Winternal verities
Feb. 3rd, 2009 06:09 pmI should never forget that, even when you get a far-less-than-predicted one-inch snowstorm (down from, at various points in the last week, four, eight, and fifteen), you can still turn it into some fairly massive and long-lasting snow rolls, as long as the snow is the nice sticky kind. Which we got (although the flurries it's transitioned into now are utter powder). I'm just back from making a pair of 30-40"-diameter rolls, which will hopefully last straight through the 55-degree weather we're forecast to have this weekend, as a reminder that this is *winter* dammit, and there should be white on the ground. They'd've been larger, but you can only do so much with one inch.
I was surprised nobody else had already done it, or any other kind of snowbuilding since the snow was of ideal consistency. Hopefully I've set an example to more current students that what's falling from the sky isn't just beauty, it's raw material.
Lη: Good grief, was that some form of voodoo (er, white magic?)? It hasn't stopped snowing since I made those, while the storm is long over for most of the region. Just in Philadelphia and Delaware County it's still snowing, and pretty hard -- we're probably up past 4 inches at this point. Watching the radar over the past several hours has been eerie.
I was surprised nobody else had already done it, or any other kind of snowbuilding since the snow was of ideal consistency. Hopefully I've set an example to more current students that what's falling from the sky isn't just beauty, it's raw material.
Lη: Good grief, was that some form of voodoo (er, white magic?)? It hasn't stopped snowing since I made those, while the storm is long over for most of the region. Just in Philadelphia and Delaware County it's still snowing, and pretty hard -- we're probably up past 4 inches at this point. Watching the radar over the past several hours has been eerie.