You will need to click to see how thick the snow was...
Liz and I ran Becky over to college this morning, after milking (and after the motherperson got up at four to finish the Farm Side for Friday), and then headed to Oneonta for a farm meeting (the boss stayed home to calve a cow.).
It was put on by our feed company.Liz and I ran Becky over to college this morning, after milking (and after the motherperson got up at four to finish the Farm Side for Friday), and then headed to Oneonta for a farm meeting (the boss stayed home to calve a cow.).
With good speakers.
Brook's Chicken.
Great door prizes. We really wanted to be there.
We hopped on I 88. There was rain predicted. There was squally wind predicted. However, nothing that we heard prepared us. Or not enough anyhow. It was a boy who cried wolf sort of thing. We have canceled several tempting outings this winter because the forecasters called for blizzards and other apocalyptic weather conditions and nothing happened. We decided to ignore them (or I did...Liz wanted to stay home) and we paid the price. The wind was so fierce on 88 that Liz could barely hold the car on the road. We got off onto 7...not much better. We made it to Richmondville, called Becky and told her to skip class, picked her back up and headed home (with a quick detour to Wally World for dog food.)
What followed was 30 or so miles of the worst driving we have seen this winter. It was bad. I have pictures. I didn't take them until it had actually let up some.....The snow was horizontal! Now that we are home it is sunny again.....
****Update...to add insult to injury, not one, but two milk inspectors just stopped in to tell us that our milk hauler will be charging us another $300 bucks a month to haul our milk and we can't change haulers. Milk is about the only commodity where the producer pays the hauling to the buyer. (Everyone but milk buyers pays their own darned shipping and handling.) On the positive side (and there always is one) one inspector said that the barn looked good. Milk inspectors NEVER tell you that your barn looks good. (I think they just didn't want to get us any madder than necessary.)
Brrrr. Glad you made it home safe.
ReplyDeleteThose waffles (Belgian?) in the previous post look amazing.
Gosh! I see you have a label named "Double GRRRRRR" now! You must be REALLY mad.
ReplyDeleteI would be, too, iffen I was a farmer. Holy cow, they are shafting you pretty nasty, now. I'll bet you still pity us city slickers, though, right?
Yup, that weather front was nasty, and I'll bet driving in it was scary. Glad you got home okay.
ReplyDeleteFC, thanks me too...it was really, really awful! Plain waffles, but delicious!
ReplyDeleteMrs. M, I am indeed...300 extra bucks a month specifically for just us! Not other farmers.
NW, thanks, it was scary.