. Cranberries; : the national cranberry magazine. Cranberries. inJioHjfuul FROZEN FRESH WHOLE INDIAN TRAIL INC. P. O. Box 710 Wisconsin Rapids, Wis. as tne excessive showers through- out July. WISCONSIN December Warm December was warm and wet, with a wide range of weather that compared somewhat with the weather extremes the State nad all during the past year. Tempera- tures averaged degrees over the state normal of and inches above normal inches. The first two weeks were sunny and warm, followed by snow, rain and fog coupled with flood condi- tions in some areas. The warmest


. Cranberries; : the national cranberry magazine. Cranberries. inJioHjfuul FROZEN FRESH WHOLE INDIAN TRAIL INC. P. O. Box 710 Wisconsin Rapids, Wis. as tne excessive showers through- out July. WISCONSIN December Warm December was warm and wet, with a wide range of weather that compared somewhat with the weather extremes the State nad all during the past year. Tempera- tures averaged degrees over the state normal of and inches above normal inches. The first two weeks were sunny and warm, followed by snow, rain and fog coupled with flood condi- tions in some areas. The warmest day occurred on the 16th when a record 57 degrees was recorded. Very heavy snow fell in the south on the 22nd and in the far north on the 27th. An oddity of the month was the sighting of a tor- nado cloud near Milwaukee on the 9th. A heavy rain in the central and south of almost an inch of rain caused flooding on the 27th and very heavy fog. The outlook for January was for below normal temperatures and precipitation. Extremes During the Year A brief resume of the years weather was that it went from one extreme to the other from month to month. However, the overall statistics do not reflect the wide weather spread. State aver- ages for the year were degrees compared to normal or a dif- ference of and inches of precipitation compared to normal inches or a difference of plus inches. It was one of the coldest and snowiest winters in years, one of the most distress- ing Augusts ever, no Indian sum- mer, record cold in November and winding up as one of the mildest Decembers on record. SnowfaU was double normal in the south and less than half for the north. Deep frost held the vines back, but ab- normal temperatures in May started the vines going thru a warm summer, with earlv bloom. a good set and large berries. State Average Final crop figures for the state ihow a production of 440,000 bbls. [or an average of bbls. per acre. Berries were


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