Snoooooooooooo

Oct 16, 2011 10:46

I'm glad I got my outside chores done over the last week, because I woke this morning to find the ground and trees covered with snow. There's not a lot of snow -- maybe an inch. Fairbanks is a desert, of sorts, and we never get a lot of snow at one time. It just never goes away.Seems ungracious to complain about it when it's starting so much later ( Read more... )

alaska

Leave a comment

Comments 17

liz_mo October 16 2011, 19:24:42 UTC
Hehe. Yes, exactly :)

Get safe through winter!

Reply

sholio October 16 2011, 20:02:45 UTC
I think I'm ready for it, and it was absolutely lovely when I walked the dogs this morning! Although now the roads are going to suck for a while ... bleh.

Reply


leesa_perrie October 16 2011, 19:57:14 UTC
Four feet of snow for six months? Most people in the UK can't cope with a few inches of snow on the ground for a few days, let alone one. Whole. Week!!! :D

Reply

sholio October 16 2011, 20:03:51 UTC
*grin* I do think it's a matter of what you're used to. Like I commented over on DW, the worst part of winter is always right after the first snowfall when the roads are made of suck and everyone is re-learning how to drive in it, and you guys get that EVERY TIME IT SNOWS, so you have my condolences. *g*

Reply

trobadora October 16 2011, 20:24:31 UTC
My impression is that a frigheningly large number of people forgets how to drive at the mere sight of a snowflake, regardless of actual road conditions. *g*

Reply


trobadora October 16 2011, 20:01:01 UTC
Heh. A few years back we actually had a winter where the snow didn't melt for about three months, and that was practically unheard of. (It was also rather unpleasant, as the snow - obviously - just kept getting dirtier and dirtier.)

Reply

sholio October 16 2011, 20:12:25 UTC
Yeah, the longer the snow sticks around the less picturesque it gets ... and when it melts in the spring, things just get nasty. When I was a kid we had a German neighbor who hated Alaskan springs because she'd grown up somewhere that spring was bright and green and full of flowers, and our springs are more brown and squishy and full of trash ...

Reply

trobadora October 16 2011, 20:22:14 UTC
Yeah, we really do tend to forget that seasons are different elsewhere, don't we? In my head "spring" and "green and flowery" are sort of hardwired together.

Reply


jimandblair October 16 2011, 20:19:49 UTC
A good friend lives on the equator and I remember telling her that the dark nights were drawing in and I completely threw her. She didn't know what I was talking about. We had a fun conversation with me explaining changes in latitude and light.

Your everyday tales illustrate an interesting and fascinating place. Winter as a four month constant with fluctuating dark with the edge of light at noon is a fascinating concept. I adore the midnight sun, but I think that I would struggle with the winter dark.

Reply

sholio October 16 2011, 21:22:04 UTC
Oh wow, I hadn't even thought about that! Yeah, if you lived in an equatorial place, that's something you wouldn't even know about, except in a sort of vague "yeah, I read about that once" kind of way.

I actually like the changing daylight and changing seasons, though I wouldn't say I enjoy the winter darkness so much as it makes me appreciate summer a whole lot more! I wouldn't want to have the midnight sun all year 'round.

Reply


kodiak_bear October 16 2011, 22:56:08 UTC
LOL that so cracks me up because it's one of the things that I learned to like about Nebraska. You get snow, get to enjoy it and have fun and then...it MELTS! Awesome, no 4-6 months of snow and ice. Of course the Air Force has kept us most of the time in the south so we rarely get snow anymore but I still remember the long winters growing up. By the time break up arrives, you are so ready to see the *ground* again.

Reply

sholio October 17 2011, 19:57:07 UTC
Hee! It was nice - winter in Illinois felt a lot like autumn in Alaska to me, with just enough snow that you got to have some nice winter fun (and got a reminder of everything that you weren't missing in the summer) and then it WENT AWAY.

Reply


Leave a comment

Up