Nym
Free Ranging
I need to see this silkie tumbleweed phenomenon .. it sounds quite funny to witness, as long as they don't get hurtI know I shouldn’t chuckle at that but I have had to rescue my tumbleweeds from time to time…. Poor pookies!

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I need to see this silkie tumbleweed phenomenon .. it sounds quite funny to witness, as long as they don't get hurtI know I shouldn’t chuckle at that but I have had to rescue my tumbleweeds from time to time…. Poor pookies!
It's always confused me too. I don't get it how it has recently been -30F, yet humidity was 65-80% most of those days.That is very interesting ..humidity in winter, I imagine winter to be cold cold, I have not experience humidity in winter. Our winter here is cold air, no snow so it is not that cold compare to your snowy winter.
I am trying to imagine humidity with cold air.....nope, not seeing or feeling it.
That is to show the world is big, what looks like something it might be different when one is living in it and experiencing moment by moment of the many differences.
I also looked it up, and like the corn sweat rule better!It's always confused me too. I don't get it how it has recently been -30F, yet humidity was 65-80% most of those days.
Right now, it's 29F, gusts 33 mph, and humidity is 71%.
So I finally looked up why. It's a phenomenon called "corn sweat." Apparently, the abundance of corn grown here, plus other crops, is a big reason. The proximity of the Great Lakes is a contributing factor too. Lake Michigan is closest at 45 miles.
Thanks for raising the question as it always made me wonder too but I just never looked it up!
A lot of us did. I've lived some 60 years in the Midwest and never remember hearing about corn sweat!Thank you for looking it up, I learn something new today.![]()
I can imagine that, the top of the corn plant might look dead, but it is still alive underground and doing its thing. The wonder of nature.A lot of us did. I've lived some 60 years in the Midwest and never remember hearing about corn sweat!
It must continue to give off moisture even in its harvested or dead state. There's a field of it across the road they never harvested. Most do. I presume it's harvested in spring for silage.
OgMaGosh! I am SO stealing this line. I have friends "down there" who will both groan and rant about it ... all at the same time!That is pretty sad, but I thought of something funny it sure Sounds like mobile is become immobile
Don't be surprised if that field gets totally plowed under in the spring. Silage is usually harvested before the dead of winter. My BIL farmer monitors the moisture to get the best yield. Too early and the silage rots. Too late and it won't ferment and molds. If it's left all winter, there's no nutrition in it. My guess is that something sidetracked your neighbor's harvest - weather, illness, equipment or crop failure.A lot of us did. I've lived some 60 years in the Midwest and never remember hearing about corn sweat!
It must continue to give off moisture even in its harvested or dead state. There's a field of it across the road they never harvested. Most do. I presume it's harvested in spring for silage.
It's sharecropped, so my neighbor doesn't know what the heck that dude is doing, ever.Don't be surprised if that field gets totally plowed under in the spring. Silage is usually harvested before the dead of winter. My BIL farmer monitors the moisture to get the best yield. Too early and the silage rots. Too late and it won't ferment and molds. If it's left all winter, there's no nutrition in it. My guess is that something sidetracked your neighbor's harvest - weather, illness, equipment or crop failure.
Then again, maybe it was a (very expensive) way to encourage deer and turkeys. If that's what's up, then I'm betting your neighbor and their friends/families all have full freezers!