In my neck of the woods in Northern New Jersey this winter, more so than in my childhood, the weather has tended less towards snow than what the weather forecasters call a “wintry mix”—i.e., some combination of snow, rain, freezing rain and sleet. There might be less of the white stuff on the ground, but that doesn’t make it necessarily easier to take.
What I’m talking about is ice, like what we had Friday
night into Saturday morning. For the first time that I can remember, the local
news stations’ meteorologists were explaining how an uptake of, say, 0.19”
versus 0.3” of ice could lead to more of the crystal clinging to wires—and causing
power outages.
And that’s not even the getting into walking or driving
on “black ice.”
So far this season, I’ve been grateful not just that
this “wintry mix” has occurred on weekends, but also during a period when I could
work remotely. This means that I haven’t had to drive to work in uncertain, shifting
conditions for nearly an hour before the sun even comes out in the morning.
So, Saturday morning, I waited—and waited—until the
snow on the street and sidewalk across from my home increasingly melted. At 10
am, beginning to get cabin fever, I walked out to my driveway for a quick trip
to the store. Even at that point, I was careful to grab hold of my car to keep
from falling—something I might have survived without serious mishap when younger,
but much less likely now.
By mid-morning, the ice was in retreat. But you could
still see evidence of it on the ground, as I did when I photographed this
wintry, grassy corner in Tenafly, near the Roosevelt Common.
During the spring, summer, fall, and even warmer
winter days, parents are likely to take their kids and dogs, happy to have the
protection of tree branches. But by mid-afternoon on Saturday, this section of the park was empty, with the trees casting lonely shadows on the ground. For those willing to brave the wind chill in
the teens, the sight of all this ice would have been the last straw, forcing a fast rethinking of their plans.
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