[first published in 1999, and sounding awfully familiar]
Once again Mike’s
Prediction has held true. Some folks may have their doubts, but it’s been our
experience that you can set your calendar by Mike’s Prediction.
You see, according
to my husband, we have only two weeks of below-zero weather in Southeast
Wisconsin. Around these parts, that weather rolled in around January 2 and out
around the 16th. So the nay-sayers must admit that for this year at
least, Mike had a pretty accurate prediction.
Living in
below-zero weather is something we Wisconsinites tolerate but never quite get
used to. We need to know there’s an end in sight.
But I’ve lived
other places – Norfolk, Virginia, and Rome, Italy – where people would laugh if
they heard that you could tolerate even two days of below-zero weather, much
less two weeks.
I saw snow in both
places, and some bone-chilling damp weather, although never the teeth-freezing
bitterness we know in Wisconsin. And when snow comes to places like Virginia
and Italy, we Wisconsinites have to laugh.
There they are,
those Italian or Virginian hardy-lifers, out in their après-ski boots and
garden hoes, trying to clear their walks. There are no snow plows, so a
three-inch snowfall can mean school is closed for days. It’s best to stay off
the roads, because what warm-weather motorists don’t know is that you must learn to drive all over again each
winter! They drive way too fast and way too close. They build snowmen
immediately because they’re so excited about the snowfall. Here in Wisconsin,
if our family hasn’t built a snowman by February, we figure we’ll still get a
chance in March.
It must be true
what they say about warm weather thinning the blood, because after we had lived
in Virginia for a year, our friend Mark Metscher came to visit. It was
Thanksgiving, and we were freezing and wearing winter jackets. Mark couldn’t
believe we were cold. He walked around outside in shirtsleeves, exclaiming,
“Sheesh, it’s fifty degrees!”
There’s something
special about really, really cold weather. It’s so dangerous that it’s
exciting. I realize again what a thin thread we hang from. If I were a
survivalist, I don’t think I’d live in Wisconsin.
Come summer, it’s
all a memory. Then it’s time for Mike’s Prediction about above-ninety-degree
weather. You guessed it: two weeks.
“Bloom
where you’re planted” is a hard directive during the winter when you’re planted
in Wisconsin.
**
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