Showing posts with label weather. Show all posts
Showing posts with label weather. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 04, 2015

IWSG Wednesday - Snow Days



The Insecure Writer's Support Group

I have a special guest post this Wednesday from a friend in my writer's group. Her name is Debra Clay and she writes short stories/flash fiction with a unique style. This month, as we look forward to spring, her short story "Snow Days" seemed to be exactly right, uplifting. I hope you enjoy it! Also don't forget to visit our Co-Hosts this month and thank them.  

Snow is one of nature’s most enigmatic occurrences. Whether viewed from the front porch or under a microscope, it is beautiful. Yet it can be one of nature’s most destructive forces. I remember my first snow days from school. As a matter of fact, living in South Georgia, they were my only snow days from school. Although we in the south are more accustomed to dealing with heat and thunderstorms accompanied by lots of lightning, the rare snow storm does occur.
It was in March of 1962 and what a storm it was! Forty-mile-an-hour winds, temperatures in the upper twenties and, yes, snow…wet, heavy snow that stuck wherever it landed. Tree limbs, power lines, clothes lines and anything that could fall, did. Needless to say life came to a standstill with power outages affecting half the state. We were used to having to ‘rough it’ without power, but only for a few hours in the summer. We would raise the windows to let in the cooling breeze, cook supper on the grill, light some candles at night and generally have a high old time. Not so in winter, I discovered. We’re talking three days—three days without power. The only heat was what our own bodies generated and who wants to grill outside in subfreezing weather? I thought my life was ending after only 8 short years on this earth.
Fortunately for me (and my siblings) Mom and Dad grew up in a time when there were none of the conveniences that my generation had become accustomed to. They huddled in a corner for a while, hatching a plan to keep us all alive until the power was restored. Then Dad began to issue orders.
“Okay boys. Take your wagon and gather as much wood as you can. Girls, you follow your mother to the kitchen and, and…do whatever she tells you.”
We ultimately settled in the smoke house where a large kettle set in hollowed out concrete served as fireplace, water heater and cook fire. We girls had helped mother bring cast iron cookware and food from the kitchen. We bathed in warm water taken from the kettle, ate sausages and biscuits cooked over coals pulled from beneath the kettle, and generally had a high old time. It was just like hog-killing, only without the hogs. Sleeping on burlap tobacco sheets spread on the ground was the only tough part of that adventure (if you don’t count having to go outside to take care of business. Mom and Dad didn’t worry about us being out there. The cold and the darkness insured we didn’t stay out for long.), but at least we were warm in the smokehouse, full and safe.
Those snow days taught me to appreciate the things that made life pleasant: central heat, a kitchen stove, running water, a soft bed, electric lights, a room of my own and, of course, a flush toilet. I’m all grown up now and sometimes when I feel down, unloved, unwanted, and insignificant I take ‘snow day’ stock of my life, making a list of all the things I am grateful for but sometimes take for granted: family, a home, good health, US citizenship, education, income, transportation… My list is five pages long and growing daily. This exercise certainly chases away the blues and serves as a reminder that, I am having a high old time.
Image from:

Monday, October 29, 2012

Clothes On A Line



Do you have a clothesline? One of those now old fashioned ways of drying clothes? I do. It’s a new one too. I’ve only had it about two months and already I’m in love with it. But today is the first day I feel why. It’s overcast, windy and our first cold afternoon. Not cold by northern standards, only by southern, and it feels wonderful.
The day is coming to its end. The clothes are out on the line and I can tell by the way they hop in the wind which ones are denser, not as dry yet as the lighter weight ones. T-shirts are lithe, work shirts airy, hand towels move with a little less agility and the bath towels move as if in slow motion. They are the heaviest, the most ungainly dancers, and the first things I put out. My line is unique for a country clothesline. This kind is/was usually found in cities strung between buildings on pulleys. I have one pulley on my deck attached to another on a tree. A good forty feet stretches out giving me plenty of room for a full load of clothing and more.  You should see the sheets when they take center stage. My daughter’s old school bag holds all my clothes pins and memories of her young and precious face always accompany me when the clothes go out on the line.
It isn’t twilight yet. It’s that time right before the day readies to put itself to bed. Jacques Brel is playing inside, the puppy is joyful in the lightness of cool weather and my husband’s cooking smells of curry and rice and all things Indian. He has lighted the first fire of the season in the fireplace. I don’t worry about the clothes smelling like smoke because there is too much wind for that. Almost the moment my nose registers the perfume of the smoke it’s gone, like a promise of yesterday.
Tomorrow it’s back to the work grind but right now I can indulge in missing France, the scents and sounds unique to that country. That’s what the clothesline reminds me of with its clothes whipping out their ballet in the wind. My mother in law puts out her laundry on a line and the odor of her freshly washed and dried clothing is the main reason I wanted to put up a clothes line. Before this, speed and ease were of paramount importance to me. Now I find scent, time, and memory take center stage, along with the sheets, of course. I watch my husband’s long sleeved work shirt billow and it’s as if the wind is trying it on. But then it empties, deciding it likes its freedom more than wearing a shirt.
I guess it could be age that makes me feel this longing/desire and love for my life, and if it is, I like it. Soon, I’ll go and take the clothes down and this moment will be over. Thank goodness there is an endless supply of dirty laundry guaranteeing more thoughtful and picturesque moments to come. Who knew cloths on a line could be so whimsical? I should have taken a picture.



Images from:
Sodahead.com
dailyhampshiregazette.com
growingyoungereachday.wordpress.com