Friday, February 12, 2010
2-12
posted at 11:44 PM | Permalink | 3 comment(s)
Since at the moment there are hardly any subjects of interest other than snow and weather, I want to mention that at this moment, this year, early in 2010, there is visible snow on the ground in all fifty states - even Hawaii which has snow atop two volcanoes - and I think that is awesome although I'm wondering if someone misread something about "global cooling" and thought it said "global cooking" and, in order not to plagerize plagiarize, said "global warming" by mistake. . . .

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Thursday, February 11, 2010
2-11
posted at 11:21 PM | Permalink | 0 comment(s)
Alas they charge $15 for 24 hours of wifi in the hotel and they don't have a shorter or hourly fee so I did not log on this morning to begin the day with a diary sentence and it was too busy to do so during the day; the snow was minimal in NYC and north, I am personally happy to say and when I got home after the previous two days in the City, my lovely neighbor had snowblowed my driveway so I needed only to park and go into my house!

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Tuesday, February 9, 2010
Blizzard of '10, continued
posted at 9:44 AM | Permalink | 0 comment(s)
There may be quite a snowstorm in the so-called northeast corridor, tonight and tomorrow. My blogger friend, Allan, is well-versed weather aficionado and he says (here), that this storm has the potential to be a real humdinger, possibly adding a foot or more to the DC area and contributing a foot or a foot and a half to NYC. It will be amazing, if true. I'm not sure if the snow managers in DC know how to make those interesting walls of snow that they used to make in Maine and Vermont in the winter. Meanwhile, it looks as if the middle part of the state will again get the least amounts. Funny weather year, this.

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Sunday, February 7, 2010
Blizzard of '10
posted at 11:08 AM | Permalink | 0 comment(s)
Where I live there is nothing to show for the Blizzard of '10, not a drop, not a flake. But 300 miles south, round about Washington DC, they got 20-30 inches, hard though it is to imagine. The Washington Post has a terrific slide show of scenes from all over the area. I especially like the shot of M Street in Georgetown....

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Saturday, February 6, 2010
2-6
posted at 7:05 PM | Permalink | 0 comment(s)
Thanks to free wifi at a Borders bookstore, I spent the better part of the afternoon with a huge cappuchino and a bagel, doing work remotely on my (new and fantastic) netbook (thank you, Santa), headphones plugged in and listening to the opera streamed on WQXR, and switching off to exchange emails with friends and a relative getting ever-more inches of snow in Maryland (at last count it was over thirty inches, astonishingly); awesome afternoon.

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Friday, February 5, 2010
Snow
posted at 11:27 PM | Permalink | 0 comment(s)
Hoping the DC/Maryland/Virginia area gets through the deluge of snow (can you have a deluge of snow or only of rain?) without too much anxiety or difficulty. If they really get 30" in places, it will be record-setting which will make it good to have endured but I hope everyone is all right. And how odd is it that in NY we are getting nothing, this time?

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Monday, February 1, 2010
2-1
posted at 11:03 PM | Permalink | 0 comment(s)
One gripe, one observation; gripe: wheeling bags are absolutely a boon to the health of the people wheeling them along who no longer need to lug pounds and pounds of stuff and hurt their backs and joints . . . but they are a true menace to people trying to walk anywhere nearby; observation: on account of the place that the earth is in its yearly traverse around the sun, the full moon yesterday and today is at its lowest in the sky and therefore is surprisingly and extraordinarily huge, mesmerizing and lovely.

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Thursday, January 28, 2010
28
posted at 9:06 AM | Permalink | 0 comment(s)
A short but surprisingly severe snow storm hit parts of NY and CT this morning without any warning or little drizzly snowflakes on the Weather Channel forecast - nothing - and it makes me a little crazy that the omnipresent "they" can assiduously stir up trouble and anxiety for days on end before many storms only to have us get maybe 4 inches and not be buried alive or incapacitated, but then they don't even notice or mention an early morning storm that had enough ice (black as well as visible) to cause dozens of accidents and actually kill at least one motorist.

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Monday, January 25, 2010
Rain rain rain
posted at 9:46 AM | Permalink | 0 comment(s)
It's pouring like a deluge in NYC today. If this were snow . . . .

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Sunday, January 3, 2010
Winter
posted at 12:03 PM | Permalink | 0 comment(s)
Yes cold and snow are what winter is all about. And it's a nice season in some ways. Makes you appreciate spring and summer, for one thing. Pretty, too. But when it's THIS cold and the house trembles a bit in the chill and wind and the car has to be warmed up for a few minutes, it does make you kind of wish for those seasons to hurry up. Or at least to have a moment of that famed January thaw. Brrrr.

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Saturday, December 19, 2009
Gotta love it
posted at 7:33 PM | Permalink | 0 comment(s)
Global warming summit . . . world leaders take their own private jets to get there . . . major blizzard disrupts the last two days . . . third highest snowstorm in DC's history greets President Obama on his return from same . . . I'm not quibbling over whether things have changed, climate-wise, but I love the juxtaposition of the above. Mother N is still in charge, I really do believe, and she often makes her dominance clear. Love it.

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Wednesday, December 9, 2009
Snow
posted at 9:55 AM | Permalink | 0 comment(s)
What lures me back, you ask? Snow, I answer. Wanting to share with everyone that I had to shovel about 8 inches at 7 o'clock this morning. It was light-ish, fortunately, and my lovely neighbor had his snowblower running to do the sidewalks and fronts of driveways or I'd still be there. And the municipal plow came by right after he'd cleared the driveway . . . and yes smushed a wall right where he'd just cleared. Life really does imitate art (you know that long, involved, very funny story, right?).

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Wednesday, September 23, 2009
posted at 3:07 PM | Permalink | 0 comment(s)
Man oh man doesn't that look incredibly eerie?! It's apparently a huge dust cover over Sydney (Australia) and it sure looks forbidding and scary as heck and yet people are continuing to exercise and move about. Perhaps it's all trick photography with a red filter over the lenses..... Click the post's title for more details.

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Sunday, August 30, 2009
The great outdoors
posted at 11:56 PM | Permalink | 0 comment(s)
There are an amazing number of no-fee, lovely state parks in Connecticut and I spent time in one of them today. It's just north of Brookfield and called Lover's Leap Park because of the bridge (originally wooden planks, rebuilt in 1895 with spiffy red iron sidings) from which, tradition has it, the Pootatuck Indian Chief Waramaug’s daughter, Princess Lillinonah, and her lover plunged to their deaths late in the mid-eighteenth century. One trail leads to the rock formation that gives the park its name and for the most part is an easy walk. There is another alluring branch of the path that heads slightly steeply downward and around to end up at water's edge, and another twist would take you onto a promontory with the scene (seen) here. I will go back soon in appropriate shoes to finish both, since the possibility of losing my camera and/or my neck did not outweigh the pleasure of doing either in flip-flops which were more than adequate for path walking but unlikely to be so for what I could see of the others. I had not planned on this tiny adventure but could not resist once I saw it and did not have sneakers with me, let alone hiking shoes. I am a poor excuse for a well-prepared boy scout, patently, although I did extricate a cigarette end and drink cup, like a good steward.

Another pleasure of the day were sweet ground cover, a frequent late summer treat along with purple clover and lacy white flowers. Some interesting tree root and rock formations suggested serious storm activity now and then. The weather was neither too hot nor too humid for a leisurely walk and the tree cover was enough to keep one from baking but so thick as to not let the sun through. And there were hardly any flying or buzzing things to discourage one even a little. There were two motorcyclists but they just shot through and went around quickly, not disturbing anyone. And there were only two other groups of people walking along while I was there, one a quartet of high school students talking about what subjects they were taking this semester (school starts tomorrow for them) and what they like and loathe. They almost scampered passed me taking their picnic things down this cliff toward the fairly large ledge a bit of the way down that seems perfect for a pleasant hanging-out picnic, if a bit scary to contemplate how easy it would be to hurt oneself and/or fall off. One of the boys stopped, turned and said, "oh, sorry, are we taking your place? were you on your way there?" I hadn't been and I said I hadn't been but how gracious it was of him to ask. He smiled and went on his way. Nice moment. Nice park.

Brookfield also has a well-reputed Craft Center with a shop and a nice sitting / eating / chatting area beside a rushing creek and waterfall. I may have to take a class there to repay them for allowing me the relaxation and delight of spending time in both.

As I made my way north before going home, I stopped in Kent because it's seemed the perfect place to stop for a cup of tea on my way home. It turned out their library was having a great big book sale, than which there is little that's as much fun, to my way of thinking. I resisted the set of Dickens that was too musty even for me but did pick up an early Peter Pan edition with lovely plate etchings and an illustrated sequel to Heidi (you'd think I knew Johanna Spyri wrote other books but I didn't, until then - she wrote 27 others, to be precise!). I also got the book of In a Lonely Place and felt bad that I hadn't thought to find out that one of my favorite movies is based on a book (by Dorothy Hughes who also wrote Ride the Pink Horse, another marvelous noir film); I can't wait to read it. Then I strolled through some of Kent's charming stores, ideal for gift-giving browsing and buying. I topped the day off spooning smooth strawberry gelato, sitting on a wooden bench beside a tree on a bright green expanse of grass. What a nice day.

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Saturday, August 29, 2009
Dear Diary
posted at 8:47 AM | Permalink | 1 comment(s)
It's a gloomy day today in the northeast. This time it's meant to be the edges of the fourth hurricane of the season but it's been such a rainy spring and summer that it doesn't feel or look any different from oh so many previous days. (It rained on 28 of June 's 30 days, by the way.) When one is very tired from an intense work week, thick cloud cover in the sky is unfortunately more influential than it should or might otherwise be. I will therefore take even more deliberate enjoyment than usual today from small things. Like the wonderful recycled-material plastic-looking carry bag with humorous French phrases and sketches.

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Saturday, August 1, 2009
August
posted at 8:53 AM | Permalink | 0 comment(s)
I can't believe it's August already. It's beautifully sunny today, too. (Uh-oh, might have to worry about drought now.) Have a great beginning of August day yourself.

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Wednesday, July 29, 2009
Rain away
posted at 6:47 PM | Permalink | 0 comment(s)
It's starting to feel as if it's been raining every day since the beginning of recorded history. Sure I'm exaggerating. But it just doesn't stop and it's starting to be annoying. It hasn't been real summer here on the east coast, and I admit I like that it hasn't been ninety or above, but this every single day of thunder and rain, rain and thunder is just getting tiresome. Humidity in the eight or nine hundred percent range. Dark dark afternoons and evenings. Needing two or three umbrellas at home and at the office because they take so long to dry off, clammy furniture, hair never quite dry after the morning shower, damp laundry even out of the dryer, a feeling of heaviness in the air so you can't breathe all that well except early in the morning, a few strange insects and bugs coming inside because even they want to dry off (who's anthropmorphizing, who?). Couldn't the rain rain go away and come again another day in about two weeks after we all dry off and have some nice normal sunny summer weather? Just a few days. To weed our gardens and mow our lawns and sit on the porch and get some vitamin d from the air instead of supplements. Wouldn't that be nice? (What do the plinth sitters do when/if it rains like this??)

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Saturday, July 18, 2009
Summer
posted at 9:50 PM | Permalink | 0 comment(s)
It was a really nice day today in my part of the northeast. It was an actual summer day - warm, sunny and perfectly, not humidly, hot.

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Monday, July 13, 2009
Electricity & Gas
posted at 5:57 PM | Permalink | 0 comment(s)
I'm getting weary of the amount of money I pay for utilities. The utility company says my usage is lower each year than the year before but that rates have been increasing. And one cannot do without light or heat but I yearn for a place where utilities are more reasonable. I leave my house at 6:45 in the morning and rarely get home before 9 at night and yet I pay over two hundred dollars a month for gas and electricity. I don't run machinery or anything else power-thirsty.. In the summer, I keep the temperature around 72 and turn the thermostat to 75 when I'm out; in the winter, I keep the temperature around 66-67 and turn the thermostat to 62-63 when I'm out (having been warned that 60 is risky and indeed having had periphery pipes freeze twice in the last ten years). A wider variation seems pointless because of the work/energy the power/gas has to expend in getting back to snuff when I get home. My utility company does not (yet?) offer alternative power choices, fwiw. Frustrating.

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Saturday, July 4, 2009
Sun!
posted at 8:13 AM | Permalink | 0 comment(s)
At last it's a beautiful day in the northeast. Sunny, warm, breezy but not too hot. Enjoy!!!

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