海角大神

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Puny snowmen? Biking in January? New England鈥檚 winter that wasn鈥檛.

From fat-tire bikes to tapping maple trees in December, small businesses from Maine to Connecticut are adapting as snowy New England winters become things of memory.

By Sara Lang, Staff writer

Ruth Goodrich celebrated Christmas doing something no one in her family had done before.聽

Boiling maple syrup.

Goodrich Maple Farm in Vermont鈥檚 Washington County has been family-owned since 1840, and Ruth and her husband, Glenn, have operated the business for the past four decades. They started with 25 trees and have expanded to 150,000. Ms. Goodrich has seen it all, but tapping trees in December was a first, as winter brought rain instead of snow.聽

鈥淭hat was the earliest we鈥檝e ever boiled,鈥 says Ms. Goodrich. Due to the warm New England winter, a season that normally would have begun in early March started three months early.聽

鈥淢other Nature鈥檚 doing her own thing,鈥 says Ms. Goodrich. 鈥淚 say she does what she wants when she wants to. The trees simply cope.鈥

The Northeast Regional Climate Center dubbed this New England鈥檚 鈥淲inter that Wasn鈥檛,鈥 with temperatures that ranged up to 8 degrees Fahrenheit聽above normal.聽

鈥淲hat normally would have been just a warm winter has become warmer due to climate change,鈥 says Jonathan Winter, associate professor in the department of geography at Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think we should assume that every winter from 2023 forward will be this warm, I don鈥檛 expect that it will. But I do think this year is a good example of 鈥 these types of winters becoming more common. It鈥檚 a useful indicator of where we鈥檙e headed.鈥

And that could have economic effects on small businesses from Maine to Connecticut.聽

鈥淏usinesses that are tied directly to the environment are going to be adversely affected because of seasonal movement,鈥 says Madhavi Venkatesan, an economist at Northeastern University in Boston whose focus is sustainability integrated into economics.

鈥淭he smartest businesses are going to be the ones that start to adjust to truly being operationally sustainable rather than trying to hold onto the profits they鈥檝e had in the past,鈥 says Dr. Venkatesan. 鈥淭he time is changing, and they are part of the future. They have a civic responsibility to the communities that they live in to educate and be the catalyst for change.鈥澛犅

Warmer temperatures have affected more than just maple sugaring time. Skiing, a favorite winter sport in New England, has been more of a challenge for resorts. Wachusett Mountain in Westminster, Massachusetts, has been preparing for warmer temperatures for years. They installed a new pump house around 10 years ago that doubled their snowmaking abilities.聽

鈥淥ur snowmaking system is pretty much unmatched, and our skiers have been loving it,鈥 says Chris Stimpson, public relations manager for Wachusett. Just two days of below 27 degrees F before the holidays enabled the mountain to 鈥渂low some pretty serious piles of snow.鈥澛

鈥淓ven if we don鈥檛 get natural snow, if we have cold temps, we can get this place open quick,鈥 says Mr. Stimpson. As of March 15, the number of skiers this year is running 5% ahead of last year.聽

The resort's adaptability is not uncommon in the Northeast.聽

鈥淓astern ski resort operators, they鈥檙e really hearty folk,鈥 says Adrienne Isaac, director of marketing and communications for the National Ski Areas Association. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e very good at being resilient and adapting to these sorts of situations.鈥澛

Resorts have found other ways to keep economically viable, according to Ms. Isaac. Activities such as weddings, adventure courses, or even golf help keep the business afloat. Another option: fat biking.

Maine Huts & Trails, a nonprofit providing backcountry experiences in the Carrabassett Valley in Maine, was known predominantly for its cross-country skiing and snowshoeing. Executive director Wolfe Tone, however, has recently been putting the focus on fat biking, or mountain biking in the snow.聽

The town of Carrabassett Valley, local ski resort聽Sugarloaf, and Maine Huts & Trails have been working closely for the past few years to expand mountain biking opportunities, especially for the winter season.

鈥淭he more that we can offer for people to do, the greater the draw to get people to stay here,鈥 says Mr. Tone. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 a shared strategy of all the participants of the winter economy up here.鈥 He says if the conditions aren鈥檛 good for cross-country skiing, they鈥檙e great for fat biking. The nonprofit is seeing more and more fat bikers on the trails every year.聽

鈥淢y first winter [in 2018], it snowed just after Halloween and the snow didn鈥檛 leave until after April,鈥 says Mr. Tone. 鈥淭hese last two winters, we鈥檝e had torrential rainstorms at Christmas. We鈥檙e definitely seeing some of these extremes and patterns.鈥 He鈥檚 asked frequently if climate change creates worries for his business.聽

鈥淵es, undeniably,鈥 says Mr. Tone. But, he flips it. Although the climate is more variable, he says, his part of New England is going to receive snow the longest. 鈥淭his is still a very important winter region,鈥 he says.聽

But some New Englanders lament the lack of a winter wonderland.

鈥淭his winter isn鈥檛 winter,鈥 says Sue Paul. She鈥檚 lived in the region for all 70 years of her life. She remembers her childhood sledding down hills with friends and skating in the park. Now, her grandkids might never experience an outdoor ice rink.

She describes sending her grandkids a picture of the three inches of snow she received after a March nor鈥檈aster, and the kids being jealous because they had only gotten rain an hour away in North Easton. They鈥檝e only been able to make 鈥減uny鈥 snowmen in their lifetimes.

鈥淕oing out in the snow, coming back for hot chocolate, you know the whole tradition,鈥 says Ms. Paul. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not there anymore.鈥澛

Yet other traditions continue. And the Goodrich鈥檚 maple syrup season, although unpredictable, always ends with a maple festival in St. Albans, Vermont, where syrup makers across New England gather to compare who made the most that season.聽

鈥淭here鈥檚 a brotherhood and camaraderie among sugar makers,鈥 says Ms. Goodrich. 鈥淓ven though we鈥檙e all competitors, we鈥檙e all on the same team fighting Mother Nature and fatigue and breakdowns and everything else.鈥