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#19826346 10/10/24
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What is the coldest temperature you ever experienced in Alaska? For me it was -63F when we lived in North Pole. To the best of my memory it was the winter of 79/80. I do remember trying to start my Ford truck and the fan belt shattered into a hundred pieces or so. Tried to change it but my eye lids froze shut. Ended up going back inside and waiting a day or so until it warmed up to -40.


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Fairbanks, Ladd AFB, in about 1955. 56 below and I delivered the Daily News Miner in the 2 trailer parks on base.

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56 degrees below January first mid 1980's Lake Louise.


ALASKA is a "HARD COUNTRY for OLDMEN". (But if you live it wide'ass open, balls'to the wall, the pedal floored, full throttle, it is a delightful place, to finally just sit-back and savor those memories while sipping Tequila).
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-62F in Ambler,Alaska in 1996 with constant 40mph wind from north. Windchill was -110f. It was cold enough to kill caribou. Completely, 100% miserable.

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The coldest I ever had, was about -22 in Fairbanks when I had to change a water pump on my Hilux outside.


If you take the time it takes, it takes less time.
--Pat Parelli

American by birth; Alaskan by choice.
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Originally Posted by Snowwolfe
What is the coldest temperature you ever experienced in Alaska? For me it was -63F when we lived in North Pole. To the best of my memory it was the winter of 79/80. I do remember trying to start my Ford truck and the fan belt shattered into a hundred pieces or so. Tried to change it but my eye lids froze shut. Ended up going back inside and waiting a day or so until it warmed up to -40.

I remember that winter, first one for me.

I had to drive my 69 ranchero to NP.

Power steering hose was broken and the door gasket was so stiff I couldn't get the door to latch.

Drove outside mid 80s with my wife and son, January, tried to spend the night in teslin, it was too cold to stop and sleep in the van, had to keep driving.

Thinking it was colder than -60.


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Sourdough, AK, 1969 on a caribou hunt we saw -64... I froze a toe that trip, which makes it memorable, but I have probably seen colder.

Or maybe it was standing next to the ex in court...


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Originally Posted by Sitka deer
Sourdough, AK, 1969 on a caribou hunt we saw -64... I froze a toe that trip, which makes it memorable, but I have probably seen colder.

Or maybe it was standing next to the ex in court...

colder than -64 is friggin cold.


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Late 60's, early 70's Fairbanks. -65 or so. Winter of 69 I think, the first 15 days of January AVERAGED 53 below. Warmed up to -35 and started snowing.

Pt Hope, early 70s. -50 with 50 mph wind.

Looked out the school window and there was a little kid maybe 8 years old, clinging to the flag pole, looking up to see if the flag was up, indicating school that day. It was not.

Some of their home lives were that bad.


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-68 Tok, Jan 2005 (according to a sign - probably not super accurate ).

Driving to the lower 48 in my F-150. Cardboard in the grill, scraping frost from the inside with a credit card. Lost rear t-case seal just before Beaver Creek. Serpentine belt flapping out of Haines Junction.

Limped into Haines for the ferry at 9am.

-48 at Ft Wainwright circa late 90’s, had to hang out on the flight line waiting for a fuel truck for over an hour… military cold weather gear then sucked.

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Well wasn't in Alaska but years ago crossing I80 in Nebraska it hit -65*. Froze up both fuel tanks and mechanic came out from Ogallala with equipment to thaw both tanks. Was a Freightliner with two 150gal tanks and each tank had a can of jet deicing fuel in them. According to the radio temp on Chicago that night hit -103*. In the service my last assignment was at Lakeside, Montana. Don't recall how cold it would get up there but my son was born on Dec 5, 1972 in Kalispell and the night he was born it was -20* outside!

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Negative 54 in North Pole 2004 I think.


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The coldest I've been was caribou hunting, via snow machine. The temperature in Cantwell was -33, when we started towards Alpine Creek Lodge. The wind was blowing so badly, it was warmer to stay on the machine and try to match the windspeed ripping down the Denali Hwy. If we did it right, we didn't really feel the wind until we stopped.

We saw a small group of caribou on our way to the lodge. We stopped and got setup. My brother was with me, and he'd never shot a big game animal. I told him that he could shoot whenever he was ready, and I'd take whatever was left. After several minutes, I looked over at him and asked, "Are you thinking what I'm thinking?" He replied, "It's too damned cold to deal with this. Let's just get to the lodge."

We ended up taking a caribou on our way out, a couple days later, when it warmed up to 13-below.


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Lived and worked year round for 2 years at Old Faithful YNP saw -50 F several times the 40 mile ride to West Yellowstone by late 80,s snowmachine was brutal no handwarmers used my elbows several times. Dodging the bison that took over the roads at night when the tourists were gone was rather sporting going past them as they tried to hook you! Dont enjoy the brutal cold any more!


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I don't recall the year, but it was a cold one in Fairbanks.

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At my place in North Pole.

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Seen mine bottom out at 60 many a times back in the late 80s.. 50 blow this past winter for 3 days , that's a real eye-opener for what was and has been...


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I've never been around in deep winter. Other things in my life at those times. Expect to in the future though. So -33 is the coldest temp. Which is the wind chill of the coldest I"ve seen in TX. -33 wind chill.

OTOH Sunday in TX it was 102. Yesterday it was 100. Today it was 101. I've taken off all the clothes I can. I'm still sweating. Keeping the house here at something comfortable like 60 or so when its that hot is not feasible or affordable and when you walk out its really miserable... Wind will be North at 4am so I'm ready for this bull hockey heat to go away.


We can keep Larry Root and all his idiotic blabber and user names on here, but we can't get Ralph back..... Whiskey Tango Foxtrot, over....
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The coldest I saw was 58below at Prudhoe Bay in 1985 - that's ambient - it was dead calm so no wind chill. I saw 100mph winds a couple of years later in Winter in the late '80s.... no telling what the wind chill factor was. Wind was so strong it blew roof panels off the modules and you could see the stars above. Thank God we never lost the fired heaters or else we would have been really f****d.


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Originally Posted by akbluz
The coldest I saw was 58below at Prudhoe Bay in 1985 - that's ambient - it was dead calm so no wind chill. I saw 100mph winds a couple of years later in Winter in the late '80s.... no telling what the wind chill factor was. Wind was so strong it blew roof panels off the modules and you could see the stars above. Thank God we never lost the fired heaters or else we would have been really f****d.
I've been in a tent in 110 mph gusts... thankfully it was a bit above freezing.


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Back in about 1979 or so before I knew better I was leaving Fairbanks in an old rice rocket. Eve. But on to Tok I go, -. I Clear Delta and things are fine but cold. then I get out the old sleeping to drive in. The 100-miles between Dela and Tok was not built up than and it was lonely worry about my car and me. I hit the flats outside of Tok and the car warms up! It was a nice warm -65 degrees there. In to Tok I go and decide to hit the Lodge for a quick one or two. I get out of my car and down I go! It seems that my feet had frozen and well as my hands. So I stagger in to the bar and sit down. After the first double is consumed and my hands are somewhat working decide to take my boots off. Well have you even pulled your sock off and had ice come off with them? Well the reaction of the crowd
said it all. They wanted to medivac me and all but it was too cod outside but I just said bring me another
drink please! so they did! The damage from the freezing of my hands and feet gave me pains for the next 5years or so. Oh I went to a Doctor and after I gave my list of ales ( 5 things including the freeze) and he examined the He said you're a wreck!


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I have pulled my socks off and had ice in the socks. You wouldn't believe where it happened to me. But my mother in law was aghast.


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In 72, Northway. Brother was racing in the Anchorage to Fairbanks MS600 snowmachine race. Northway was the overnight accommodations for our vehicles, all parked in the hangar. -60 on the thermometer hanging outside. Next day in Fairbanks showed -55.
On the way home, we stopped in Paxon to fill up vehicles. -12. Felt like tee-shirt weather. Amazing change...


"You've been here longer than the State of Alaska is old!"
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I was in the Air Force stationed at Galena back in 91-92. I remember one night at -56. One day I flew to Unalakleet with a friend. Temps were around -30 with winds 35-40kts. Wind chills close to -70. I hope to never feel anything like that again.

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Originally Posted by DonFischer
Well wasn't in Alaska but years ago crossing I80 in Nebraska it hit -65*. Froze up both fuel tanks and mechanic came out from Ogallala with equipment to thaw both tanks. Was a Freightliner with two 150gal tanks and each tank had a can of jet deicing fuel in them. According to the radio temp on Chicago that night hit -103*. In the service my last assignment was at Lakeside, Montana. Don't recall how cold it would get up there but my son was born on Dec 5, 1972 in Kalispell and the night he was born it was -20* outside!

Windchill I would guess as the Nebraska state record low is -47 from 1989

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Originally Posted by duckster
Originally Posted by DonFischer
Well wasn't in Alaska but years ago crossing I80 in Nebraska it hit -65*. Froze up both fuel tanks and mechanic came out from Ogallala with equipment to thaw both tanks. Was a Freightliner with two 150gal tanks and each tank had a can of jet deicing fuel in them. According to the radio temp on Chicago that night hit -103*. In the service my last assignment was at Lakeside, Montana. Don't recall how cold it would get up there but my son was born on Dec 5, 1972 in Kalispell and the night he was born it was -20* outside!

Windchill I would guess as the Nebraska state record low is -47 from 1989
Wind-chill only works on things that are alive like skin and you a chair outside a log and so on don't give a damn what the wind does.


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January 2000, -67 F in Tanana according to the TAL AWOS.


Originally Posted by atvalaska
Originally Posted by duckster
Originally Posted by DonFischer
Well wasn't in Alaska but years ago crossing I80 in Nebraska it hit -65*. Froze up both fuel tanks and mechanic came out from Ogallala with equipment to thaw both tanks. Was a Freightliner with two 150gal tanks and each tank had a can of jet deicing fuel in them. According to the radio temp on Chicago that night hit -103*. In the service my last assignment was at Lakeside, Montana. Don't recall how cold it would get up there but my son was born on Dec 5, 1972 in Kalispell and the night he was born it was -20* outside!

Windchill I would guess as the Nebraska state record low is -47 from 1989
Wind-chill only works on things that are alive like skin and you a chair outside a log and so on don't give a damn what the wind does.


It's amazing how many don't even get that concept. They sling the term 'wind-chill' around as if it'll somehow increase the street value their cold weather creds. 😆


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Not Alaska but the first week of January 1980 in Jackson Wyoming it was 50 below or lower every night for a week straight. The coldest night was 63 below. It warmed up to a balmy 37 below the next day. We didn't have any electricity for 3 days. Thank God for pine beetle killed lodgepole and a good wood stove.

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Back in 65 (Las Anchoraga) our thermometer was sitting out in the sun. I watched the mercury blow out the top end. Was hotter than H E double hockey sticks! Oh wait, wrong thread? 😉


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The Patron in celebration of Our new ei Presidente "might" have had something to do with 👆 post... 😎


"You've been here longer than the State of Alaska is old!"
*** my Grandaughters

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Two winters ago we saw -57 in Bethel, ME. I think top of Mt Washington had the coldest reading on the planet that day. If memory serves the wind chill was heading for -120.


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Originally Posted by bearhuntr
The Patron in celebration of Our new ei Presidente "might" have had something to do with 👆 post... 😎
🤔
🤣🤣


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Originally Posted by atvalaska
Originally Posted by duckster
Originally Posted by DonFischer
Well wasn't in Alaska but years ago crossing I80 in Nebraska it hit -65*. Froze up both fuel tanks and mechanic came out from Ogallala with equipment to thaw both tanks. Was a Freightliner with two 150gal tanks and each tank had a can of jet deicing fuel in them. According to the radio temp on Chicago that night hit -103*. In the service my last assignment was at Lakeside, Montana. Don't recall how cold it would get up there but my son was born on Dec 5, 1972 in Kalispell and the night he was born it was -20* outside!

Windchill I would guess as the Nebraska state record low is -47 from 1989
Wind-chill only works on things that are alive like skin and you a chair outside a log and so on don't give a damn what the wind does.

Point being, it was never that cold in Nebraska.

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Not Alaska.
But deer hunting in Alberta on the Battle river.
November 1985.
First morning -36.
With 50 60 mph winds.
Nasty.
All the radio stations had warnings for live stock.
With those kind of winds the noses on livestock would freeze.
If you weren't careful you could get in trouble real quick
I told my guide..
This place is the azzhole of the world.
He said Eh.
That's about 500 miles farther north......


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-67 Late 90’s McGrath Ak. Think the official all time low was -75 at the FFA site.

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Have seen -40 for two weeks here in WA and naturally when I had to change a motor in my Ford with 2 feet of snow. Trucks froze up in the street and a few houses froze up.
Gets colder here than many think, it also gets much warmer here than many think.

REPUBLIC HAS SET THE BAR FOR COLD TEMPS IN WA

Did you know Republic holds the record for the lowest temperature ever recorded in the United States? The record was set on January 20, 1954 when Republic recorded a temperature of a bone-chilling -69.7 degrees.


Read More: The Coldest Place in Wa State Where It's Always Chilly | https://newstalkkit.com/if-you-love...m_source=tsmclip&utm_medium=referral

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January of '89, Eielson AFB. -55/-60ish. I remember the heating units in the barracks struggling and there was a 1/2" of ice on the inside of the windows. I have pics of that somewhere. I also remember a couple of weeks later it warmed up to 40 above or so and it felt like you could have worn shorts and a t-shirt outside.

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