What's NOT to love about snow days?

Did you know there is an APP for that? Yessir! An entreprising young senior in high school in my English district, has developped an app that lets you know when there is a snow day, meaning the schools are closed.  No more listening to the radio, searching online, calling the district, sending emails to friends... ETC.  NOPE!  There is an APP for that!

So if you are fortunate like me, and do not work when the schools are closed, OR you can stay home with your children when there is no school, OR you are retired, OR your workplace is closed, then...WOOHOO!

Firstly, you have the luxury of sleeping in.  Or at least knowing you don't HAVE to get out of bed until you darn well feel like it.  Then the day unfurls in a leisurely way, as you do things you normally would not do, because you would be having a "normal" day, NOT a "snow day!"

My "duvet day", as my British friend calls it, was SO fantastic, even though I didn't spend it under a duvet on the couch.  No, a few errands run around town before the roads became impassable; the intoxicating smell of caramalized onions simmering in my slow cooker; a tidied up bulletin board; a warm pumpkin walnut loaf cooling on my counter; finalized travel plans; a few decluttered drawers;  a vigourous forty minute walk with Vimy; an afternoon nap; a soak in a hot tub with a glass of wine; a leisure read in my lazy boy; a new 500 piece puzzle started; catching up on Season Three of X-Company on Netflix; an evening capped off with a leisurely stroll through the neighbnourhood, and a nightcap of Red Wine Hot Chocolate (recipe below!)... ALL added up to a PERFECT SNOW DAY for this lady

It is quite easy for me to become a COMPLETE hedonist on snow days.

On the other hand, what is NOT so thrilling about a snow day? A SECOND SNOW DAY!  The fun has worn off.  The sad reality is, you have to pay for that day of indulgence.  The next morning, you are trapped! Trapped in your house until you can dig yourself, your dog and your vehicle out of all that white S&?*! surrounding you.

Lucky me! Handy bro dropped by and had Jiminy out into my half plowed driveway, in ten minutes flat.  It would have taken me at L*E*A*S*T an hour of digging.  So what did I do? I packed my bags and left to go visit family, where there was much l*e*s*s snow.


X-COMPANY by the way, is an EXCELLENT Canadian 
production about Canada's contribution to the Allied spy network during WW2. 

RED WHITE HOT CHOCOLATE RECIPE
Yummy!



Long, long winters...

can help develop a sense of humour! You might as well laugh, because there is NOTHING you can do to change the weather.  Our winters on the east coast can last a good FIVE months.  If you don't e*m*b*r*a*c*e  the cold, s*h*o*v*e*l the snow, s*l*i*d*e across the ice, and try to enjoy these frosty elements, you will go stir CRAZY from cabin fever, be DEPRESSED from all the snow, ice, blizzards, and freezing rain, get SICK of being cold, and feel so FED UP with having to bundle up in so much clothing that when you walk, you waddle!  If you can't beat it, join it, right?  Mind you, you have to deal with vagaries in the weather, such as a positively balmy +10C temperature on December 23rd, and a wicked -24C on December 27th.

Canadians have developed a sense of humour, visually as well, about our TRUE NORTH, STRONG, FREE, and COLD!



Plus, we can joke about it.  Take, for example, the following incident.  I was walking Vimy, when I ran into a neighbour, who noticed that Vimy had lost two of his Muttluks (booties he wears to protect his paws from ice and salt).   My neighbour's quick quip made me laugh out loud, "Oh, I see Vimy is using his two wheel drive today!"

When paying for my gas fill-up with my Visa card, I didn't have time to tell the cashier at Irving, before he picked up the card, that I had left it in my wallet in the car ALL day.  Upon picking it up, he immediately squealed, dropped it and exclaimed, "FROSTBITE!"  Again, I had another great chuckle.

Laugh and learn to cope when you are 12 hours without electricity, through the night of Christmas Eve, and early morning.  It is -10 degrees Celsius outside, but a MERE 9 degrees inside. Your house is so cold that you see your breath: when you touch the walls, and your door handles, you get a shock, an ice COLD shock. Try making a cold breakfast with your gloves on?

Thank your lucky stars that someone can drive to Tim's to get a hot coffee.

Thank your lucky stars and God above, that five NB Power workers, and five different types of trucks, flatbeds, boom trucks and whatever, are two doors down, trying to bring warmth back into your home.

Thank your lucky starts, God above, AND hug an NB Power employee in a bright, orange vest, when he comes to your door, wanting to know why YOU were outside in your housecoat and bright Santa Claus hat, waving at him frantically, when the power GLOWED back on!

 BRIGHT ORANGE VESTS HERE ARE not A SIGN OF PROTEST!
RATHER, THEY ARE A SIGN OF PROTECTION, AND SAFETY... especially throughout our long, cold winters.
As Gilles Vigneault so aptly expressed in his song, "Mon pays ce n'est pas un pays, c'est l'hiver!' 
🎶🎶🎶









Kindergarten = LAUGHTER: Part Two

Here we are again. Another school year has begun and I never had time to finish my end of the year blog.  So here are the last few gems from...