The Weather Man got it right, and we got snow last night!
about 2 inches of the white stuff, everwhere... a little ridge of snow on top of the fence rails, the grass completely covered, every tree branch & twig - we haven't got so much as a light breeze to shake it off - yes, it's the light fluffy stuff, we dreamed of as kids, for skiing!
Powder over the top of a nice hard coating of packed snow, gave us tremendous downhill skiing, carving down the side of the mountain, tremendous white wakes of snow on each turn spraying after us. Being the first was the best, if, of course, we were already familiar with the slope to avoid any dangerous appendages beneath the fluffy surface. Watching my brothers navigate fresh powder, barely bobbing, but legs compressing like huge springs on the mougles and suddenly extending when airborne - they had better balance than I. They looked cool, in a tight & fast run down the slopes - me... well, I was most likely to slowly find one edge after another, turning a steep slope into the pitch of a bunny hill... while they zipped back and forth, racing past me, "See you at the Lodge, pokey!", voice rapidly fading as they disappeared into clouds of white powder.
Regardless, of how we got to the bottom of the slope or who was watching, we always had fun! My feeble attempts to straighten out the hill a little, usually ended in something like a promo for the ABC, Wide World of Sports, but, not the 'thrill of victory'... I was 'the agony of defeat', tumbling, throwing limbs & snow everywhere, leaving a visible huge scar in the snow, hundreds of feet down the slope. Limping into the lodge, with a big grin, hoping the guys pointing at me 'that's the guy, heheh', and the snow bunnies would take pity on me, 'Oh, that looked terrible, are you hurt...?' - alas, never actually materialized.. Nope, it'd be my brothers, 'Man, wish you could have heard this place erupt in 'Oooohhhh!' and laughter, 'who's that fool trying to take on double zero!?' Got that greeting for them occasionally - their hot chocolate half gone - it took me that long to get there, though we rode the lift together - down hill skiing was fun, just not well suited for a skinny teenager like me.
Towering over my brothers by 3-6 inches, they were just naturally stronger & much better coordinated. Cross-country skiing would become my winter night sport, with the advantage of my longer stride, and great lung capacity, pounding out mile after mile, up and down the hills, the huffin n puffin of exertion, was over in a minute - ready to do it again! Our farm/ranch had an indoor riding arena & hay barn at one of the high points, meaning we had a quarter mile or more, uphill, to feed the animals, twice daily. Walking for us boys was drudgery, we ran to 'get there' and finish quicker. The challenge was how many deep breaths would it take, once on top? 5 or 6? Or for our city friends, would it be hunched over, hands on the knees, gasping & hacking like they almost drown in the lake? Never really developed the 'speed' for serious Cross-country, just the endurance came naturally.
I loved those crisp winter mornings, sunshine or not, getting out there, on top of the hills, racing across the ridge, breaking open trails for the business or that night's excursion with my brothers. A sort of freedom from all the cares, as each step into fresh powder & breaking off the sticking snow. I'd get near the end of what would become my brothers' air strip, 2000 ft, and though I thought it would have been straight, the tracks zigged and zagged back and forth across the snow like tracks through desert... alas, bad balance would plague me my entire life.
Dad would interrupt the fun day with the tractor & hay wagon... ruin my tracks on the ridges, it was time to get wood. He'd strategically pull a couple of huge Oak or Hickory trees to the woods edge, waiting for the coldest part of winter to split. The chain was freshly sharpened & tightened, and as each log was cut, we'd man the Maddox or axes to break these monsters into something we could lift. Everything split easier in -20 below, a couple of days of that, and we'd make quick work of it all, with the girls help stacking on the hay wagon. Everyone worked, either cooking or stacking wood. That was our heat for the house, as well as the fireplaces.
Fond memories of those fireplaces... sitting on the warm stone hearth, cracking hickory nuts with this crazy looking black dog cracker. Raise the tail, opened the mouth, insert the nut, and lowering the tail to crack. Which eventually broke on a walnut, the cast iron tail would need to be welded back. One of the local guys in town, two miles down the hill, a real Blacksmith, the miracle worker with Iron & steel. He'd get us back in business with the dog nut cracker. Just in time for another Sunday afternoon football game, the Packers verses the Bears or Evil Vikings... We were just peaceful farmers & ranchers, and these thugs would roll into town, looking for a fight, it's take everything Vince could dream up, Bart, Dollar & Dale would connect and pick them apart. That 'Ice Bowl' game, 'phhht!' wasn't that cold for US Wisconsinites, it might have been for Landry's Cowboys, our boys lived it - we figured.
A big FAT Cardinal got my attention, landed on the fence, looking at me... guess the bird feeder needs attention? There goes the Ducks, in a neat little line, plowing a little Ducky snow path to the pond ... heh, time to get back to it, the snow will be gone in a few days. Southern Virginia is like that, the snow is great to look at, not to shovel.