The snowfall on Saturday gave Suki Dewey a blank canvas to share her voice, again.

She’s been using a 40-acre Bedminster farm for three years now to speak out on global warming, women’s rights and other social and political issues. It’s in the flight path President Trump takes when he heads to his nearby golf club.

With meteorologists talking all last week about a snowstorm, Dewey got out her graph paper and set to work on her latest creation.

The word “IMPOTUS,” coined by Trump-critic George Conway for Impeached President of the United States, was sent to her a few weeks ago as a suggestion by a friend.

“I laughed and said, ‘maybe,’” Dewey said.

Then she came up with the idea of making some of the letters look like they’re melting, symbolic of the breaking down of the presidency.

“Sometime when I’m creating these things, an image comes to me," she said. "I think the reason the IM was solid is because it’s real. But the presidency is surreal almost,” she said. “He’s in a position he shouldn’t be in. He’s someone who doesn’t seem to believe in the Constitution. He only believes in himself.”

After giving the explanation, Dewey paused.

“I also want to leave it to other people to figure out,” she said of interpreting the carving.

Dewey spent days working on it. She started on Tuesday working it out on paper. Then took a clipboard with her sketch and measurements to the field, mapping out the letters with several hundred sticks using a tape measure and fighting the whipping winds late last week.

Sunday morning, with about 2 inches of snow on the ground, she set out at 6 a.m. and spent a few hours stomping the design with her feet into the freshly fallen powder. The whole message is 200 feet long. The I and M are 35 feet tall and the S is about 100 feet tall, she said.

The pedometer on her phone clocked that she took 11,000 steps making the design.

This is the fifth message Dewey has carved into the field. Her last one said Listen to the Kids. Her first said Resist. Another said Vote and Truth. One said SOS. And you can bet there will be more.

“I have this canvas and I can write things in it,” she said. “I’m trying to use my voice in a positive way and speak for more people and get people thinking.”

Dewey, who says she is a registered Republican, stops short of identifying herself as anti-Trump. “To me those terms make people sound ridiculous,” she said.

“He’s not an appropriate person to run the country. He’s an egomaniac. He has no understanding about rules, cooperation,” she said. “But I’m more concerned about the Republican party. I don’t understand why Republicans are allowing this to happen. What does he have on these people?”

There was no answer Monday, a federal holiday, at the White House Press Office when NJ Advance Media called for a comment.

And there’s no indication that Trump has seen any of Dewey’s field messages. But that doesn’t deter her.

“I don’t care whether he sees it or not,” she said. “It’s more for everybody else to think about and have conversations.”

Word of her field messages has spread through friends, family and the media to Colorado, Alaska, Germany, India, South America and New Zealand.

“I get feedback, periodically,” she said. “I’ve been more outspoken now that I do these things. I send them to people and they pass them on. When I mention I do this, people say, ‘Oh my God, you did that.’”

The overall idea behind all of the messages is to get more people to pay attention and to vote, she said. “I want people to get out there and really search their souls.”

Allison Pries may be reached at apries@njadvancemedia.com. Follow her on Twitter@AllisonPries. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

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