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Music on this video by Daniel Smith

27 Comments

  1. Hey darlings! I originally uploaded this video and quickly realized I'd made an editing mistake and left several minutes of black screen on the end. I pulled it down to fix it and reupload. Sorry if you were in the middle of the video, but now you can proceed!
    Tell me, are you experiencing winter weather in this storm?

    Blessings, Jess

  2. Yes Jess welcome to the Carolinas ♥️ can I come visit for a friends wedding in March when I visit the coffee shop?😊

  3. I am in Utah and there is no such thing as a snow day. We once had to sleep at the school because it snowed so much the busses weren’t able to come pick us up. And school continued the following day.

  4. Up here we call it a french toast storm because they are the first things bought out at stores. I agree it makes no sense.

  5. When I lived in Texas they canceled for a dusting. However they did not salt only spread sand which was useless. ❤️🙏 however I drove 35 miles to work to be sent home because managers 6 min from work couldn’t get there.

  6. I look forward to the first snowed in day of the year. Everything closes. No one drives. Hole up for the day+ and enjoy every second of it 🙂

  7. I do the same thing: I make sure we have eggs, bread, and milk because I don't freeze them. I don't want to run out if the streets don't get cleared enough to drive on. People also buy up lunch meat and cheese. This is in case we lose electricity. These foods allow us to make sandwiches and have cereal if we can't cook. We live in New Jersey; some winters we get a good amount of snow. This past week we got about 8 inches, and it is staying cold, so it is not melting much.

  8. Great video. I live where we grow snow in the winter and although I have seen it many times, it always makes me smile when the animals first see the snow! I laughed at the chickens. You raise an interesting question about bread, milk and eggs though….gotta wonder.

  9. Hi Jess,
    You and your family have inspired my husband and I over the years and we decided to move from Northern Ca and move to Ok to start homesteading. I have been homeschooling our 2 boys for 20 years. I enjoy prepping for emergencies, growing beautiful and tasty things and am passionate about cooking and being creative. We are excited to become self sustainable here in Oklahoma and will continue to learn and grow as we watch you and Mia raise your family and grow your farm. Keep it up and I will keep watching. I am trying to post videos on my channel 2 times a week and hope to inspire others as you all have inspired me. Thank you for sharing yours journey with us.

  10. Bread, eggs, and milk: I often buy one or more of these when a storm is coming because a) if we’re snowed in the family will go through more of these than usual, and b) I buy them regularly and I probably need them anyway. If I don’t I’ll use them up because they’re staples.

    And c) you’re never quite sure how long it will last. Last year we were stuck for a week, and I finally braved icy roads to get milk, bread, and eggs.

  11. In far north Texas we got just over 6” yesterday and more last night. A tiny bit of sleet before the snow began

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