I always thought they were. Just recently, the newscaster on the treacherous snow scene (which would currently be anywhere in Portland or the surrounding area) puzzled and frowning at the mysterious white substance in his hand, said, "It's doing something out here now. It's not snow anymore. I don't know what it is."

I hope he's not the meteorologist.

It also made national news. Well. The hours (plural) it takes to get 20 miles right now made the news. The sleet / freezing rain mystery was curiously absent. I will try to forget the screeching sounds of "Willamette" Valley in the newscaster's mouth. Will (as in the name) - a (as in at)- met (as in mets - the team). Now you know, and knowing is half the battle.

Portlanders are decidedly horrible at driving in the snow and I cannot even begin to want to apologize for thinking so. You follow too closely. You move too quickly. You start too forcefully. These are completely in your control, even when one takes into account the sudden onset of the snow and the inevitability of being caught without traction devices.

On the way back from the airport, which should have been a 20 minute drive, I was stuck on the freeway for an hour and a half. Never before has snow felt like the apocalypse. Emergency vehicles were forced to weave their way through stopped freeway traffic (impossible to move over to the right or the left shoulder). Buses and semis jackknifed (bus riders choosing to get off and travel on foot).

And. I was almost out of gas and my high mileage, hanging-in-there car started to overheat for idling so long. Nothing like being stopped in gridlock traffic, nowhere near a freeway exit watching the needle creep to the highest end of the red zone. Additionally, the fact that I had to go to the bathroom - desperately - was frosting on the fluffy white snow cake.

Not that long ago snow was something lovely, even if it, and the ice, did last for 3 months. I remember towns that plowed and sanded. I remember sledding and fearlessly leaving the house for whatever reason I wished.

Nope. Housebound now.



3 comments

  1. Sarah Mwango on December 30, 2009 at 10:07 AM

    awww your very first Portland snow... Only magical if you have no where to go and can sit at home and watch the news and mock the horrendous driving. Edwin left work around 4 and made it three blocks in 1/2 hour. He turned around and went back to work so he could wait it out. Left again around 7 and was home by 10. RIDICULOUS!

     
  2. Kylee on December 30, 2009 at 5:33 PM

    Last night as the first reports were starting about the freezing snow/rain/sleet...whatever the people in Portland call it, I started making fun of people over there. It is true that they do not know how to drive in this weather. I sometimes wonder how they would fair if they lived here or somewhere else that it snowed a lot.
    Have fun being homebound. I hope that you don't go too stir crazy :)

     
  3. Sarah on December 30, 2009 at 5:35 PM

    I was SOOOOOOO glad we were home. I saw the color of the sky about 2 pm and thought "Hmmm. Looks like it's gonna snow". Perhaps I should be the weather-person - no one predicted it. I can imagine you in your car, watching the needle move, trying to distract yourself from your Bladder. Oy. Merry Christmas! ; )

     


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