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Yet Another Snow Day

This is serious winter here, for the Ohio Valley anyway. Six inches of snow is nothing to the lake effect snow areas, like near Cleveland and like the town where I grew up just right of Lake Michigan. We had to get a foot of snow for schools to close, and I'm not just saying that like those old people who say they walked two miles in the snow up hill both ways to get to school, and they never complained. My father-in-law used to say that, and he grew up in Brazil.

No, I mean it when I say we've got winter. The schools have been closed state-wide, and today is the first day of class this week. First it was too cold, then it was six inches of snow, and then it was another few inches on top of that. Road crews in over a dozen plows and salt trucks keep things pretty clear on the main roads, but they can't always get to the country roads in time for school buses in the morning, so kids have been laying around watching TV and eating crap.

This is my back yard and the summer furniture that never made it
into storage for the off-season.

Sometimes after a reasonable snow fall, you can ignore the driveway because it will probably melt in a day or two anyway. But I don't think this snowfall will allow me to ignore the driveway this time around. I believe the stupid thing is demanding attention. So, I hitched up a pair of snow boots that I found in the basement store room, tucked in my jeans, wrapped my scarf around my neck, and went to work.

My snow boots and shovel.

I only finished half the driveway because the exterminator was parked on the other side. I'm not sure what they spray for in the dead of winter, but I'm sure it's something necessary. They wouldn't sell me something I don't need, would they? Anyway, while I shoveled, the bug guy went on and on about everything he could think of. He talked about the Christmas eve service at his church, the kind of music his church likes, how his pastor tells people that if they don't like it they can go somewhere else, the apartment building his son lives in at college (the same as my daughter, coincidentally), and how his best friend just died because he got the flu, and it morphed into some kind of bacterial pneumonia. The man was a saint, and if I had met him, I would have felt as if I had been in the presence of an angel.

OK, so back to digging out. When you stand outside on a snowy day and listen, and everyone else has finished shoveling so that you can't hear the sound of metal scraping cement anymore, all you can hear is the sound of your boots smashing the snow and an occasional lost crow. There are a lot of tall trees in my neighborhood, and a good wind makes their branches rattle and howl in a haunting but pleasing way. I hate to disturb that peace and solitude with the sound of my shovel and sniffing now and then, but there's work to be done.

After I had had enough of shoveling, I set my shovel aside and went inside for a cup of tea and a cookie. I wish there was a way snow plows could clear the street without making the snow at the end of my driveway twice as deep as the rest of it. I wish a pack of boys had knocked on my door and asked if they could shovel my driveway and sidewalks for a donation. I would have gladly paid.

Comments

dive said…
Yikes!
Oh, Robyn! That looks awful.
Sure I know it's kind of pretty but BRRR …
It's been bright sun and teeshirt weather here in England. I think if we had snow like that I'd fly south.

And I think I'd have whopped the bug man with my shovel, handed it to him and said "YOU do it!"
We men love watching women do all the work. Hee hee.
Wow. You got socked. My first reaction is total jealousy.

Big guy is obsessed with clearing snow, especially cuz he has a snow blowing machine. So...if we have a few inches or so, he's out blowing at 6am (I'm sure it echoes across the pond). Maybe he gets high on the fumes, which are plentiful. His jeans even smell like gas when he comes in.

I'm contemplating getting a flat shovel that I can just push back and forth across the driveway -- sounds much easier than lifting. I like the thought of that so much that I probably will just keep on thinking about it...
Alifan said…
Oh dear Robyn such a contrast to Dives pictures of February....

Take care moving that snow....

Happy Valentines dayxx
Sounds like you're getting a bit of cabin fever Robyn. Don't you just love people of a few thousand words and how they go on and on and on?

As for the packs of kids shoveling. That's how I made lots and lots of money during the winter months. I just suggest that to my son and he laughs -what's wrong with kids these days. ah I'm starting to sound old. shoot me will ya Robyn???
Rich you're right, children now either want loads of money or they think such jobs are beneath them.

Robyn your snow looks just fab! I'm sure it's difficult to deal with though. Are you going to make a snowman while you're clearing it? Pics please.

Here in the UK, if the postman slips on ice on your drive, it's an awful shame.
However, if you have previously cleared it and he slips, it suggests you've made a bad job of it and made a dangerous environment for him and he can sue you. No, i jest not. Best to leave it to pile up over here i reckon.
Gina said…
That looks like quite the snowfall. Over here we complain when it gets lower than 65 degrees. We're spoiled, I know.

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