Chas wrote:Wow - thanks for sharing these pictures Edwin. It does look bleak there with nothing to give protection when the cold wind blows.
You are exactly correct, Chas! The winds have nothing to stop them, and they blow hard, and boy when the temperatures are low the cold is bitter. My parents spent the first year of their marriage in the early 1930s about 800 feet from where we live now, and they about froze to death. They divided their time between standing on chairs above the cook stove to keep warm, and they also spent a lot of time in bed during the coldest times. They had the stove red hot, and had a bank of snow behind the stove that never melted, and that seems unreal, but I know it is the truth. We have it much better than they did. The first winter in this place we had broken windows, a front door that didn't really close correctly, and we kept a blanket over that door, and the wind still blew right through the house. Now we have all new windows, new doors, and a new slider, and our house is comfortable unless the wind is blowing, then it is difficult to keep warm, but even then we can keep it between 60 and 70 degrees F., and that's not bad. We do have some terrible snow drifting during the winter, normally in January, but it can be in December, not likely to be in February, although possible. Since we are retired we just do not pull the car out of the drive if the wind is blowing because we never know where we might get standed with deep drifted snow across the road. We have already had our plans disabled a quite a few times this winter, but we are safe and alive and that is what counts. We do fine here, and we get out and get going when it is absolutely necessary. This is beautiful country with the rhye grass clumps in the summer, the hay stack rocks, and in the winter it is also beautiful, even to see the drifting or drifted snow.
I'm glad you enjoyed the pictures. I had fun taking them and then posting them!
