Showing posts with label weather. Show all posts
Showing posts with label weather. Show all posts

Friday, February 8, 2013

Snow Days

Today's a "snow day", in other words a day when my children get off school because there's so much snow on the ground that school buses can't get through the side streets of individual subdivisions, i.e. neighbourhoods, which, in contrast to main roads, don't get cleared immediately.

As you can imagine, children love snow days because they don't have to get up early and can instead spend the entire day making snowmen, sledding and having snowball fights rather than listening to their teachers and learning.

Because kids prefer snow days to school, a number of fun rituals have developed over here in the New World to encourage the crystalised water to come tumbling down aplenty. Although not entirely scientifically sound, they make fun reading nonetheless:
  • Putting a spoon under your pillow. Some say it should be licked beforehand. It doesn't matter whether it's plastic, metal or wooden, slide it under your pillow at bedtime, and a snow day is more-or-less guaranteed to follow. More comfortable variation: Putting the spoon in the fridge.
  • Putting a picture of the Virgin Mary and a dollar bill under your pillow. More pious and costly than a spoon you can steal out of your mother's kitchen, but just as guaranteed of success.
  • Putting a cotton ball under said headrest. Given how rare cotton balls are nowadays, if a child is clever enough to find one, it deserves a snow day for pure ingenuity.
  • Flushing an ice cube down the toilet at 9pm on the night before the desired snow day. But only one ice cube (we don't want to call up a blizzard or block the toilet, do we?). A tried-and-tested snow-producer this, though whether it actually works is anyone's guess. Variation: throwing ice behind you so that it lands in the toilet. May have to be repeated several times until you actually hit the bowl.
  • Saying "reverse" 20 times backwards. This one's challenging if your child is dyslexic.
  • Wearing your pyjamas inside-out and back-to-front. My son does this most nights anyway, so since we don't constantly miss school, I suspect this might be a dud.
  • Doing a snow-dance. The native Americans - red Indians to you and me - used this method to encourage rainfall, why shouldn't latter-day New Worlders dance to produce snow? Particularly likely to work if the dancer is wearing snowflake-patterned socks or sweater.
  • Putting an orange in the freezer. Yeah, right! 
  • Not thinking about or saying the word "snow". Very difficult if all you want is snow.
  • Dancing around a cup of ice. Almost certain to add 2-3 inches of snow to the night's snowfall. I wonder whether European cup-dancers would add 2-3cm instead.
  • Repeating a snow chant. Doesn't have to be complex. "Let it snow!" apparently suffices. Great for those unable or unwilling to dance. If you repeated often and loudly enough, the school authorities may offer you a snow day just to shut your kids up.
  • Yelling "snow day!" into the freezer. Alternate, equally effective shout out apparently include yelling into the bath tub and under the bed.
  • Placing 12 orange index cards on the hood of your car. This must be linked to the bizarre orange-freezing caper mentioned further up. If America had gone metric, this would, I believe, have been ten cards. But who has index cards in this digitised age? And how many children have their own car? The mind boggles.
  • Throwing a paper cup out of the window. Why this should elicit snow I really don't know. But at least it saves on clearing up.
  • Brushing your tongue for two minutes. I do hope this involves a toothbrush rather than a hair- or toilet brush. Even if this doesn't cause the sky to spew frozen gobs of water, at least your children have clean tongues. Tip for parents: get them to brush their teeth at the same time.
  • Drawing three Xs and then colouring them sky blue. I have no information on whether this should be done on a piece of paper as opposed to a wall nor how one might colour something that has no un-coloured middle, but then again, I'm just a stupid Old Worlder.
  • Running around the table five times. Not to be tried without adult supervision if your table is up against a wall. Injury rather than snowfall may result. The same goes for spinning around three times with your eyes closed.
  • Sticking a white crayon in the freezer - and then putting it under your pillow. Presumably alongside the spoon.
  • Sleeping on the opposite side of bed. I have no clue why this might work. Perhaps you feel so confused when you wake up looking in the other direction that you'll think it snowed. 
  • Wearing gloves to bed. Even if it doesn't have the desired effect, at least you won't have cold hands at night.
  • Placing ice cubes on your porch. This may well work. After all, if you put enough out there, you could be convinced it had snowed overnight.
  • Sprinkling "shaved" ice on the branches of nearby trees and bushes. A very unsubtle hint to the weather gods to send a big freeze. If very desperate - or out of shaved ice - simply throwing ice cubes at the aforementioned plants may also suffice. 
And finally:
  • Stacking pennies on your window sill.This one is clearly biased towards the rich, who have lots of pennies to spend on snow. Apparently each penny is worth one inch of the lovely white stuff.

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Lost

Lost: One season. Answers to the name of "Spring".

Spring is a friendly, three-month season whose most distinctive features are sunshine, mild temperatures, leafy trees, flowers and birdsong.


Spring first went missing about a week ago, although it briefly reappeared. However, Spring disappeared completely during a freak winter storm on April 18, which brought about two inches of snow. It has not been seen since.

If found, please return to its owners in suburban Michigan, who miss it dearly and look forward to being reunited with their beloved Spring as soon as possible.

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Monday, March 9, 2009

Coming Soon?

Two days ago I saw the first V of honking geese returning. Now I hear birdsong.

Could it be that the long winter is finally coming to an end?

Saturday, February 21, 2009

It's All Relative

A winter storm warning is in effect today because up to two inches of snow an hour are expected, making driving conditions extremely hazardous. People are therefore being urged to travel only in emergencies.

When I told her about this, my wife replied, "I need to go to the hairdresser. That's an emergency, isn't it?"

Saturday, February 14, 2009

Winter Essentials


Forget snow-shovels. When it comes to getting rid of frozen precipitation, my weapon of choice is the ice scraper.

Now don't get me wrong: I'm not talking about those pathetic little moulded plastic de-icers that you keep in the glove compartment of your car. Oh, no. I'm talking about a precision engineered tool with a three-foot steel core shaft and a flat, sharpened steel blade that will cut through any car-compressed or simply neglect-compacted ice sheets that are foolish enough to build up on your drive.

An ice scraper may not be as crudely efficient as my John Deere wishlist-topper, the snow blower, but there's nothing as satisfying as slicing through a bank of thick ice using nothing more environmentally damaging than Reese's-fuelled manpower.

Common or garden-centre snow blower

Given the challenges of lots of snow and a lack of both fences and pavements (and therefore kerbs), another must-have winter product is the driveway marker. These brightly-coloured four-foot poles are stuck into the ground when the first flurries fall to prevent cars inadvertently driving across your garden, which is, after all, at the same height as the adjacent road, especially when thick snow blurs the boundaries between the two.

Because there are ditches along both sides of many roads and these are quickly obscured by the twin forces of snow and snow ploughs, driveway markers have the added advantage that they ensure you approach your garage along your drive rather than having to abandon your Hummer/SUV/4x4 (delete where appropriate) in the aforementioned ditch.

Thursday, February 5, 2009

Rule of Thumb

You know it's pretty cold outside when you can actually feel the hairs inside your nostrils freezing as you walk your children 100 metres from the car park to their school.

(-23°C this morning with a wind-chill factor of -31°C)

Sunday, January 18, 2009

Rule of Thumb (contd.)

You know it's pretty cold outside when your cold and hot water pipes freeze in a wall inside the house.

Saturday, January 17, 2009

Rule of Thumb

You know it's pretty cold outside when you park a snow-covered car in your garage and it's got just as much snow on it 24 hours later.

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Going Down

The temperatures have plummeted this week, and the bottom has yet to be reached.

It was -20°C when we got up at 7am this morning, even though it should be rising to a balmy -13°C as the day progresses. However, if the weather forecast is to be believed, we should be getting far colder weather by the end of the week, with daytime highs of -18°C and a wind chill factor of -32°C!

I've already got snow-shoveller's elbow from clearing our drive. Am I now to get frostbite waiting for the school bus too?

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Weather (contd.)

There are more freak weather conditions heading our way.

According to my iPhone, the forecast for tomorrow is for snow, a low of -5°C and a high of -6°C.

Saturday, December 13, 2008

Weather

Gravity isn't the only thing that works differently in the US. Weather doesn't follow the normal rules of numerical linearity.

When I got up this morning and checked today's weather forecast on my iPhone, it said we'd have lows of -1°C and highs of 1°C in our town. However, the actual temperature was given as -7°C (it's now up to -3°C)!

In case you don't believe me, look at this:


Monday, November 10, 2008

I'm Dreaming of ...

... a white November?!

Barely a week after our second Indian summer and temperatures as high as 22°C, the following scene greeted us this morning:


Thursday, October 2, 2008

Winter

With temperatures plunging almost as quickly as stock prices (it was down to 5°C last night), we reluctantly had to switch over from air-conditioning to heating today.

It looks like we're in for a long and energy-intensive winter.

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Rain


I just heard that we got 5.8 inches (147mm) of rainfall this weekend.

That's positively diluvian!