Nice Winters, and Other Strange Concepts

in #humor6 years ago

We had such a nice, warm winter going on there.

(Well ... "nice winter", is relative. But in northern Indiana, if the temperature stays above freezing for any amount of time between late December and the end of January, that's a nice winter.)

I wanted it to continue. I contacted my state representative and asked him to build a wall between us and Canada, to keep out those nasty polar vortexes. Look, I love Canada, but I understand why they call that country America's Hat: They have to wear hats up there to keep their ears from falling off. For nine months a year.

You have to respect people who get by even though they think North Dakota is a bit too warm for them.

Anyway, my state representative recently got a frostbit nose on the Pokagon State Park toboggan run, and was thus sympathetic. He threatened to shut down the state government unless they funded a Games Of Thrones style ice wall, until it was pointed out to him that keeping a polar vortex out would require a wall eighteen miles high ... and besides, Lake Michigan was a problem.

That guy has since moved to Boca Raton, which I discovered is in Florida. Traitor.

blogger-image--767243088.jpg
Just to make it clear, this is NOT Boca Raton.

So, with no approval for a wall, or my backup idea involving a line of several hundred thousand salamanders pointed north, winter came back.

(Imagine my embarrassment when I discovered salamanders had to be powered by something, which made the idea financially unsound. I thought they all just crawled to the state line and breathed warm air into the wind.)

So one day I went outside to do yard work while it was in the low 50s (Fahrenheit--let's not get silly). Two days later it was 22 degrees, and lake-effect snow--which my wall would have stopped--was causing vehicles to skid all over like a Disney On Ice version of "Cars".

Which ... come to think of it would be a brilliant show, and I'd pay to go, if I could get out of my driveway.

Winter2011002.jpg
"Screw it, bring in the zamboni."

Anyway, for awhile there we were having decent (relatively) weather, while the south was getting clobbered with ice and snow. I feel for the south, but there's a certain irony there: For most of my life I've sworn every winter that by next winter I'd move away; but like an angry Democrat celebrity, I never do. Honestly, I really love Indiana the rest of the year, but is a northern Indiana winter worth that?

Plan B was to become a rich author and have a winter home, an idea I abandoned when I found out the average author earns under the poverty line.

When it snows in the south, the counties dig out their only snow plow (manufactured by Mack in 1959). Most adults stay in, most kids go out to throw snowballs, and people who have to drive somewhere crash. All of them. But there's a good side: southern snow rarely lasts long, and pretty soon they get nice and toasty warm again (relatively).

Without a wall. Or maybe with, because the upper Midwest functions as their winter barrier.

Our good luck is over now, and we can expect a few months of complete ick. I shall survive by staying home as much as possible, writing under a multi-spectrum lamp while wearing both long flannel underwear and a big fluffy robe, and several layers in between. It's not quite denial.

But it beats Boca Raton in the summer.

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ǝɹǝɥ sɐʍ ɹoʇɐɹnƆ pɐW ǝɥ┴

Well, its the same every year (or most years at least): you refuse to accept it, until it bites you. And then you accept it. But its worth trying not to accept it, just in case it would work.

Here in Germany, its somewhat different this year. Totally diffent, in fact. For one, the south (the Alps mountains) is usually the snow region, while the west and north is more on the rainy side, which has to do with the gulf current I was told.
In addition, we had more or less harmless winters in recent years. That may be caused by global warming, but nobody was complaining too much about it. Except the people in the Alps, who live mainly from tourists who come to do skiing. Which is not much fun without snow, so they had to make a lot of artificial snow.
Well, have they been in for a surprise now! Inside a short time, they got 6 - 9 ft of snow in the Alps, and even in the lower Bavarian regions 4 -5 ft.
Now the Alpine people are complaining because the tourists cannot reach them, due to closed roads, the danger of avalanches and so on. And the tourists who were there already, cannot get home.
To make things worse, there is so much snow on roofs, that they are in danger to collapse. So they have to clear them with snow shovels, which is much less fun than skiing. It looks like that:

And some people got killed as well, because they didn't believe that its dangerous to get in a avalanche and ignored the warning signs. Some other got hit by collapsing trees.
I guess, they have by now come to the conclusion, that its much better to complain about the lack of snow.

You know you have too much snow when ski lodges complain about it!

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