THE GREAT LEVELER

I want to put two ll’s in leveller. (There are going to be problems when I get to SPELLING in my English course). Anyway, Our John thinks we got over Six inches yesterday. Nice light fluffy snow.

But it is what comes after the snow that will cause the – hmm, what is the word, not problem exactly – adjustment, change, issue? No, it is the wind. If all the nice white fluffy snow stayed in place it would be very manageable. The wind is continuing to blow – the pathways and driveways he scooped and ploughed are already blown back up into mounds of snow again.

I don’t scoop snow. It is not my department. The dogs and I just clamber through the snow drifts like pioneers.

Snow is the great leveller – everything evens out in the snow. Until men get at it and try to subdue the snow everything is uniformly pretty.

The other issue is the cold. It looks like we will be below freezing for a few days now. I see this as a good thing because snow melt means more mud and I am deeply tired of mud.

But the animals are all less than inspired by snow and the barn will be packed with sheltering animals and birds.

My guests yesterday worked hard and cooked hard and laid in front of the fire to rest a lot. There was a chef and a barista and two dishwashers ( one of whom was visiting from the Philippines ) so I was well taken care of.

The blowing snow kept our work inside.

C

The shot below was earlier in the day.

Our John has already taken a pass with his snow-plough. He is a Midwest native and joined the chorus of complaints from the men about the snow but secretly they are thrilled to bits when they get out there and hook the huge heavy metal rusty dinged up ploughs to the fronts of their oldest rusty dinged up trucks and plough off into the snowy sunset.

I hope you have a good day.

Celi

And now the weather…

Oh Wait!! I almost forgot to tell you – Jude has shifted himself into the grown up pigs house. The black upside down tub – stuffed full of straw and rags has been hanging out next to his heat lamp bed for a few weeks now. Last night I found him deep in the straw in his draft free house. With his heat lamp heating nobody. At last I can turn off his terrifying heat lamp. Thanks Gods.

He will get hot porridge twice a day now and I will be watching him carefully for signs of chilling. But that heat lamp ( which was only on at night and tied up three independent ways – even anchored from the sides so it could not swing) makes me very nervous.

Ok – NOW the weather and I will see you in The Lounge after chores … onwards!

C

31 responses to “THE GREAT LEVELER”

  1. Oh my, in that second picture-the one with the clatter box contraption that carries hay up top- is that Jude just in front of Boo??? If so he has gotten huge! It was always difficult to tell just how much he had grown, but if that’s him then the perspective from that picture really shows how much he is bulking up and becoming a real pig!

  2. The men-with-snow-tools thing doesn’t just apply to trucks and big plows. The men on our street get excited when flakes start to fall. Next door neighbor Don and across the street neighbor Glen both cleared their drives by mid-day with their blowers. But, alas! It continued to snow until dark. They had to do it at least one more time. Me? I watched from my front window then went out at dusk to do the job only once.

  3. I’ve noticed that a lot of men like Action, big sweeping noisy activity with lots of highly visible results. If it involves a tractor and a big, dinged-up metal attachment, they’re right there. I quite like that too, but I get a lot more satisfaction from clean paths, dry feet, full bellies and everyone safe and warm… I hope the Farmy and all its denizens (don’t you love that word?) will stay warm, well fed and dry in the coming days. And no mud.

  4. That Tane is just too cute, tusks, overbite and all!!! 🙂 Gosh, we’ve had nothing but rain for the past several days, but I’m always delighted by rain, no matter what, to fill the ponds and lakes around us! Everything totally stops here when the snow comes, as in these Ozark Mountains snow and ice can be
    extremely dangerous. It would be fun to see a little of it though! 🙂

  5. Those hearty duckies are brave little guys. And I agree with Jude, draft-free sleeping quarters are superior when it’s cold. Boys and their toys is the phrase that always comes to mind with the first couple of snow falls each year, but that wears off soon enough and the ‘toys’ would gather dust except for their need to get their other toys through that snow. Hope you can stay warm and dry today. ~Mame. 🙃

  6. Men do love their toys, er tools. They can complain but my last husband loved to get out and drive his little tractor around pushing and blowing snow. I got the shovel, thank you very much. Tane is so cute in that photo. I hope I have that right. How nice to have help in the kitchen. That’s where I like help the best. Hang in there with the snow and cold. I have a feeling the summer is going to be a doozy.

  7. Morning Celi ~ we had 10.5″ of snow over here 30 miles west of you!! No wind this morning and the sun is glistening on the all white beautiful landscape!!! Boo Boy would have a ball running around here!! And Jude would just sink down in ~ in some of those drifts!!! I dread the mess when it decides to melt. Have a good day with your guests cooking for you!!!

  8. My crew gets that way when storms come through. When storm drains get clogged, they call for the backhoe, and then get annoyed when I unclog the drain with a shovel before the backhoe arrives.

  9. So glad that you had helpers for the day! A chef and a barista sounds so wonderful. I agree, boys and their toys… Love the snow photos when everything looks so clean and bright. Later on though, grey snow and slush and mud is not so much fun :*)

  10. Yes, being north of the Great Lakes, I find “American” spelling constantly trying to autocorrect me (so I just changed my keyboards to UK English, et voilà! Problem solved! (Or Canadian French, Mexican Spanish… ; )

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