scantrontb wrote:shadowinthelight wrote:lake_wrangler wrote:Meanwhile, our snow has not finished melting...

Lazy snow.

Snow?... What is this "Snow" stuff you're talking about?
we had MAYBE 2 days worth of snow here in Federal Way (between Seattle and Tacoma, WA...
And we still have snow...
Though it is slowly melting away... it doesn't help, that the temperatures have been oscillating between 50°F one day, and 28°F the next...
So what's snow, you ask? Let me tell ya:
Snow is just a bunch of little water droplets that took advantage of the cold temperatures to change their appearance to make themselves look more fearsome. But it's all a trick, I tell ya! A trick!
Taken just a few at a time, they will simply melt in your hands. But get enough of them together, and they can really mess things up for you...
In fact, snow tends to be quite well organized. So much so, that they even have their own banking system... It's so popular and widespread, that you will in fact find a snow bank at the edge of all major parking lots in the city...
(Yes, that's the trailer to an 18-wheeler, which should give you an idea of the size of the snow bank...)
Although I wouldn't trust my savings to any snow bank... I'd be afraid of seeing my savings melt away like... well... like, snow in the sun...
When we get enough snow, people will go to great lengths to get rid of it, or at least to contain it, manage it, and cart it away if possible...
I was thinking about this, and I think that the snow is actually playing dirty politics... And it's giving it more staying power... When the snow starts melting, the dirt stays at the top and forms a crust, which then makes it harder for the rest of the snow below it to melt...
But that's OK. It will melt, eventually...
But fret not! All is not bleak! Snow is also capable of creating some lovely scenes:
And every year, there are more and more people who choose to make sport of the snow, who laugh in the face of it, and who won't let it stop them from going on their merry lives, determined as they are to not give the snow the satisfaction of thinking it might have slowed them down.
Here's one of my better frozen beard photos. I particularly like this one, because it's not just a mass of frozen stuff, but you can see each hair individually frosted over...
Some will even go as far as organizing rides as a statement to the fact that winter bicycling is easy, and within reach of anyone who cares to try.
See anyone familiar, at the left?
"Some people" will even go as far as going on day treks just for the fun of it...
On that day, I got the chance to ride on the snow's not so distant cousin, ice. Specifically, an ice bridge. The place where, in the summer, runs a ferry, serves as a bridge, once the river freezes over. It was fun to rid on, particularly with my studded tires.
All in all, I can't complain, nor am I. I enjoy the winter. I always have. When I lived in Toronto, I actually missed the snow. They don't really know what snow is, there... their snow removal method consists of shoving it to the side of the streets, and letting it melt, which it does in just a few days. One year, they had just a little too much snow to melt away like that, and
they had to call in the Canadian army to help them out! (I, as a Québécois, was laughing my butt off!

)
Winter biking allows me a regular form of exercise throughout the week, and it's actually rather fun...
It also helps prepare me for my bicycle touring trips during the summer.
Meanwhile, I hear that Spring is actually coming, some time soon... Sure, we've had three or four days of snowfall, during the last two weeks, but it looks like the thermometer should stay above freezing, for the foreseeable future.
Time to get ready for my summer bike trips!
