The Pony and I expected to go to
school Friday. I had made a trip to town at noon Thursday, and the roads were
completely clear, as well as most fields and yards and parking lots. The lying
clowns TV meteorologists mentioned some snow showers moving through late
Thursday night, but we were in the clear section of their simulated clipper. So
we planned a normal day.
At 12:30, as I went to bed, I
noticed that the front yard was white. I opened the door. We had an inch or
more of fresh snow on the ground! And more was pouring down as I patted my
sweet, sweet Juno, who was standing vigil on the front porch. Well. That was more snow than we had
the day they sent us home early, and kept us home the next day, too. With a light
heart I went to bed. Looked like another snow day for Val!
Hick got up around 2:00 a.m. and
looked outside. “Have you seen the yard?”
“Yes.
Looks like we won’t be going again.”
“Yeah. That’s more than we had last
time.”
Hick was no doubt considering
calling in sick to stay home and keep us company. I made a mental note-to-self
to put the kibosh on that plan once we were both up. Retirement hasn’t started
yet, you know.
At my regular get-up time, I got up
and went in the bathroom. As I came out, Hick asked through his breather, “Are
you going?”
“How would I know? How am I going to
find out sitting on the toilet?” That man is ridiculous sometimes.
I went to the kitchen and checked my
phone. No message yet. But it WAS only 4:50 a.m. The earliest I’ve gotten the
message is 5:11. So I decided not to waste time packing lunches, but to go
straight to the shower, so I would be up and ready to start my day off. Do some
writing. Work on taxes. Try to get into Genius’s FAFSA to update it before
March 1. I told Hick, “The house phone will ring when they send out the call.
You don’t have to get up and answer. It’s a recording.”
When I got out of the shower, I
still had no message. I figured the school administrators must have been caught
off guard as well, and must be out driving the roads before making the decision
to call off school. Also, they sometimes seem to play chicken, waiting to see
who will call off first. I grabbed the house phone to settle down in the
La-Z-Boy. No need for the automated call to wake The Pony.
The lying clowns TV
meteorologists did not seem in a hurry to mention school closings. There was no
scroll across the bottom of the screen. Still, it was not yet 5:30. Way early.
I watched some news. At 5:33, one of the anchors mentioned that Kent would be
on with the forecast and the school closings. HUH? I had just hit the remote to
change channels. But I went back. Kent did not mention anything about school
closings. We don’t report on that channel anyway. No need to worry.
I switched to our channel. Nothing.
On to another main station. WHAT? Their clown meteorologist named off
three schools that were closed. A small one near Backroadsia High, and two in
our conference closer to the homestead. Not even a bottom scroll! What’s up
with that? It was already 5:45. Getting a little late to be calling off. But
we’d had the call before at 6:45, after I had already left for school…
Great. I couldn’t take a chance. The
Pony needed to get up at 6:00. And I still had lunches to make!
The schools always seem to tighten up on their closing standards when those snow days start to pile up.
ReplyDeleteThat is very true. All it takes is a couple of flakes for the first one. Towards the end of winter, we're following a snowplow through 10-foot drifts.
DeleteI guess maybe I was greedy last year, wishing for the 22nd snow day...
Here in Portland the schools close if there's more than a handful of snowflakes on the road. It's a joke.
ReplyDeleteGotta pamper those future hipsters!
DeleteYou have already had more than your share. I've only had one. I need to catch up before you have any more...
ReplyDeleteHeh, heh! I accumulate snow days like Linda accumulates Chicken Soup publishing credits. Good luck catching me!
DeleteThe bahstids don't want any more make-up days in the schedule.
ReplyDeleteThose make-up days don't make me no nevermind. I'm outta there for good once they're over. I can handle a short delay.
DeleteI see by your accent you're from the east coast tonight...
Delete