What a snow day should look like... |
Regardless, the kids were happy to have a day off from
school, even if it was more of a “sleet day” than a “snow day.”
Snow days (or sleet-and-freezing-rain days) are the only
chance my brood gets to sleep in during the winter. Otherwise, we are up early
for school, and just as early – sometimes earlier – for weekend skiing. It was
nice Tuesday not to have to drag the kids out of bed in the dark of a winter
morning.
Instead, they emerged on their own time, all tousle-haired
and sleepy-eyed – and confused about why they were allowed to sleep late
(which, in our house, means 7 o’clock). “No school? A snow day?” asked my son
when he heard the news. “Yes!”
It’s been a while since we’ve had a snow day. When the kids
were younger, we used to build little kickers in the back yard on the rare weather-induced
day off. The kids would fly off the jumps on sleds or skis and come back inside
with rosy cheeks and wet mittens.
Or we’d make snow creatures in the front yard. Some winters
we’ve had such a huge pile of snow at the edge of the driveway, the kids could
build snow forts complete with sitting areas and tunnels and exit slides.
We haven’t had a snowbank worthy of a fort for a couple of
winters now. In December the snow-building opportunities seemed to be looking
up. The plow had made decent piles in the fort area. Elsewhere in the yard, the
kids had shaped and piled blocks of snow to make the start of an igloo. There
was even a small snowman – until the puppy ate it.
Alas, all that white stuff has long since melted. Tuesday’s
warm temps and so-called “mixed precipitation” resulted mainly in our
driveway-turned-skating-rink melting out – again – into large puddles of slush.
There was not enough snow to make even one snowball, let alone an elaborate
structure.
Instead, we went for a long walk in the woods, discovering
ice-fringed hemlock and beech branches before the temperature warmed to a
melting degree. In the shelter of the trees, the mixed precip had left enough
white to make a satisfying crunch underfoot, although we had to step carefully
through the not-quite-frozen marshy area along our route.
Despite the sad, snowless state of the yard, the sleet day timing
was perfect. The day before, two of these children had pulled in quite the haul
of birthday presents, which they now had time to properly explore. One kid was
recovering from a cold, and we both appreciated the bonus relaxation time to push
her back toward healthy.
The day also left us with time for catch-up chores. In the
process of cleaning up, lost mittens were found buried under the birthday
goodies, new clothes given as Christmas presents were unearthed in the corner
of a bedroom, and long-forgotten toys were happily rediscovered.
There were also a few rounds of board games played, some
quiet coloring time, bouts of spontaneous snuggling, and – of course – the arguments
that come from too much together time.
By the end of the day, the puppy and I were both exhausted,
even if the kids seemed rejuvenated by this bonus day off. I thought of my
friend in Tahoe, where they’ve received something like 300 inches (that’s 25
feet!) of snow this month. Her kids have had 10 snow days in the last few
weeks. That means they’ve been out of school almost twice as many days as they’ve
been in.
While the occasional snow day is a nice pause in routine, I’m
not sure I’d take 10 of them in a month. But I sure would like some of that
snow.
Original content by Meghan McCarthy McPhaul, posted to her Blog: Writings From a Full Life. This essay also appears as Meghan's Close to Home column in the January 27, 2016 edition of the Littleton Record.
Original content by Meghan McCarthy McPhaul, posted to her Blog: Writings From a Full Life. This essay also appears as Meghan's Close to Home column in the January 27, 2016 edition of the Littleton Record.
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