January 6, 2010 8:42 PM

Farmers Race to Save Crops amid Cold Snap

Icicles cling to strawberry plants just after sunrise Monday, Jan. 4, 2010 in Plant City, Fla. Farmers spray water on their crops to help protect the fruit. Temperatures overnight in area dipped into the 30's. (AP Photo/Chris O'Meara)

Icicles cling to strawberry plants just after sunrise Monday, Jan. 4, 2010 in Plant City, Fla. Farmers spray water on their crops to help protect the fruit. Temperatures overnight in area dipped into the 30's. (AP Photo/Chris O'Meara) (AP Photo/Chris O'Meara)

(CBS/AP)  Updated 6:59 p.m. EST

A persistent arctic chill tightened its grip on the nation Wednesday and reached deep into the South, where it was blamed for at least six deaths and threatened to freeze crops and bring snow to places more accustomed to winter sunshine.

Authorities said four people in Tennessee, one in Mississippi and one in South Carolina have died from the cold since the weekend. They included a man with Alzheimer's who wandered out into his yard in Nashville and froze to death, and a homeless man found dead in a tent in South Carolina.

The total doesn't include people who died in car accidents on icy roads and in fires started by stoves and space heaters.

The deep freeze was expected to linger through the weekend. The National Weather Service predicted the heaviest snow from the fast-moving system would fall on Iowa, Missouri and Illinois, with 4-6 inches predicted along with some locally heavier amounts Wednesday afternoon through Thursday.

In a rare turn for the South, forecasters warned that snow and ice were possible Thursday from South Carolina to Louisiana and wind chills in the region could get down to near zero at night.

In the South, cold snaps typically last only a day or two, but it's day six for this big chill in Louisville, Ky. and Atlanta, where water lines froze underground, reports CBS "Early Show" weather anchor Dave Price.

"This air mass originated on the ice cap at the top of the world," said Bobby Boyd, a weather service forecaster in Nashville. He said the cold shot wouldn't be spent until it plunged southeastward and moved well beyond Cuba into the Caribbean.

The frigid weather hampered northern firefighters and even made life hard for Florida's tree dwelling iguanas.

In Indianapolis, frozen hydrants frustrated firefighters as they tried to put out a Tuesday night blaze at a commercial building.

In central and south Florida, farmers were trying to salvage citrus and vegetable crops by spraying them in protective layers of ice and covering them in plastic.

It was so cold in Florida, freezing iguanas were seen falling out of trees. Experts say the cold-blooded reptiles become immobilized when the temperature falls into the 40s and they lose their grip on the tree.

Florida citrus grower John Arnold did not see what wanted to when the sun came up. To protect his orange and tangerine crops, Arnold ran sprinklers all night, reports CBS News correspondent Manuel Gallegus. The goal was to creating a thick layer of ice that's supposed to keep the fruit from freezing on the inside.

But it doesn't always work. Arnold ended up with slush and cold damage and he unwelcome 28-degree weather damaged some fruit on nearly 4,000 of his trees, Gallegus reports.

"They're basically about $1 a pound, so if we lost 100,000 pounds, you do the math," Arnold said.

The unusual cold is catching man and nature off guard. In north Florida, bees are clustering in their hives for warmth and eating the only food they can - their own honey.

In Virginia, sea turtles aren't able to warm up from the chilly water; they're "cold stunned" and near death.

Kentucky Gov. Steve Beshear has declared a state of emergency in Perry County, where water line breaks have left large swaths of the area without water.

Officials said the city of Des Moines is likely to exhaust the remainder of its $3 million annual snow removal budget with this week's storm, expected to dump up to as much as 10 inches of snow in some areas. That is on top of the more than 28 inches of snow that fell in December in the city.

In the Dakotas, Interstate 90 between Rapid City and Mitchell in South Dakota was closed Wednesday because of zero visibility that led to backed-up traffic and some crashes.

Police in Kansas City, Kan., said a man died Tuesday after jumping over an interstate highway barrier wall, apparently to escape sliding cars after he was involved in a multiple-vehicle crash. Officers said 35-year-old Verner David Estrada-Duran likely assumed level pavement was on the other side, but he ended up falling about 80 feet to his death.

Much of the Blue Ridge Parkway in North Carolina and Virginia has been closed to motorists because of heavy accumulations of snow and ice as well as downed trees.

In Maine, a pilot died Monday after he reported ice buildup on the wings of his small plane and it crashed into a river channel. Searchers were also looking for an 18-year-old snowmobiler who disappeared on New Year's Day. And in Wisconsin a 7-year-old boy died when he fell through ice into a river while sledding with friends.

In coastal North Carolina, volunteers were scrambling to save endangered sea turtles that were stunned by the cold and stranded off the Outer Banks.

Southern supermarkets were doing a brisk business in staples like bread and milk.

Ann Warden of Brentwood, Tenn., loaded eight grocery bags into the trunk of her black luxury car Wednesday morning and worried about a snowy forecast.

"You know Nashville gets paralyzed with just one snowflake," she said. "I couldn't be caught without milk. And I got some nice wine at the liquor store."

© 2010 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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by dusterrm January 7, 2010 10:56 AM EST
I can see it now....we are going to have a BAILOUT for the Orange Farmers...We'll call it the "Orange Bailout" To the farmers...you took a chance...you got to weather the storm... Don't even tink about asking for a bailout..I bet some of you are thinking about it.

"Cash For Clunkers Oranges"

Recently I have been noticing some striking headlines regarding our weather. U.K. hit by worst cold snap in decades and freeze warning issued for U.S. Gulf Coast. While I believe we need to be aware of the earth and be responsible I find it ironic that the Gobal Warming experts have been silent.

What the American people have got to understand is we are going to be paying for Global Warming with carbon credits...and now we are paying for Global Cooling in the form of Higher Heating bills.

Where are the Global Warming experts now?
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by vfyu January 7, 2010 1:23 AM EST
someone said he is searching someone on the famous rich men seeking passion site *****************. c o m. there are some of his hot pictures.. joke or not?
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by lakota2012 January 7, 2010 12:35 AM EST
Extreme negative phase of the Arctic Oscillation yields a warm Arctic

Arctic sea ice extent at end of December 2009 remained below normal, primarily in the Atlantic sector of the Arctic. Average air temperatures over the Arctic Ocean were much higher than normal for the month, reflecting unusual atmospheric conditions.

Warm air keeps ice extent low

December air temperatures over the Arctic Ocean region, eastern Siberia, and northwestern North America were warmer than normal. In contrast, temperatures in Eurasia, the United States, and southwestern Canada were below average. The strongest anomalies (more than 7 degrees Celsius/13 degrees Fahrenheit) were over the Atlantic side of the Arctic, including Baffin Bay and Davis Strait, where ice extent was below average.

http://nsidc.org/arcticseaicenews/
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by Noval53 January 6, 2010 11:09 PM EST
Climate Change / Global Warming has clearly been exposed for the giant scam that it is. The MAD science used to manufacture this "chicken little" crisis is falling apart at the seams. The ongoing artic blasts prove that climate scientists are clueless about the future and know no more than a street corner palm reader about the climate now or 10 years from now. What is clear is that there is a pandemic of gullibility globally and millions will be fooled by the climate change scheme. Billions of dollars will be conned away into a UN bottomless money pot. Your money would be better spent placed under your pillow for the tooth fairy.
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by pdxdave January 6, 2010 6:37 PM EST
"We?ve got to ride the global warming issue. Even if the theory of global warming is wrong, we will be doing the right thing ? in terms of economic policy and environmental policy" ? Senator Timothy Wirth

"No matter if the science [of global warming] is all phony . . . climate change [provides] the greatest opportunity to bring about justice and equality in the world." ?Christine Stewart, Canadian Minister of the Environment

"we have to offer up scary scenarios, make simplified, dramatic statements, and make little mention of any doubts we might have.... Each of us has to decide what the right balance is between being effective and being honest." ? Stephen Schneider, lead author of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
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by rwsmith29456 January 6, 2010 5:21 PM EST
Hang the tourists, this is where a lot of the U.S.'s winter fruits and vegatables from from. People being chilly at Disney World in January doesn't even count as an inconvenience.
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by PLS8395 January 6, 2010 1:04 PM EST
That darned global warming is freezing the crops...again. "Oh wait, global warming isn't working out the way we thought it would. Let's call it Climate Change!" This must be that Hope and Change we were promised.
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by sjc_1 January 6, 2010 1:39 PM EST
Climate change is caused by Global Warming. You get a lot more of everything, heat, cold, drought, flood, tornadoes, hurricanes and all other types of weather. Once there are crop failures and reduced grain production, you will start to see people take notice, but then it will be too late.
by luadda22 January 6, 2010 11:01 PM EST
sjc, you're like a TV preacher, if it's good, God is listening to your prayers and you send more money, if it?s bad God is punishing you for not giving enough money.
by msimamaji January 6, 2010 12:50 PM EST
Global warming is a scientifically proven fact, verified by overwhelming scientific evidence. While you can choose your opinions, you can't choose your facts. One of the symptoms of global warming is extreme fluctuations and changes in climate, so while places like Florida are experiencing an unprecedented cold snap; California faces a serious water shortage because of an unprecedented drought. As a result, much of California's Central Valley will become 21st century Dust Bowl. Global warming has already wreaked havoc on many farmers in Australia.
This article emphasizes one major reality. We must act now to reduce greenhouse gases, or what we are witnessing now is just a prelude of what's to come. I wonder how many of farmers who are facing this cold snap believe that global warming is a hoax. How many farmers are betting their farms on the crackpot science promoted by the GOP? And, how many farmers will lose everything they own because of their risky gamble?
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by PLS8395 January 6, 2010 1:17 PM EST
Southern California faces a water shortage because it is a semi-arid desert with tens of millions of people washing their BMW's and Hummers. And in the winter, you should see all of the outdoor heaters turned on. Maybe that's the source of the global warming. They need the heaters because it is illegal to smoke inside any building now and we don't want the drunken smokers to freeze to death in the 60-degree weather.
by patocc123 January 6, 2010 1:31 PM EST
We all drive hybrids and use solar power to power our homes . . . You know how that will stop global warminging. IT WILL NOT. First off global warming has been going on since the ice age. The ground under my feet where I live now used to be a ice. Plus if people are truely worried about global warming they would be focused on the major causes not the tiny amount at which we are focusing now. Why are we focusing on the things we are now. Money and Control.

Global warming is increasing at the rate at which we see due to the overpopulation of humans on this planet and the land/livestock that is needed to feed us. But hey as long as you make someone else wealthy besides the oil companies I guess that alone will make people sleep better at night.
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by afmcalax January 6, 2010 12:04 PM EST
I wish man's effect on climate change could be discussed intelligently without the sound bite arguements for the left and the right. What I wish is that people would stop using global warming and start treating the possible negative aspects of climate change seriously. I do think PEOPLE are affecting the earth's climate and I think if we don't take it seriously these uncharacteristic weather patterns will continue to increase. It would take little to start affecting air and ocean flows that could alter the weather of countries dramatically and I doubt that America would not be affected. If America got noticeably cooler and dryer while other parts of the planet got warmer and wetter, this would seriously impact America's wealth and ability to feed itself. If only sections of America had their weather altered in a small way our ability to feed ourselves could be seriously impacted. So let's ignore the dooms dayers and nay sayers and concentrate on how America would change with only a perceptable climate change, that could create the real call to action we need.
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by Empire-George- January 6, 2010 11:18 AM EST
Millions of Dollars at Stake as Deep Freeze across U.S. Threatens Fruits and Vegetables

Don't worry farmers, it's only weather....don't confuse your freezing crops with "Climate"
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