October 16,2013
"We are as tough as shoe leather," Deadwood resident Mary Kopco told the Rapid City Journal. "I mean, we have to be."
(MORE: Photos from Winter Storm Atlas)
An early October storm dumped more than 4 feet of snow in some areas, and more snow fell early this week. There are reports of more than 80 inches of snow in some spots.
"To me, it is what it is," Lead resident Joe Bailey said as he cleared a sidewalk on Main Street. "You live in South Dakota and you live a mile high — you kind of have to expect some of it."
Cars are buried in snow at a car dealership in Spearfish, S.D. on Oct. 6, 2013. (iWitness weather user: Guzva84)
"We've had mild winters, and we've had tough winters," Apa said. "We just roll with the punches."
"We South Dakotans are self-sufficient," he added. "We don't wait for the government to do it. We all pitch in and do it together. Today's just another day in paradise."
Still. this October's snowfall is a little unusual, even in Deadwood, which averages more than 20 feet of snow annually.
(MORE: October's Increasingly Snowy Reputation)
"I've never seen this much snow, not this regular and not this early," Deadwood Public Works Director J.R. Raysor said. "I mean, geez. People are already sick of it and it's only the 15th of October. It's still fall. Come to South Dakota. See our beautiful fall colors — white."
Nonetheless, Raysor said South Dakotans tend to be doers and not complainers.
"This is our South Dakota spirit," he said. "I talked to a guy where I hunt near Lemmon, and he lost a pile of cattle in this blizzard. His attitude was, 'I'm better off than my neighbor is.' That's how South Dakotans think. We're always willing to help out because we know someone always has it tougher than we do. That's how it works here."
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