In honor of Winter Storm Jonas and all my friends burdened by Mother Nature's wrath, I thought I'd revisit a story I wrote last year! Even though we have no snow here in the Ozarks, I feel your pain!
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Winter Storm (Photo credit: jdn) |
Despite the biting cold temperatures we've been experiencing here in the Natural State this winter, I am so thrilled to be here.
I know the other side of winter--the one currently being experienced by
my friends and family--elsewhere in the country. I am hearing reports of road
closures, hideously long travel times, blizzard-like conditions,
plummeting temperatures, and unending snow-shoveling. The pictures are
terrible.
I can relate.
It doesn't seem so long ago that I remember my feet being so cold I
could barely feel my toes. I recall more than once, stepping off a curb
onto the ice only to have it give way beneath me, plunging my feet into
an icy abyss. The freezing cold slush may have only been a couple inches
deep, but it was as shocking to my system as being completely submerged
into a frozen sea. Just as bad was the feeling when my skin began to
thaw. It was accompanied by that annoying intense itching, second only to an
infestation of chigger bites.
I remember trying to breathe what little warmth my body possessed into a
scarf just to keep my nose from freezing. I remember getting off the
train at Union Station only to have to walk to my office across the
bridge over the Chicago River, hoping the bitterly cold wind in the
aptly-named windy city didn't carry me away or freeze me in place.
But my worst winter experience was when I was stranded in my car. For
nine hours I waited to be rescued, all the while, having very full
bladder, which was the worst part of the entire ordeal.
It was April 2, 1975. The day began in the 60's. There were eight days
in a row that made it feel like spring would be early that year. I
dressed accordingly for work that day.
I lived in Aurora, IL and worked in Downers Grove, IL, western suburbs
of Chicago. It was about a 20-mile drive home. It was a crazy day.
Seemingly out of the blue, the temperature fell like a rock in the
afternoon. It also began to snow, with that wet, heavy,
quickly-accumulating snow. It was also very windy, causing white-out
conditions.
At the time I had worked at a check-printing plant. I was not alone in
thinking we should close early, but the management would have none of
that. So, we stayed until 5 p.m. I lived the farthest away.
The snow began to pile up in what would result in the "biggest snow of
the 1974-75 snow season that recorded 52.2 inches," according to Chicago
Weatherman Tom Skilling.
It wasn't too bad driving, at least for me. I had a Toyota Celica with
studded snow tires. It was the last year before they were banned. If I'm
not mistaken, I should have already taken them off my car, but just
hadn't gotten around to it. I think April 1 was the cut-off date.
Thankfully, I was able to maneuver through the heavy snow, and had
relatively little trouble stopping at intersections. I loved those
tires.
Then at one point, the traffic just stopped moving. I was in a long line
of cars that suddenly were stationary. Fortunately I had gas in the
car, and a jacket in the back seat. Most importantly, I had my favorite
eight-track tapes with me. There were no cell phones back then. There
was no way to get in touch with anyone. So I just listened to my music,
wrapped the jacket around my legs, and told myself this wouldn't last
very long.
It was starting to get really dark. It started to get cold too, even
though the car was running and the heater was on full blast. Finally,
some guy appeared on a snowmobile. He stopped at each of the cars, one
at a time. When he got to me, he asked if I was alright, if I had any
medical conditions. I told him I was fine. He advised me to keep my
windows ajar and to turn off the car now and then, so as not to become
asphyxiated from carbon monoxide. I asked what was the hold up and how
long would we be stuck here. He said two trucks had jack-knifed, one in
each direction, unable to climb the incline of a bridge just up ahead.
Once they were moved, we could get on our way.
I felt a little better, except that ever since the time I left work, I
had to go to the bathroom. It was starting to get serious now. I
wondered how much a bladder could hold before bursting.
The wind continued howling and blowing the ever-increasing piles of
snow. It was drifting up against my car. I kept opening the door
periodically and removing the snow from around it. I realized if I
wasn't able to move soon, I'd be really stuck. I observed the people
around me. There were two guys in front of me in a pickup; two guys
behind me in a car. One by one, guys were getting out of their car and
walking toward a billboard just ahead of us. It dawned on me, they were
reliving themselves. I wasn't the only one that had to go potty. I
thought about traipsing up there myself, but the thought of wading
through what was now more than a foot of snow in a short skirt, heels
and panty hose was not my idea of a good time. I looked in the back seat
for some kind of container. There wasn't any. I was probably more
worried about a bathroom than a warming station at this point.
Finally, nine hours into my ordeal, another snowmobiler came by. It was a
fireman who said he was going to help me make my way to the fire
station, about a quarter of a mile from where we were parked. Our
location was also just outside a new shopping center that was in various
stages of being built--Fox Valley Center. It was way too far to get to
on foot in these conditions. For that matter, so was the fire station,
but we were going to try. So we left my car in what I was beginning to
think of as its snowy grave. The fireman held me up as I attempted to
walk in snow higher than my knees. I'm short--it was very difficult.
Without him I couldn't have done it. I clung to him with each step.
There were drifts up to my thighs in some places. He helped me navigate
them. Finally, we got to the station where there was a bathroom, thank
goodness. There was also a phone. I was able to call my roommate and my
mother to tell them I was alright. A fire squad ferried several of us to
the Sears store. They were already out of food, but had a little coffee
left. The store was new and hadn't opened yet, so they didn't have
provisions for wayward travelers.
I ended up spending the night at one of the tables in the snack bar at
Sears talking with a couple of guys who worked at Fermi-Lab. I think I
put my head down and fell asleep for a few hours only to be awakened at
dawn by one of the guys who said they were taking us to our cars. When I
got there, I noticed I had a flat tire. There was also a local farmer
with a front end loader that offered to pull my car out of the snow for a
fee. I gave him a few bucks and off I went, flat tire and all. I
couldn't wait to go home to my bed. When I got there, I called in to
work, telling them I wouldn't be in because I had just gotten home. No
sympathy. In fact, they seemed suspicious, as if I was lying. I think
they were a little miffed that I wanted to take the day off. I was
annoyed, but too tired to think about it. I got regular tires put on the
next day and went to work.
This wasn't my only experience being stranded in the snow.
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West Lafayette, Indiana (Photo credit: Wikipedia) |
Two years later, when my husband John and I were returning from our
honeymoon in Florida, we hit a freak snow storm. It started snowing in
Kentucky and by the time we got to Lafayette, Indiana, the traffic was
no longer moving. Since we couldn't go any further, and I had been in
this play before, I convinced him to turn around like many others were
doing. We drove the wrong way on the interstate to get to the last exit
where we maneuvered our way into town.
We passed trucks stopped along the way, cars in the ditches, and huge
snow drifts that we almost got stuck in ourselves. Finally, we learned
that the interstate, I-65, was shut down at West Lafayette. Had we not
turned around, we would likely have been stuck in our car. We found a
motel with a vacancy and checked in for the night.
The weather was as bad as it could get. It was snowing, blowing, and the
temperature hovered around zero. This was way too similar to what I had
been through just two years earlier.
Sleeping was out of the question. I don't think either of us had ever
been that cold.The wind howled through the night and drove the snow in
through the cracks in the walls and windows. There was actually snow
inside our room. The heater wasn't great either. We huddled and shivered
for hours. Finally, with the light of day, we decided we would do
anything to get home. Home was north, but the road was still closed, so
we took a different route south, then west, and north again on I-57. We
were finally able to make it home after going way out of our way.
The bottom line for me, is, I paid my dues to live in Arkansas. It would
be easy to say that I never want to see snow again, but that isn't
quite the case. I love the snow, as long as I can stay home and enjoy
its beauty. That is what it is all about for me, living in Arkansas. I
am drawn to the immense beauty of this place. I love living in a place
that only gets a couple inches of snow at a time, it melts quickly, and
doesn't happen too often.
I feel sorry for my friends and family, but I wouldn't live up north for anything. I love it here.