Showing posts with label snow. Show all posts
Showing posts with label snow. Show all posts

Saturday, 15 March 2008

Blizzard on the Heights

It wasn't a blizzard on an epic scale, no, but it was a more snow in a short period than we're used to getting. I'd stocked up on Friday, heeding the weather warnings, and by late in the afternoon folks were canceling events & trying to leave work and schools early, if they were smart. Only about 3 or 4 inches of new snow covered the frozen couple of inches in my driveway by Friday night, but ohhhhhh Saturday morning was another thing entire! With the way I get crazy drifts, it's difficult to tell perzactly how high it got, but a few dips of the metal yardstick convinced me that it was two feet, more or less.
I had to push the back door open against drifts. The wee dog just looked at me as if I'd lost my mind in expecting him to go out there and Do what Needs to be Done. (And me with no Powdermilk Dog Bisquits, darn.) I shoveled a path for him, but by the time I got past the edge of the house, the 8°F and 30 mph sustained winds suggested to me that I reconsider. The dog took advantage of the path, but with lack of canine conviction. An hour later, everything I'd shoveled was drifted back in again. Listening to all the cancellations of dances and concerts announced on Saturday radio was clue that it wasn't just Siberia On the Heights that the storm had inconvenienced. What gave me pause was when WRUW decided to "end our broadcast day" at the end of Bill Kennedy's Irish show at 1:30 in the afternoon, for the safety of their volunteers. I enjoyed having a fully stocked larder, a couple books to read, plenty of tea, heat, water, and electric, knowing that I wasn't going ANYwhere anytime soon.

Sunday Morning was gorgeously sunny & it felt so peculiar to be sleeping in rather than up and tuning the 'harp for church. The snow smothered landscape was gorgeous, deep, and a challenge to shovel. I hacked out a path for the dog, but didn't last too long and figured I MIGHT be able to get the drive done by Tuesday morning, then a neighbor took pity on me, and had my drive cleared by snowblower. The street hadn't been plowed till Sunday, though the driveway plow guys had been busy. I'd watched the guy doing the drive next door with more enthusiasm than skill, after I heard the first BAM!!! of plow hitting the stone edging to their drive. Not learning his lesson, he scraped the snow down, then back toward their lawn with another BAM!! At that point, I figured he'd demolished part of the two steps & wingwall bit of masonry by their sidewalk. The thaw has shown this to be the case: He uprooted a 16 inch boulder and bits of brick from the wingwall are peeping out of the snowbank that is filthy with the turf and topsoil he scraped off my treelawn. It's going to be ugly, but I'm still ready for a full thaw. Meanwhile, what a lovely difference a week makes:
Saturday, March 8th:

Saturday, March 15th:

Tuesday, 12 February 2008

Folk Processing the weather

I was sent home early from work downtown today because of the bad weather. As I drove home through what was only mildly annoying bits of snow on roads mostly plowed, I thought on other trips home where the weather took us by surprise and was scary to drive in and hard to see in and much more in line with being a significant threat to travel. As I mushed along in the troughs of slush on Carnegie, I thought of "the really bad stuff" and of the wonderful Michigan Snow Shantey that details the work of winter survival. Written in 1989 by Michigander Judi Morningstar, and performed by her all women's string band "Just Friends" (and me, in my car). I loved her irreverent take on it: “Written in the genre of the Sea Shantey which had three unwritten rules: Never sung on dry land - never sung in harmony - never sung by women. Rules begging to be broken.” I find humor a necessary survival skill for living in Siberia-on-the-Heights.

Michigan Snow Shantey

Heave ho! Heave ho!
Rock your car in the snow
Forward, first throw it in reverse
Way up in Michigan-i-o


On Saginaw Bay where I come from
You learn survival on the run
Chains and saws and shovels and sand
Are tools you’ll always have on hand.
Heave ho! Heave ho!...

Well bundle up and cover your nose
Wear your hat when the big wind blows
Air so cold you can see your breath
If you get sick you’ll sneeze to death.
Heave ho! Heave ho!...

Well wear you woolies whenever you roam
By springtime they can walk alone
Keep your mukluks on your feet
You’ll need the traction in the ice and sleet
Heave ho! Heave ho!...

Pretend that you like winter games
Downhill skiing is quite insane
Hang your ice-skates on the wall
You can’t hur yousealf if you don’t fall.
Well…
Heave ho! Heave ho!...