Fourteen Inches of Snow

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Spent the last hour and a half shoveling fourteen inches of snow. Thankfully it was light and fluffy, in mild temperature with no wind.

Rethinking the wisdom of buying a house with a double lot.

Gave away my two snowblowers when I moved to the city from the burbs. Had a big one for the driveway and a small one for the sidewalk and to blow the blow from my deck down into my pool.

Now all I have are four shovels, a spouse, and a springer spaniel (with dubious snow moving skills).

Jill

Comments

Careful

Daphne Xu's picture

Depending on your age and level of fitness, shoveling snow could be dangerous. One could get a heart episode from overexertion.

Also, what's with the CAUTION?

-- Daphne Xu

Maybe

Maybe it had to do with exactly what you pointed out. A guess on my part but who knows.

Oh no!

0.25tspgirl's picture

Home Depot is calling your name. Cub Cadet with a front mounted blower and a back mounted blade and a mower for summer…. Fantasy is fun isn’t it? Still that’s the best way to minimize all future snowfall (applied sympathetic magic - Murphy’s law corollary. What you are prepared for won’t happen.).

BAK 0.25tspgirl

Jill,

Angharad's picture

I hope you weren't going to shovel off this mortal coil, were you?

Angharad

Snow

jacquimac's picture

your lucky
the UK weather bureau have been threatening the UK will turn in to iceberg and we've only seen a bit of snow in the last 2 years

SNOW

I moved to Florida because of the Snow, not to rub it in but I don't own long pants nor a heavy coat short and t shirt year-round.

Long Pants

I often need long pants when I'm shoveling, then I stop to catch my breath.

Jill

Angela Rasch (Jill M I)

I was born in 1940 ...

... in the English midlands and I didn't own any long trousers until 1955 - it was shorts all the way, even when sledging. I wasn't very unusual, though I was fairly old before moving to longs, but not the last to succumb. We used to get a lot of snow in those days and central heating was unknown. I feel the cold more now :)

14" of snow?

It's all relative. Where I live now 2" of snow brings the whole world to a grinding halt. Where I used to live it meant an extra cup of coffee before driving to work on well-cleared roads. North of there 14" of snow would be called "scattered flurries".

I don't shovel driveways or front walks, it might encourage people to come knocking on my door.

Damaged people are dangerous
They know they can survive