We woke up Saturday morning
to 26 inches of snow. It took my
husband and me over an hour and a half to get to the barn to feed the horses.
We were using his mighty new John Deere tractor with the world’s largest snow
blower, but the drifts were shoulder high and the snow was so wet that it was
hard to move it. All day, we plowed and shoveled and in the end, I must say we
did a very nice job of clearing paths and runways so we can move through the
white mountains. Now, we are
getting freezing rain, which is going to turn to plain old rain.
This is the recipe for true
disaster around here. When we have a lot of snow and the rain can’t drain into
the ditches, the barn floods. So
far, we are on the edge of the rain on the weather map. I honestly wish we would
have more snow instead of the rain.
I’ve just mucked and fed and chopped up the icy patches, and it’s only
7:30 am, so I hope I’ve got a jump on it.
My friends in California are all checking in with wisecracks, but I was
reading somewhere some quote about how you don’t know how strong you are until
you have no option but to be
strong. My right elbow and arm
have held up through all the shoveling, although I was pretty sore on Saturday
night.
Yesterday, on Sunday at the
crack of dawn, my daughter and I had to go to New York City because she had a
very important interview that she did not want to postpone. So, in the dark, we
drove down unplowed roads to get to the 95 and brave our way to the closest
open train station. It took double
the amount of time it would usually take, and I was loving our old Landcruiser
with the four-wheel drive. I felt like it was some kind of dream. We got to
Grand Central, walked to the interview, walked back and got on the train and
were home in record time. I was so
happy to pull in the beautifully plowed driveway and see my horses standing in
their little cleared off runway in the pasture eating hay and my puppy playing
with my neighbor who had been babysitting her.
Stella is a riot in the
snow. I need to shoot some video of her leaping in the deepest snow banks. She
has no fear and as she gets buried over her head, she shoots straight up in the
air and launches herself into the next deep spot. Boing, boing! She was loving
it, and the best part is that it only takes about ten minutes for her to be
completely exhausted. She sleeps on the couch for a few hours and then runs to
the back door, ready to have at it for more playtime. It reminds me of how I
was when I was a little kid and it snowed.
How many days until Spring?
7 comments:
We did get blasted with the snow this time. I hope the rain doesn't cause your barn to flood. Stella sounds like she's really enjoying herself. Stay warm.
You sound like you are doing very well in spite of the weather conditions. Especially love that last shot of Stella. It started melting last night so there was ice on our driveway this morning and I just had to slip on it, fell on my back, tried to catch myself and jammed my shoulder. Can't catch a break! I too, am looking for spring.
Arlene - Glad you are doing okay with this weather. Take care!
Lori - I'm so sorry that you fell - I hope that you take it easy. I don't go anywhere without my Yak Traks on my boots. It's so slippery! Please be careful!
Between tales from you and from Arlene about snow and horses, I have informed my husband that we are not moving anywhere near mtns. with regular snowfall unless the farm has an indoor arena attached to the barn and a huge storage building for an entire winter's worth of hay, stall bedding, feed, and all with back-up huge industrial generator to boot. :)
I hope you skip the rain and just keep the snow - and please please take good care of your arm and elbow! Big hugs to those sweet horses for being so patient!
That would have been a shock to the system seeing that much just overnight! It sure is pretty though. Hoping this is the last of the winter storms that the east has to endure this year, and it melts without flooding anything. I can just picture Stella boinging in the snow. Dogs know perfectly how to enjoy life! We can learn a lot from them. :)
I'm with billie 100% - three winters up north were all I'll ever need.
Glad your wing is holding up. Who knows, maybe the workout will help your recovery. Your girls are adorable, and I can picture Stella now. I miss the exuberance of a young labbish dog.
Hope the rain bypasses you!
great blog. It's nice to be surrounded by horses.
Mike
www.mikekraus.blogspot.com
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