During Wednesday’s late afternoon shovel-the-front-stairs
adventure, it was observed that the snow was the perfect dry and fluffy
consistency for cleaning rugs the very old-fashioned way but the late hour made
it less feasible. Today, dressed for the snow and bitterly cold weather (officially 16 degrees - feels like 5 degrees) in snow pants,
layers, snow coat, heat reflective liners, and snow gloves, I went outside to
check out the day’s snow situation.
 |
Digging to the shed, snow-cleaning rugs. |
The shed doors were still blocked by two feet of snow, holding
captive the snow shoes I neglected to retrieve the 1,000 times I thought about
it since December. The sun had been shining in a blue sky all morning and by
11:30 the snow in the front yard was wetter than Thursday. Not wet and sticky enough
for building snow sculptures but just wet enough to be not useful. At the side
of the house near the carport, it was still shaded and the snow was dryer.
The three runners (laundry, kitchen, hallway) were retrieved
from inside and set atop the snow. The larger rug that really needed the
refresh lives closer to the front door/front yard and is just too large enough to
be paraded through the house alone so it wasn’t dragged out back.
Dry snow was tossed on the runners, then I took a few
minutes to start blazing a trail to the shed doors. One by one the rugs were
swept free of the snow (and dirt), flipped, swept on the backside, then hung on the porch
rail and swept again. Unlike the last time I did this on different rugs, the swept-off
snow remained relatively clean around the rugs. Either I’m doing a better job
with routine cleaning, rugs are cleaner without two dogs, or these new runners
are magical. My money is on the absence of dogs, but I would take dirty rugs all
day any day to have Moose and Winston back.
The snow shoes were successfully retrieved from the shed and
set into the tiny cargo compartment of the Jeep. Most of the car’s length is
under the hood, and the so-called “cargo” space is minimal in the Renegade if
the back seats are upright. For now, it’s full of snow shoes and a set of ski
poles, a large umbrella, and various household items intended for donation. I couldn’t
fit a bag of groceries back there if my life depended on it.
It was much more pleasant outside today then yesterday. The
sun was shining, a neighbor stopped by to chat, and tasks were accomplished. Remembering
I own reflective glove liners was helpful and my fingers didn’t get cold during
the shoveling and sweeping.
Once back inside, a modification was made to the dance
costume. Brocade trim was hand basted along the back neckline and pressed using
the tailor’s ham and it looked okay until I tried it on and saw that the
neckline no longer lays flat. Did it ever? Suddenly I don’t know. But Houston,
we definitely have a problem, but it’s now a Friday problem. Sometimes sleeping
on it delivers the solution.
My necklace for the costume was located, ending a day long
search. That is what happens when I “organize” things, like I did in December
after our last performance – they end up being set someplace “logical” which I unfortunately
can’t remember when I need to (lifelong affliction). After looking for the
tenth time in various jewelry boxes and travel cosmetic bags used for transport
to performance, the necklace was found today in a clear plastic bag on a closet
shelf with many other dance accessories. Perfectly logical, right next to the
storage bag of troupe performance coin belts and veils, except for the part
where I might wear the necklace for non-dance purposes, making it also “everyday
jewelry” which lives elsewhere. Clearly, a better system is needed.