The world’s first skyscraper was the 10-story Home Insurance Company completed in 1884. Chicago now has 52 building standing 600 feet or taller (183 meter). The former Hancock Tower is 100 floors and is now the 5th tallest building in Chicago and the 13th tallest in the USA.

Frozen Lake Michigan


Snowmen appear in European literature as far back as the 1300s. In North America they tend to have three spheres representing the head, torso, and lower body, while in the UK they tend to have only two.

Future so bright gonna need shades


These images are sized to fill your wide-screen display. Try using <F11> to maximize your browser window for the full effect. If the images overshoot your display, such as a laptop, just click on the image or the URL link and they'll resize to your screen from the host Flickr site. You can click a bit further into the image details on the Flickr page, if desired. EXIF data is available from the host Flickr pages as well. On the Flickr site, use your <L>key for Large and the <F11> for the full-screen.
Chicago’s longest string of subzero days is 10, lo... (show quote)


Looking at the skyline shots, I am reminded that there are a "whole bunch" of buildings that popped up since my childhood (1955-1969) growing up in the Chi-West area in Chicago.

Keep on sharing the shooting. Have been enjoying your series.

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Feb 12, 2021 07:49:06   #
CHG_CANON Loc: the Windy City
 
Thank you timothy, Stephan! I'm temped to head out again this weekend with air temps at 5F or lower ... or maybe not.

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Feb 12, 2021 14:23:11   #
tainkc Loc: Kansas City
 
CHG_CANON wrote:
Thank you Tom! There's stories from back in the day, when men were men like the 1800s, the ice would freeze thick enough for the foolhardy to walk from Chicago across the lake to Michigan proper. I was down around North Ave after our initial big snow a few weeks ago, and again fell through the thick snow to my hip, wetting a boot. I'm always wary of being out on the ice.
I hope you are o.k.. I don't miss it. By the way, I used to live just a block north of North Avenue on Normandy.

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Feb 14, 2021 16:23:57   #
Cwilson341 Loc: Central Florida
 
Beautiful series, Paul. The first two are gorgeous. I love the green building and all the cityscapes, too!

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Feb 16, 2021 20:51:51   #
CHG_CANON Loc: the Windy City
 
Thank you tainkc, Carol! They're making a big deal that the 36-inch winter average of snow has hit in just the past 3 weeks.

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