Hey, wanna see a dirty picture?
No, not that type of dirty picture. I try to run a family-friendly blog here.
Those of you who think snow is the be-all and end-all might be wondering how those of us who live in what I shall call so accurately the snowbelt can get sick of that magical white stuff that floats down from the sky.
A walk yesterday with Ellie B, aka Dogamous Pyle, through our Syracuse city neighborhood reinforced my answer.
Even my pooch would not sniff this dirty snowpile.
This is what snow becomes around here after it’s pushed into a big bunch. There it sits, attracting every stray twig, leaf, dislodged grass clump, ball of road salt, grain of sand, and ugly portion of all things nasty in the immediate area.
Beautiful it is not.
Does a pile like this make you wish for new snow to cover it up?
I agree completely. The only good thing about snow is how pretty it is and moving it into piles where it accumulates “stuff” is the worst. Especially car exhaust.
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And we have some really ugly stuff stuck to our snow piles in Syracuse, Cat, although the melt continued pretty good through the week.
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yes, time for a quick cover up and refresh. as you and i both know, those grey snowy icy piles can linger on into the summer months )
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Yes, you are right that in the huge supermarket parking lots, these manmade glaciers can stand until way past shorts weather, Beth. Here and in Michigan. Lucky us.
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New fallen snow gets me every time. But the dirty snow in your photo … that’s when I yearn for spring.
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Yeah, Judy, it is UGLY!
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It’s kind of like when you have short hair and want to grow it long. It gets to that unmanageable point where you’re half mad trying to decide to cut it all off again or let it keep growing. Well…it’s kind of like that.
I say more snow to cover it up. I do NOT like this not winter not spring mess!!!
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If my hair looked like this, I’d be a self-made baldy, Colleen. (As it is, I guess I’m a reluctant, God-made half-baldy.)
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HA! 🙂
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Oh how I do not miss those dirty piles of snow that seemed to grace the curbs of Iowa until late March. YUCK!
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A tribulation of snowland, CBXB. Yuck indeed!
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If that pile of snow was where I live it would hang around for weeks, maybe shrinking a little, but an eyesore.
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Yes indeed, Rachel, an eyesore it is.
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I was thinking about the snow issue this morning. It takes a toll on your feelings as you look around Syracuse. It’s dreary, the snow, which doesn’t help with the aesthetic value. The cold rain doesn’t help as well.
Not to worry: the snow will melt or we’ll get a fresh layer.
By the way, you’ve got me craving No Name Diner now. It’s been a while since I’ve been there. Might have to go for breakfast.some day this week.
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It’s really good these days, Chris. The niece, Kellie, took it over from her uncle after a period in which it was closed. For a bit, it was actually the spot for Hammi’s barbecue. I was glad when the No Name Diner came back!
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Photos like that remind me that baseball season can’t be too far away!
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Pitchers, catchers and snow-pile blow-torchers report!
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Or that it will just stay warm enough and go away entirely 🙂
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I always feel that your scenario only happens around here in April, NAPR!
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