Tag Archives: plowing

More Snow

Yippee to the homeowners. They will be fined for not shoveling the sidewalks they do not own if they are not cleared.

Roads, City and County sidewalks and paths, forget it, most likely they’ll wait for Spring for the snow to melt and mosquitoes start biting me again. In snow, I know the side of the street on which to walk the old dog. Homeowners, hurrah. Thank you!

Stuck indoors I made a great small pizza yesterday and ate the remainder for lunch, and for dinner made my version of a vegetarian cold sesame noodles.

It just turned midnight, must join the dog as she will wonder where I am after I’ve lifted her up on the bed for the night (old, no hips). She’s a herder so follows me everywhere.

Cheers! Dee

 

 

My Dog Has Shoes

Yes, our town does not believe in plowing streets, any streets. Instead they spray salt or brine onto our streets and sidewalks with salt or a saline mix. We were used to daily plowing, sometimes several times per day as needed, in a ski area.

County park streets/sidewalks and sadly, even parks during summer are rarely touched by park personnel. We lived in the Rockies for years and never had this problem until this year, when our dog places one paw up after the other unable to take the salty snow mix. The snow was cold for her and we tried paw wax but this salt/slush/snow is too much all together. She hates it.

As a cook I know that old-time ice cream makers had a churn and vessel for the cream-flavored mixture and on the exterior there was chipped ice and rock salt (the kind you use for your driveway) to make it even colder so as the kids churned it, the freezing would go faster.

Yesterday my husband researched dog booties, and we went to get her some. Well, he did and there’s no way I’ll put them on her. When she gets up in the morning it’s enough for me to go to the bathroom and do things like brush my teeth and put my hair up in a ponytail. She needs to go out asap so I do it.

In really cold weather I’ll need pull-on boots and perhaps ski pants and several jackets. That takes a few minutes. In summer it’s a snap. But in winter she has a coat as well, Ruffwear, that protects her from rain, snow and cold. Plus I have to check the temp real quick to decide what we need to wear.

My husband says early on a weekend morning when he’s up on his computer, oh, hi.” I ask him if he took the dog out and fed her. “No, she hasn’t asked me yet.”

Dear, she has to go. OK. Then he spends an hour in the bathroom shaving and showering and thinking and I just get up and take the dog out. With 17 layers on different parts who cares what the security guard thinks, just get the dog out!

He won’t take her out but will spend two hours researching dog shoes. I will not place them on her paws and she knows that and that I don’t mind carrying her the last 200 feet home and know that I can run a 1″ bath right near the door in the bath so her paws will be OK.

I’m right brain and he’s left. Given a problem we come to the same or similar conclusion with vastly different processes, but we love each other and love our dog. I figure that if we wear shoes or boots out in the snow (I’ve a few pairs for every occasion) so should Zoe.

Thank you, dear. Cheers and happy holidays to all! Dee

Snow Removal

As Cardinals alight on trees, a hint of buds emerge on the lilac bush across the street that is lovingly tended by a neighbor who keeps her building awash in flowers, there are high winds and snow continues to fall.

Yes, my husband will be stealing my car all week because I have snow tires, as his are in storage. I am CB or confined to barracks.

Our city and county have a unique and cost-cutting approach to snow removal on local streets and sidewalks. It is called “Spring.”

“Make ’em wait, it’ll melt eventually,” is the mantra. Now when I complained that every curb ramp for ADA (Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990) was obstructed by two feet of snow the City showed up and plowed two sidewalks and three ramps. One is on a designated crosswalk, the only one in our neighborhood, but the County Parks have the other side so forget walking your dog across the street.

Even when they do plow, it looks like independent pickup trucks who do the work. Where I lived for the past few years had articulated tractors and high tech equipment that kept our roads and driveways clear. When Hartfield airport in Atlanta got snowed in, our city flew snow equipment out there to clear the runways.

This must be either a joke or a bad dream from which I cannot awaken. My husband has an early meeting and will have to leave 45 minutes to an hour before to get there in time because cars are going 3-5 miles per hour on the city streets, and who knows if they’ve even bothered to plow the highways.

Yes, Spring may happen, though not soon enough. I’ll walk to the store and take the dog out 5X somehow. It’s 6:00 a.m. and City trucks are plowing the streets for a change. High taxes, swallowed up by bureaucracy, and a dearth of corporate employers says dying town to me. I’m glad we’re paying through the nose for underground heated parking! Cheers, Dee