I called the bus company for timetable details. You don’t talk to the bus company these days, you talk to a call centre. They told me the service isn’t operating today, even though I gather the main roads are clear. They didn’t know why; they don’t have that kind of information. So they couldn’t offer any indication as to when the service is likely to resume. I know the local council has a rural transport department, so I called them. I got a recorded message telling me they’re too busy and can’t take my call. I’m now in a situation in which I’m running low on food and unable to get out and buy some; and I can’t even talk to anybody to find out what’s happening.
I’m sure life didn’t used to be like this.
And I’m supposed to say ‘Ooh, isn’t the snow lovely,’ am I?
We had more truckloads of the stuff last night. The last time I saw snow this deep was when I was doing a winter photographic commission for the Northumberland National Park twenty years ago. I was up in the Cheviot Hills on the England-Scotland border. The last time I saw snow this deep down at this level was thirty years ago. I want it GONE.
5 comments:
As I am a nesh, I understand how bad it feels to be exposed in such cold weather. Snow used to be exciting for a tropical person like me, but when I have seen enough, I became bored by it.
Now I see your problem with the snow, Jeff. Seven miles is a LONG WAY in the cold, nevermind the snow. I hope you can find a solution very soon! Good luck with this. We're currently having temperatures of -17C with the wind chill factor – I've never felt anything like it here so early in the season. Take care.
Mei-shan: The problem is that we're not geared up for extreme weather in Britain. What we've been getting for the past five days is something we usually get about once every 20-30 years, and it usually happens in January or February. It's just knocked everything for six.
Della: I daresay you're getting the same Siberian airflow we are. If the worst comes to the worst, I can always pay an exhorbitant fee for a home delivery of groceries and hope their vehicle can get here. Should do; the lane isn't that bad.
wow that is tough! i hope you have a nice little shopping trolley...i find mine quite handy rather than try and wrestle with all the carparking bullies(even if I had a car). i guess there are costs to living in natural seclusion and sanity!
I doubt a shopping trolley would be much help on seven miles of country verges laden with two feet of snow, Z. But, read on...
Yes, indeed. But rather this than living in the city.
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