Cleaning lady in the lobby today at work sprayed the outside of the glass doors with windex, and by the time she swiped at it witha rag, it was frozen into a big hazey patch. Much chuckling ensued.
I put these up in the Nikon thread earlier, forgetting about this thread. Here are two taken about 20 minutes apart this morning, so you can see how fast it was coming down. We got about a foot with a few more inches due tonight when the tail of the storm comes around. My brother's place in Roanoke is at 22" and counting, but they're in Florida..... worrying about how their house is doing. Years like this make me deeply thankful that we moved out of our house into a condo several years ago. This one would have been a BUGGER to shovel - very heavy and wet snow...
'Still digging out on da' hill as we like to call it. (Burke Mtn, NEK Vermont.) A neighbor's leftover holiday decoration.
X Pro1, 35mm, ISO400, f2. LR5, Silver Efex Pro 2.
. . . David
Gee, thanks Ed - it is beautiful, we look down upon the Housatonic River...thankfully quite a ways below so our house won't be flooded when all this snow melts and the river overflows its banks... This is our first winter up here, so it's all new to us.
The snow is about two feet deep...and thankfully my husband is good with the snow blower and knows how to fix it!
If I'm not mistaken, the Impala has a special 'historical vehicle' license plate…..may be a participate in the annual 'Dream Cruise' Woodward Dream Cruise - Wikipedia
My long departed 1974 Ford Pinto would of qualified for a 'historical vehicle' designation if it had managed to still be running in 1976….slight exaggeration
Just one of the many places on my road that keeps cows. That tunnel/bridge is pretty interesting. It's one of the bridges that was built for a railroad line long ago but never used. The Valley Railroad - Abandoned Rails
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