GOOD MORNING---
It's slightly above freezing this morning at 33 out there......which means my dark walk down my driveway will be mucky and very difficult. Yesterday turned out to be another beautiful, sunny, warm day, and it felt so good to be able to get out on the deck for some rays. As we still have mountains of snow here, and tons on the level still, there is no possible way for Molly and me to enjoy being out off the deck. The parking lot in the driveway here behind the house, which is in the sun most of the day, is beginning to harden up a tad, but the driveway in has just begun to turn into the annual quagmire it becomes every spring. Trees and snowbanks shelter that from the sun. A headlamp in the mornings, with the muck sucking at my boots and sometimes grabbing one too solidly to take another step, I arrive at the truck with cold, muddy feet as I invariably lose my balance when trying to take my foot out of the stuck boot to free it up, and end up barefoot in the deep, black, freezing muck. A container of baby wipes to help me clean them off, a roll of paper towel to help to dry them, and then waiting for the heater in the truck to thaw my aching feet so I can put them into some shoes I keep out there has become my morning routine----all now done by the light of my headlamp. The drive to school has also been negatively affected by the morning darkness, as the deer think it's still 5:30 and not 6:30, which is the hour they make their early-morning walk-abouts and get their drinks from the thawing ponds for the day. Last week, before the time change, this was happening before the morning commuter traffic, and now deer carcasses are laying along the roadsides, and confused deer can be seen darting across the roads trying to avoid being hit. It's not nice to mess with Mother Nature.
The good thing here is that perhaps this might be the last spring I will need to be doing this! Hopefully I might be fine in FL next year until the end of April! However, the deer will still have to try to comprehend why the humans are out in droves in the darkness that used to be theirs.
If others in my family will need to deal with this spring driveway thaw from now on, perhaps they can come up with enough money to have it fixed----the guy who looked at it said it will need to be cleared more on the sides, excavate good shoulder drainage ditches, have the crown arched to encourage better drainage, black plastic road-bed material laid down the entire length (the heavy duty rubber-like kind with holes in it to allow drainage, but not allow settling into the soft, sucking mud) and then loads and loads of small stones dumped over that followed by loads and loads of crusher run. If the driveway had more of a slope, that is if it were on a hill, it would drain and thaw much faster each year, but it is relatively flat once it leaves the parking lot. It's not an easy fix, such as having dump truck loads of crusher run added to the surface, as that would sink out of sight the following spring.
Today is a jeans day for us faculty, as tomorrow is also one because of the superintendent's day fiasco. Our money will be contributed to the High Peaks Hospice today. YIPPEE! Come on in and have some coffee and tell us about your plans. How about some spring flower pictures from some of you who actually have some color already? I can't wait to see the purple of my crocuses!
P.S.---Molly just ponted out that I have caught my first spring mouse. That should be fun to carry out to the truck this morning, along with my backpack and coffee mug!