Anatomy of a blizzard
Friday:
Listen to the forecast of SNOW!SNOW!SNOW! Sigh. Cancel appointment to get car’s oil changed and (sob) broken snowblower fixed. Look forward to enjoying cinnamon rolls on Saturday morning after shoveling.
Friday night:
Take husband up on offer to do Saturday errands on Friday night. Enjoy a lovely dinner out along with a casual stroll through Target. Arrive at grocery store to discover they are out of hamburger. Curse hotdish-loving countrymen.
Later Friday night:
No snow yet. Congratulate ourselves on our proactiveness; now we don’t have to leave the house at all! Mourn (once again) the loss of a functioning snowblower.
Saturday morning:
Snow! But only about 6 inches. Six inches is nothing. Decide to attack the snow now (even though it’s still falling) rather than wait until it’s finished. Reschedule long-awaited breakfast of cinnamon rolls until Sunday. Spend a relatively easy hour shoveling. Go inside and cram all of our snow-covered gear into the dryer for Round 2. Wrap Christmas presents while listening to Christmas music and snuggling with the puppy. Look outside an hour later and see absolutely no sign that we were ever outside – it’s like we never existed. Resist urge to sob. Decide this would be a good way to get information from terrorists (“Confess or shovel this driveway until all the snow is gone!”).
Saturday afternoon:
Still snowing. Remind self that winter doesn’t officially start for another few weeks. It’s like winter personally hates us. The roof drifts are ridiculous, like 10-feet-tall white sand dunes. Trudge back outside. Plow has tossed an ice fortress across our driveway. Decided to tackle it anyway, since we’ll be out again Sunday and the plow will be by once more. Spend 45 minutes shoveling, only to look back at my “progress” and realize it looks like I haven’t done anything. Quickly reach Shoveling Fatigue™. Realize husband has also reached Shoveling Fatigue as we get into a shouting match after he criticizes my speed, as though I have been standing outside smoking French cigarettes while he does all the work. Point out that I am conveniently shoveling the four-foot drifts, carrying them all the way across the driveway and tossing the snow over our 6-foot fence, while he is at the narrower part of the driveway where he can toss the snow onto the 2-foot drifts on either side. Do not mention that he is using a much-heavier shovel that can handle a much larger quantity of snow. Despair over lack of upper arm strength. Get annoyed at my hat falling down over my eyes every time I bend down. Remove it, despite husband telling me I shouldn’t. Realize hair has frozen to scarf. Fret over whether the removal of said scarf will also result in the removal of hair. Neighbor leaves in car. Five minutes later, neighbor’s wife goes trudging by, her face stoic, yielding a shovel. We follow her to find her husband’s car stuck and the tires spinning uselessly. He gets free right as we arrive. There is a lot of wind. I probably should not have taken off my hat, but do not admit this to husband, pretending instead that I do not feel the wind freezing my eyeballs. Put hat back on; it is frozen stiff, as are the kleenex I stuffed into my jacket pocket. After two hours of shoveling, the motion light comes on. It is dark out. I can’t feel my thighs or two fingers on my right hand. Husband has ice on his eyelashes. Shoveling sucks. This is possibly the worst thing ever.
Saturday night:
Spend a ridiculous amount of time anxiously looking out the window. The snow tapers off, but it is windy as crap out there. Watch weather report and laugh as one station goes to their on-the-spot reporter outside and all you hear is the wind roaring through his microphone.Take some ibuprofen to ward off the aches and pains. Hear a news item on the New York Giants, and how they prepared for their game against the Vikings by leaving a half hour early. They’re now stuck in Kansas City. Wish fervently for a forfeit to reward their stupidity.
Sunday morning:
Get up and see the plow has already been by and the snow isn’t too bad. Realize my arms refuse to rise higher than my head. Decide to tackle everything first thing. Hold off on the cinnamon rolls – we’ll have them when we’re done. We are wearing layers big time: long underwear, two pairs of socks, two pairs of gloves, ski masks, my insanely long scarf. The driveway ice fortress is hard as a rock and requires plenty of Snow Cleaving, an action that irritates my Shovel Blister. Cannot believe I have been shoveling so much that I gave myself a blister. Jason takes the roof rake to the drifts, as I grumble about the fact that we actually have to use a rake on our roof. What’s next? Siding spades? Hallway hoes? The roof rake drops a metric ton of snow on our driveway, so our “quick” shovel turns into a 90-minute affair. Halfway in, I realize there will be No Cinnamon Rolls. There is Whining. My ski mask makes me claustrophobic; it’s hard to breathe through the material, and the eyehole keeps blocking my vision. I would be a clumsy bank robber. There is very little shoveling; it’s more like snow tossing, shuffling a few steps forward, tossing the snow ahead, and repeating I’m until close enough to toss it over the fence. I am barely able to lift my arms. This is an insane workout. I estimate we have spent nearly 4.5 hours total shoveling snow. We finally finish, coming inside and seeing that the Dome roof collapsed.
Spend the rest of the day in an exhausted stupor on the couch. Vehemently vow two things: 1) we are getting our snowblower repaired next weekend and 2) I am having cinnamon rolls next weekend NO MATTER WHAT.
Sunday afternoon:
Discover a dead, buried snowman in our yard. He deserved it.


OMG. We haven’t had ANY snow yet this year (it’s 60 degrees and sunny right now), and I have been very thankful for that given that the pregnancy has me off snow shoveling duty for the year and I feel bad making Torsten do it all himself. This just reaffirms that point. You guys are really freaking dedicated, good lord.
Also, I laughed really hard at the comment about the Giants having to forfeit due to stupidity.
Comment by Jess — December 13, 2010 @ 2:34 pm
I love how the grocery store was OUT OF HAMBURGER. At least they had their Tator Tot Hotdish to keep them warm!
We watched some footage of the dome collapse online, and they were showing a couple of dudes up there SHOVELING snow off. I mean, ??? Good luck with that, buddy. I think Scott called it “pissing in the wind”.
Comment by Tessie — December 13, 2010 @ 3:02 pm
I love a good blizzard – but not on the weekend. On the weekend, I have stuff to do… during the week, all I miss is work. Hee.
I would have been eating those cinnamon rolls at midnight if that’s what it came down to. You worked so hard to forego that indulgence.
Comment by LoriD — December 13, 2010 @ 3:15 pm
I agree with LoriD; I would have made the cinnamon rolls anyway. I have to admit, I was disappointed that the snow missed us entirely. But, we don’t have to shovel anything (the apartment manager does it all), so that might have something to do with it.
Do you think the ‘dome roof collapse is just one more nail in the coffin of the Vikings in MN? I would be terribly sad to see them move, but it seems like everything this year is working against them.
Comment by Becky — December 13, 2010 @ 3:25 pm
I promise to never ever again lament 80 degree temperatures in December. Amen.
Comment by nonsoccermom — December 13, 2010 @ 4:55 pm
I think my favorite line is “Halfway in, I realize there will be No Cinnamon Rolls.” That’s the Despair Pinnacle right there.
Comment by Swistle — December 13, 2010 @ 9:16 pm
i just… no. no no no. i would refuse, and stay snowed in for many days, i think. until someone with a working snowblower felt bad and came to rescue me.
Comment by Alice — December 13, 2010 @ 9:51 pm
After reading this — writhing and twitching through all the snow-shoveling parts — I looked outside and it’s started snowing. A very tiny little mild Connecticut snow, though — none of that Minnesota badboy stuff. Not yet.
Comment by Ellie — December 14, 2010 @ 9:04 am
We have a snowblower, but it is puny and, despite the fact we attacked the driveway three different times over the course of the blizzard, was no match for the thigh-high drifts, which meant I had to shovel to knock the drifts over so my husband could come along behind me and blow the snow. Number of times I got shot in the face by the snowblower because Joe could not be bothered to aim the chute in a direction other than the one in which I was standing: 6. Number of screaming matches held in my driveway, for all the neighbors to see: 4. Number of times I stomped into the house in a wet, frozen, miserable rage: 1. There were no cinnamon rolls at my house either.
Comment by Buster — December 14, 2010 @ 12:13 pm
You want to know what is really sad? Brian and I had tickets to Sunday’s game. I have been to pre-season Vikings game, but this would have been my first “official” Vikings game during regular season. I had been looking forward to this game for the last 3 months. Stupid Snow snow. This is almost as bad as the storm from 1997. I snow blower went out as well.
Comment by Michelle — December 14, 2010 @ 2:03 pm
Fellow Minnesotan (St. Paulie), commenting for the first time. I picked up one shovel full Saturday morning and hurt my back. Spent the rest of the weekend sitting by a fire, popping advil and applying ice while my husband and son shovelled. Win?
Comment by Carrie (in MN) — December 14, 2010 @ 5:57 pm
Oh, and I too had big baking plans – cinnamon rolls, oatmeal bread….standing sends my back into spasm. Fail.
Comment by Carrie (in MN) — December 14, 2010 @ 5:57 pm
Urrrrg, I feel your pain. Except THANK SWEET GOD I have a neighbor with a snowplow attached to the front of his four-wheeler who likes me. So he always plows my driveway when it snows. Okay, I guess I DON’T really feel your pain? *sheepish* But it has snowed an ungodly amount here, too.
Am now craving hot, sticky cinnamon rolls.
Comment by amber — December 20, 2010 @ 1:07 am