I Like Winter???
I like winter. I really do. Mostly. I like cocooning at home, hunkering down in my office and writing. I like walking in the snow and cold (so long as it isn’t too cold and that’s relative. What was too … Continue reading →
I like winter. I really do. Mostly. I like cocooning at home, hunkering down in my office and writing. I like walking in the snow and cold (so long as it isn’t too cold and that’s relative. What was too … Continue reading →
It’s been a brutal Feb. and it continues into March. The weather people are saying it was the 4th coldest Feb. on record. What? Wait. You mean there were three colder Feb.? Brr. Many days it’s been too cold to … Continue reading →
I love snow. I love how it creates a white canvas and then like an invisible hand is finger painting, it is pulled into drifts in the corners, dribbled on the evergreen trees and dotted on every fence post. I … Continue reading →
The never-ending story of Winter. There are things I enjoy about winter. The snow covers the dust of the previous summer and fall. It sculpts interesting shapes of the landscape. Noise is muffled. It’s a good reason to cocoon in … Continue reading →
It’s winter. There is a serious lack of color so my eyes seek patterns like those below. Of course it doesn’t hurt that those were taken in Hawaii. Which is where I should be when the deepfreeze hits Alberta. Just … Continue reading →
I confess to having a love-hate relationship with winter. I like walking in the cold. But bitter cold? Not so much. To walk at -40 degrees is just plain silly. I like walking in falling snow. But wind-driven snow pellets? … Continue reading →
We’ve had a looooong week of cold. I’m hoping it’s winters last hurrah. It means being indoors a lot and someone in the house is bored with being shut in. It’s not me. I’ve been busy getting the fourth book … Continue reading →
What strange weather. A cold, wet October and yes, there was snow. Thank goodness it didn’t stay. Then an unseasonably warm November that saw the farmers working long hours to get their crops harvested. And now we have December. And … Continue reading →