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When the cold starts moving in, and staying, that's winter. It's been down in the low-20s and even the low teens over the past week or so. So it felt like winter, just didn't look like winter here in the northeastern United States. Now it looks like it and feels like it. Which, as I get older, gets wearisome. Especially when you have to heat the house and pay for that luxury. Which up here is actually a necessity.
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Now I know it isn't a lot of snow and I like that. It makes things prettier than being all brown, and it doesn't impede driving and it isn't much to shovel. As Chez Sarge faces south, and the driveway slopes to the south, clearing the driveway, even when it's bitter cold out, isn't really necessary if the sun is out. Anything less than three inches will pretty much melt on its own. We (I) still have to clean the automotive conveyances off, but that doesn't require any lifting.
This isn't the first snow I've seen this year. If you remember my post from a week ago (here), we saw snow the day we left Maryland, after our Thanksgiving trip to see the lads, Roberto and Finnegan, and their sister (for whom I have yet to pick a nom du blog). It wasn't as much and it wasn't as cold, though lately Maryland has been matching Little Rhody degree for degree as regards coldness. Something I hadn't anticipated but am getting used to.
In fact over the last couple of years, they've seen more snow (and deeper to boot) than I have up here in Little Rhody. That big old ocean just out there from Chez Sarge really keeps the temperatures moderated as compared to inland. While they're within a stone's throw of Chesapeake Bay, less than ten miles, they're nearly a hundred miles from the Atlantic Ocean. If you look at a map you'll see that Chesapeake Bay is much bigger than Narragansett Bay.
Speaking of which, we're less than a mile from Narragansett Bay and we're less than 15 miles from the Atlantic Ocean. So we definitely have a maritime climate in these parts whereas in Maryland The Nuke and her tribe are further inland.
So winter, as I mentioned above, doesn't officially start until the 21st this year. But by my reckoning, winter begins at the end of November, beginning of December. Sarge-officially, I consider December, January, and February to be winter. Fall is September, October, and November, spring is March, April, and May, and summer is June, July, and August.
While May can feel like summer, as can September, I consider those transitional months containing elements of the two seasons either side of them. Same goes for March, while I consider that to be in spring, it is also a transitional month from winter to spring.
Where I grew up, Vermont, we saw elements of winter (i.e. snow) well into April. Saw the same sort of weather in Colorado as well. I once drove from San Antonio (TX) to Fort Collins (CO) starting the 1st of April, which was a bright sunny warm day in Texas, right through into the 2nd of April, where it was snowing like crazy all the way from New Mexico to Canada. I was lucky enough to follow a snow plow over the Raton Pass!
As an aside, a very dear friend of mine was born on the day I went over the Raton Pass. She asked me how I could possibly remember what I was doing as she was being born, I just looked at her and said, "Driving from southern Texas to northern Colorado in a snowstorm isn't something you forget!" (And yes, I have some young friends, besides which, she was the best boss I ever had.)
So enough about the weather, as Not Your Uncle Skip says, "when you've got nothing to really post about, there's always the weather."
Some of you are no doubt wondering when the next installment in my World War One tale is going to come out. I wish I knew. Ever since the Muse and I shared an Italian coffee Friday last, she's been missing in action. Probably on a bender again, she's been working hard and keeps complaining, "I thought we were retired!" Which we are, but ...
It's the holiday season, Christmas for some and Hannukah for others, and truth be told, I just don't feel like writing much. The news is effing depressing, politicians who control society mostly (nearly all?) suck, and I'm just waiting to go see the grandkids at Christmas. Not going to see my breakfast buddies again until January and I'm in a holding pattern of sorts. I'm kinda the electronic device sitting in the charger until I'm needed again, the tanker flying the racetrack waiting until someone needs gas. My morale is shaky and I'm playing too many games on the computer. (How many is too many? YMMV)
I've given serious thought to quitting this blogging thing, I realize that it's become too much a part of who I am to do so, but I can ease off on the throttle a bit. Being a writer is not something you can just walk away from, it's addictive in many ways. You don't even have to be good at it to be addicted to it!
So that's where we're at.
By the way, juvat's Monday post, wasn't that strange as can be, but surprisingly it worked. At least for those who've been following the "juvat saga" as I call it. Vehicle mishaps, moving to another town after years of living in the same place, getting old, and yes, I'm paying attention. That sort of thing might happen for Your Humble Scribe. Not the vehicular mishap part, but the moving somewhere else? I just don't know. Once my mother is gone, that might happen, but our roots are awfully deep in these parts.
But the damned winters, they get to me at times. (Once the summer starts then I'll bitch about how hot it is!) But you never know, man proposes, God disposes. We shall see.
Personally I'd hate to leave New England, my roots are incredibly deep here. There are many folks here that I love deeply and I would hate to not see them again. My ancestors, at least those I knew personally and those in the generation before them, are buried here.
Geez, I'm such a geezer.
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Rabbits, we have quite a few. They drive The Missus Herself crazy as they love to eat all of her plants. A couple of years ago they wreaked havoc on the vegetable garden so two years ago we installed a chicken wire fence around it. So now we get to eat those vegetables rather than feeding the rabbits.
We have a lot of wildlife around here, rabbits, deer, turkeys, foxes, coyotes, and the neighborhood has a resident hawk. The hawk does more to keep the rabbit population under control than the coyotes, I know this as I found a partially eaten carcass in the backyard last summer while mowing the lawn. I knew it was a bird which had done the deed due to the way the carcass had been pecked at.
Nature, red in tooth and claw, if you pay attention, you can see it in town as well as in the country.
Anyhoo, that's enough for now. Expect days with nothing and days with just a little over the rest of the month.
I might even go "on sabbatical" in January. I'm still up in the air on that.
Stay tuned.
¹ Winter has begun. While the title didn't have to be in German, I like German, so there.




Nice change of pace post Sarge, that white stuff here reveals a number of cottontails, squirrels, deer and several cats roaming out there at all hours of the day around my abode. Not to mention the older I get the less I look forward to snow season, removing the stuff takes longer (more rest breaks) but there are hot liquids afterwards to revive the tired body. Yet my roots are in this state, no moving out of the region for me, want to stay in a place where there are lakes to fish in........:)
ReplyDeleteI understand completely.
DeleteOur meteorologists' convention is that winter is December, January, February. That works well enough for our small archipelago.
ReplyDeleteWe don't have many wildlife problems in our garden except for birds, foxes, rats (a population explosion allegedly caused by discarded fast food), squirrels (they always get all our hazelnuts), muntjac deer, and a pestilential little insect that ruins our crops of morello cherries and damsons.
Our great fear is badgers: some live close by - they can destroy a garden while being protected by law. Even if I hadn't sold my rifle I wouldn't be allowed to shoot them. They may also be the reason why we see so few hedgehogs any more.
We're fortunate in not having badgers here.
DeletePretty cold down here Monday when we disembarked the Burg, about 29 with a pretty stiff wind. Raining this morning, making it a pretty good day to stay inside and unpack boxes. Will have to make a few trips to Lowes and/or HEB for things we need but forgot. Fortunately both are within 2 moles of our rental house ( Hint: sales at both will climb steeply now. Invest now!)
ReplyDeleteRental house is pretty small, but Mrs J is a very talented unpacker and putting things in their place (including and especially ME!). So we should be good until the “forever” home is built!
juvat
Looking forward to the continuing "juvat saga." But without the mishaps!
DeleteI agree, but the mishaps do make for good content! hahaha. Just kidding- housing, horses, woodworking, etc. are good enough.
DeleteTrue, but ...
DeleteMeteorological winter (Dec-Jan-Feb) is the way I think, it's easier and it's generally realistic.
ReplyDeleteIt works up here in the north.
DeleteSarge, Winter for me starts sometime between the middle and end of November. I cannot throw a date on it, but it is just one of those things that "feels" right.
ReplyDeleteOne of the things we are grappling with in our new location is the generally colder climate - not your cold, but definitely not the balmy mid 60's and 70's of years of yore. Everyone that The Ravishing Mrs. TB meets says the first year was awful, the second year was less awful, and then things just got okay. Certainly the Springs, Summers and Autumns here are far more usable than New Home 2.0!
Writing - I am having some of the same thoughts. My numbers have "increased", but if I look at the likely actual daily readers based on geography it is a lot less. A lot lot less. I am also wondering if, for myself, I am not writing other things because I pour my energy into this.
Once a writer always a write; it is just how and where you write.
What with the bots and AI roaming around, doing no good at all, it's hard to put any credence on the numbers I see every day. But as long s people keep commenting, I'll know that "we few, we happy few" are still deriving a certain amount of pleasure from my scribbling. So it's likely I'll continue for the near future.
DeleteBecause I am now 64, and have a farmyard to dig out, my goal for 2026 is to acquire a small Bobcat. Preferably with a heated cab. The stereo I will put in myself, if needed. I have no enthusiasm for shovelling.
ReplyDeleteThat's a worthy goal!
DeleteSarge, you have to do what's best for you and yours. Yeah, it would be nice to have the stories continue, but I think that we will all survive if they don't. You've spent half a century, more or less, at the service of others, you should get to enjoy the rest of your days doing what you want.
ReplyDeleteWe shall see, I do enjoy blogging, for the most part. So we shall press on.
DeleteSarge, you don't have to uproot your Northeastern ties, just do the snowbird thing, traveling around the southern climes during Jan/Feb maybe, or just long trips visiting National Parks, cruising, etc. I don't see us leaving commiefornia when I retire, but maybe doing 182 days elsewhere. That's more tax related than weather, but you get it.
ReplyDeleteI travel like a cheap wine ...
DeleteNot very well.
Checking in to remind you that our efforts are appreciated, and read. Beware of moving to chase the kiddies. They tend to move around due to the curse of "jobs" and elders are left behind in unfamiliar surroundings. Might as well stay at the homeport and let them visit you there, or you visit them while enjoying what feels "normal" to you.
ReplyDeleteMountain west has been blessed with most unseasonable weather for several weeks with highs in the 50s when we should be chilly 30s. I've suffered thru it successfully, but know the purr of snowblowers is inevitable. Still...
JB
Yes, chasing the kids is not in the immediate future. Due to that very thing.
DeleteOver here in the UK my wife and I are now in the same situation, kids left long ago and settled in jobs but not living too far away, we thought about moving but where to? We know too many people who went to a place on holiday, loved it, bought a place there and moved in only to find that what's nice for a holiday may not be an ideal place to live. It may be boring but you want access to shops, transport and medical care as you get older and these are ideally within walking distance. We wouldn't even think of a retirement village. From what I've read the developers may as well fly a skull and crossbones and you are likely landing your kids with a problem when you go. Interestingly there is now a trend for retirees to be moving into cities and towns. We know people who have downsized to apartments in London, advantages include easy access to theatres, museums etc. you really don't need a car and as senior citizen you get use of public transport at a reduced rate. The downside is some of these apartments have high annual charges and you could be subject to unexpected charges.
ReplyDeleteWe'll see what happens. There's due to be a lot more development in my area so we'll see what happens.
Retired
There is the temptation to downsize the living accommodations but then where would everyone stay when they come to visit? That still happens and I like being able to accommodate the whole family if needs be. It's a bit tight but it isn't a long term thing anyway. And what's more, I like it here, a lot. I like my house and my town. Moving into an apartment or a condominium means having other people right on top of you. I've been there, done that, don't want to do it again.
DeleteHopefully you'll find something which suits you and the missus. Bon chance!