2006-02-15

Blizzard o' 2006

Two weekends ago I spent the weekend in Vermont skiing with some friends. I haven't skied in like 6 years and on top of that I'm probably 30 pounds heavier than the last time and grossly out of shape. I was beat. I come back from the weekend trip delayed thanks the recent Noreastern blizzard of 2006. Great. I'm all tired and sore and now I have to spend a few hours shoveling in the cold. It boggles my mind how when people are confronted with others who live in nicer weather they practically brag about the miserable cold and snow. I mean, I've met plenty of people that actually miss the snow (and the whole idea of seasons which I think is over-rated). I noticed that amongst other cold-weather dwellers, it is ok to complain a little about the freezing and the mess and extra work and delays and whatnot. But to anyone else, it's like a rite of passage; it makes them superior somehow. Can't complain too much or they'll think or will call you a pussy or something like that. What's up with that?

I admit the snow is very pretty and the experience is novel (for a while) but certainly is inconvenient to deal with on a day to day basis. And the cold just grates on me. It's more expensive to live in, requires more energy and attention and items to deal with, and slows down everything. Maybe it's a nostalgia thing for people who actually grew up in it, that excitement of getting to miss school due to weather conditions. For me, it should be kept in the mountains where it belongs. A nice thing and place to visit, but not live in.

An additional disadvantage is that I live on a cul-de-sac and there really isn't anywhere to put the snow. Everyone tries best they can to line the house walls with it, make little pathways, and make little castle walls of snowdrift to surround the cars and whatnot. Further, it is technically a private way and isn't plowed regularly by the city works. Occasionally they get to it and do a single plow, especially if someone on the block calls and orders it. One time, a plow shoved a rather large snowdrift into my parking spot. Thoroughly pissed me off. Wasted a Sunday afternoon shoveling it clear, though I'll admit I was quite proud of the little igloo-sans-roof I made for my car. But the street is narrow there's nowhere else to put what accumulates there so tends to ice over and stay that way for a long time.



Lucky for me, the blizzard wasn't as bad as other places on the east, only a 1.5 to 2 feet, and by and large I shouldn't really complain because this winter has been very mild (knock on wood). Actually I am quite pleased with this winter. On all accounts it's been great considering previous years. There's been very little snowfall and accumulation, especially compared to last year, and I don't think I used more than a couple cups of salt the whole of this winter so far. We've had many days where the temperature reached as high as 50 with mostly clear skies. Last year had record breaking snowfall. Here's a pic from a previous blizzard.



One of the things that sometimes gets to me is when it's too cold to snow. I mean, it goes well below freezing and with dry air to where even a minute outside and any exposed portion of my body starts to hurt, especially my hands which shrivel up painfully to where I can't make a fist and my ears just feel like they're going to snap off. I know there are other parts of the country where it's much worse. Those are the times I wonder why people live in such places.

Today I went out to watch a band called "Stars". I took the T there. I was commenting with a buddy how nice it was out (only because there was no wind-chill), but I didn't feel like I needed to wear gloves or a knit cap. It was about 35-38 degrees F. I marvel at the concept that I could call such a temperature "nice". Oh how things have changed.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Ahhh... snow... I've only experienced falling snow once when I lived in Northern CA (Mare Isle) years ago. Any other time, I've had to drive to it rather than it coming to me.

I remember being just slighly disillusioned about snow. Cartoons make it seem like it's so easy to manipulate snow. In particular, the good old snowball. Before experiencing snow, I thought it would be just like the cartoons: just roll some snow until it keeps getting bigger and bigger and bigger... NOT!! Or building a snowman. Not as easy as cartoons make it out to be. Regardless, it's fun to play in...

Do I want to spend time shoveling it, though? Not really. Obviously, if I had to, I would. Luckily I don't have to.

I feel for you, Tofu. Just another chore that's been added to your life because of location...

mikshir said...

You're absolutely right. It really isn't that formable, though I did discover that there are different "types" of snow. I don't know the names of them but the easiest kind to deal with is the really light whispy snow that is kind of fun to play in, easy to brush off the car (doesn't stick), but you can't really make a snowball with it.

Kind of reminds me of an article I read on the different types of ice (differentiated by lattice packing type). I think they're up to 15 now ( or at least well beyond the infamous ice-9 from Vonnegut's "Cat's Cradle" ).