While the rest of Minnesota was soaking up summer's end, the mechanics in Hennepin County's public works garages had already picked up their wrenches and started to hoist the iron onto the trucks for winter.
The process of preparing snowplows begins in mid-August. The truck changeover used to start in September — until the Halloween blizzard of 1991, a touchstone event in snow-removal circles.
"That was a real eye-opener," said Brian Langseth, transportation manager for the county, who works at the county's capacious public works facility in Medina.
The preparations for the plowing season have intensified as the days get darker and the words "chance of snow" start to slip into in the forecast, as they have for most days next week. In Hennepin County, the expectation is that the entire fleet and drivers on 66 plow routes will be ready to roll by early November.
The process takes time because the trucks doing summer road repairs are the same ones needed for snow removal.
Snow removal has changed a lot in the decades since salt and sand were shoveled off the back of a pickup truck and chains went onto the plow tires. Computers and chemistry have made snow removal and driver training more precise.
Preparing the trucks, however, remains heavy labor. Mechanics take about four hours to hoist the blades and sanders onto the trucks. Once the iron is on, the electronics get checked. If all is good, that can take 10 minutes. If there's troubleshooting, it can go for hours.
Sanders on the trucks must be calibrated. This year, for the first time, Hennepin County is using a portable machine about the size of a laptop that can measure sand output to the pound. The old stationary scale could only calibrate in 20-pound increments. "The process ensures that what we put on the dial, we put on the roads," Langseth said.