Supersized snowman's fate in peril as weather warms
Coming warm snap could spell doom for the nameless Kanata giant
Nature giveth but hopefully won't with warmer temperatures ahead taketh away, the architect behind a towering Ottawa snowman says.
Chris Mollertook advantage of both the recent dump of wet snow and the help of family and neighbours tobuilda nearly five-metre-tall snowmanoutside his suburbanKanata home.
The supersized Frosty (itdoesn't have a proper name yet) required extra-big adornments: tennis balls for eyes, hockey pucksfor buttons and a garden planter in place of a traditional top hat.
"Instead of a scarf, [a] neighbour brought a hammock," Moller said. "It was nice having neighbours and people to help me because I could never do it on my own."
The whole project took about 40 hours, Moller estimated.
KeeganBarnes and his family arevisitingfrom Virginia and staying at a house near Moller's.
"I think it's amazing," Barnes said of the towering snowman. "I want to know how he got it up that high."
Mollerhas one more addition to make to his front yard creation.
"We don't have arms on him yet," he said. "I hope we will get arms on him later if he does survive through the warm snap that's coming."
Could hit 9 C by Friday
Environment and Climate Change Canada is forecasting above-freezing temperatures for the remainder of the week and into next week.
"It's quite a big change that is coming," meteorologist Gerald Cheng said. "There is a huge, warmer air mass that's coming towardOntario. And that will affect the Ottawa Valley as well."
Temperatures could reach 9 C on Friday, the agency is forecasting. Up to 20 millimetres of rain is expected over the weekend.
"You do want to make sure that you get to the shovelling, because the rain is coming and it's going to make it hard to shovel," Cheng said.
Snow around drainage should be cleared, he added, asthe melt couldbring the potential for flooding.
'Crossing my fingers'
This isn't Moller'sfirst giant snowman. He says he's built increasingly large snow-people every year"when the weather co-operates."
This time, he's hoping tarps will protect his creation from the rain and heat and help prolong its life.
"I'm not even sure if the tarps are going to save it,"he said. "I'm crossing my fingers, but we'll see."
With files from Dan Taekema