I drove the 136 miles to Mount Carroll the other day to check on the luminaries, and to discuss with the Historical Society the idea of moving them indoors during the winter to different locations around Carroll County. Here are a couple of low-res cellphone photos of the luminaries in the snow:
They are surviving the first blast of Illinois winter remarkably well. More than six inches of snow fell in the last week, and temperatures at night having been getting down near zero Fahrenheit. For you centigrade-thinking people, that is what we scientists refer to as 'fucking cold'. Yet, apart from a slight bowing to the lids, the wood of the frames looks fine, as do the plexiglass panels. But I don't want to push our luck by leaving them out all winter, so I'm going to arrange for them to spend a few months at a time in public buildings in the area.
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They are surviving the first blast of Illinois winter remarkably well. More than six inches of snow fell in the last week, and temperatures at night having been getting down near zero Fahrenheit. For you centigrade-thinking people, that is what we scientists refer to as 'fucking cold'. Yet, apart from a slight bowing to the lids, the wood of the frames looks fine, as do the plexiglass panels. But I don't want to push our luck by leaving them out all winter, so I'm going to arrange for them to spend a few months at a time in public buildings in the area.
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