Jack Frost paints pictures on the window panes at night until I can’t see out of them anymore. The ornate ice crystal pictures that creep up the windows are one of the things I miss now that I live in a house with new fangled, double pane windows. Pa tried to sell the old wooden windows to a window salesman on the phone once.
“ You got any of those old time, drafty, wooden windows? No? Hmmm. I tell ya what.” I am sure the telemarketer never had a conversation like that before and probably won’t again.
“ You got any of those old time, drafty, wooden windows? No? Hmmm. I tell ya what.” I am sure the telemarketer never had a conversation like that before and probably won’t again.
To scratch a place to look out window with my fingernail is to ruin Jack’s masterpiece, but sometimes I can’t resist holding my face close to the chilly glass and letting my breath melt away a peep hole. If I do I can see out how the drifts wash across the fields like white waves and I am imagining I am lost at sea. The wind picks ups ice crystals of snow and slows them in billowing clouds of ocean spay across the open space. Perhaps an arctic explorer. I wouldn’t be surprised if a polar bear went strolling by. It is quite the contrast to the warm golden sea it will be in just seven short months, a lifetime away when I am looking out the window on a January morning.
Snow gathers in drifts across the driveway at the end of the shed and the space between the house and the old wood shop. Pa pushes it up onto piles where I pretend I am an ice queen in her castle, long before Frozen in the a glimmer in Disney’s eye.
Winter activities include our usual barn chores. The horses come in every night, so the stalls need to be cleaned on a weekly basis. Formerly done on Saturday mornings, this task is now done as needed.
Firewood is hauled to the house daily. And some years we spend some of the winter in the woods making firewood. Chain saws echo in the empty woods with no leaves to soften the sound. Mama and I haul wood to the truck or wagon and stack it neatly, making every trip count.
Over the years Pa has pulled a few vehicles around in the snow. Before the days of tractors and newfangled equipment on the farm. Pa plowed snow Dude and Rusty. If it snowed while he was away at work, he pulled the two wheel drive truck into the driveway as far as he could and then walked the rest of the way to the house. After supper, he hitched the team and pulled the truck to its usual parking spot with the team and then plowed out the driveway with and old road grater.
Winter driving in Wisconsin becomes a survival skill. In the rural country side this sometimes means knowing the roads well enough to estimate where the road is supposed to be. Pa’s parting line is “Keep it between the fenceposts” and this phrase calls to mind wind blown snowy fields that blend into the road. If you are lucky enough to have fence posts, your chances of staying on the road and between them(Of course this phrase can also be applied to trips home from the typical Wisconsin small town on a Saturday night - and I’ll give you a clue its isn’t from the church, it’s from the only other establishment in town.). You can only keep it between the fence posts if there are fenceposts though.
In my free time, which I had a lot of between school and the few chores I managed to dodge, I enjoyed snowshoeing and cross country skiing to the neighbor’s woods and back. I shared this favorite past time with a few friends. Anneke was and still is a dear friend who enjoyed a good bit of dress up and a trip down the trail. At her house we packed a neat little lunch of cheese, wholesome bread, a bit of fruit and stroopwaffels. Stroopwaffels before they were cool and found in every trendy grocery store - because she is half dutch and stroopwaffels are as loved as tulips I like to think. We would disappear for the afternoon or at least until our toes went numb. Snow blind and chilled we then baked sweet treats and brewed cocoa or tea, sang rounds at the piano, and played games.
Indoors, tea cups warm our hands and hearts as we go through our days. In The Morning It’s Tea You Want, is the name of a fiddle tune Pa plays, but we still have it with lunch and supper too. Also for second breakfast and another means in between. Pa starts talking about lumberjacks access. The very coldest days with blowing snow that cause most folks to barricade themselves indoors, he meets with gusto because - Lumberjacks. Lumberjack weather requires vast amounts of tea and doughnuts, though the later is a treat for us. Pa comes in from the barn with his beard covered in ice and snow and cold radiates from him like a freezer. Icicles dangling from his mustache and beard. Its nothing that a cup of tea and the parlor stove can’t fix up right quick. The winter solstice activities become a nightly ritual but without the Christmas tree.