Well, you all survived quite well! Ninnies? TBH, a lot of people here were scoffing at the warnings (we had red weather warnings where I am because of the two weather fronts, the one from Siberia/Scandanavia and then Storm Emma colliding basically over the east/south east of Ireland The Govt. had called a curfew from Thursday afternoon to Friday night for safety). Quite honestly, I freely admit to being an absolute wuss when it comes to driving on ice/snow. I'm not sure when/how that happened. We have so rarely gotten any snow here. This lot makes three times in 20 years. Since the last time we had snow, in 2010, when my husband was still alive and still at home with me, and we were snowed in for a week, I have, every Winter, regardless of forecasts, made sure that I have a stock of staples. Flour, yeast, beans/peas for soup, tins of things, and a few large bottles of water in case of power outages. My cooker runs on bottled gas. My Winter every day coat is a ski jacket from Lidl (can recommend them!).
So, this time, When the snow came, I was fine. And come it did! My biggest problem was having to dig myself out several times a day to the fuel shed and to the chicken run. Although roofed, and I had spent the first day of the storm trying to get some windbreak up to stop the snow blowing in, It just kept swirling in to the run as if the walls and roof weren't there! On Thursday, I dug the run out three times, and replaced the frozen water five times.(It's about 11x13 feet). On Friday I dug it out as much as I could, several times and put water in a large pot hoping that wouldn't freeze as fast. The snow was up to my knees in there, and deeper outside. The feeder kept disappearing under the snow. And then one of the hens looked like she was going to succumb, standing with her head drawn in, eyes closed. So I thought, enough! put extra bedding in the house, a container of water, and a bowl of food, picked them up and shut them in the house. It's not a suitable house for them to be shut in all the time. It's supposed to house ten, and I have five, but they are never shut in (the run is secure).
Anyway, they all perked up, and are fine. And I could stop at least digging out the run for a couple of days!
I finally dug my way to my front gate, and forced enough of a gap to squeeze through on Friday afternoon. What a shock!! Outside my gate, I seemed to be in a sort of hollow. The snow was only up to my thighs. On either side of me, huge drifts had piled up blocking the road, to halfway up the telephone poles! :shock: :shock: It was actually very scary, because it's a very narrow, rural road. The council don't touch these roads. And living alone, normally, I enjoy my own company, and quite enjoy being here by myself. But I found being isolated like that, being actually unable to get out and see anyone, was totally different! Very stressful. Thank God for the neighbouring farmers, who spent Friday night and Saturday with tractors and bulldozers clearing a gap through the drifts. I spent Sunday digging my driveway and front gate clear, so I could get out on Monday. FREEEDOMM! :mrgreen:
News reports here talked about the emergency services getting stuck in snowdrifts, and local people turning out to dig them out. One report told of an elderly dementia sufferer being found collapsed in a snow drift by an animal charity on a call out. They just happened to spot his clothes sticking out, and thankfully, stopped to see what it was.
A lot of people, mostly in towns, enjoyed the time off, and enjoyed skiing and sledding down the hills. Dau said one of their neighbours, a builder, took his tools, and built a very impressive igloo on the green opposite their houses!
What has most impressed me though is the resilience of nature. All my primroses, daffodils, snowdrops and Christmas Roses, which were in bloom, have come out from their deep covering of snow, still in bloom! It's taken a few days for the daffodils to come upright again, but they seem none the worse!
Don't want to see snow again for a long number of years!!