Snow Day!

It started snowing again at about 6 o’clock yesterday evening. It hasn’t stopped yet. There’s almost a foot of snow here now, which is sufficiently rare in the South of England that everything’s ground to a halt.

We don’t have snow ploughs down here because we don’t usually have enough snow to need them, so most of the roads are inaccessible. The salt and grit that’s normally laid down only works on “certain kinds of snow” apparently – the kind where enough traffic can get through to melt it. Nobody has snow tyres, because we don’t usually have snow!

Paul very sweetly came out this morning and cleared a pathway down the garden to my Shed, and put the heater on, so I’m just trying to decide what work needs to be done today. My original plan was to take my sewing machine into town to be repaired, but there are no buses because of the snow. Paul’s working from home, so we’re both safe and warm, and very grateful for that.

Unfortunately we’re supposed to be going to a funeral tomorrow, a hundred and fifty miles away. The car’s broken (it decided at New Year that the alternator didn’t want to play any more), and it won’t be fixed in time, even if the roads were to become passable in the next day or two. We’d thought of getting a train, but they’re pretty unreliable at the moment because of the weather. Given that the snow’s forecast to continue for another two days at least, I don’t think we’ll be going anywhere.

Thanks to the miracles of modern technology I can at least stay in touch with my family, even if I can’t get to see them. (Although the land line’s broken too, but I think that’s the phone, not the snow.) We have mobile phones, we have email, and times like these would be a lot more difficult without them.

Leaves in the snow.

I went for a walk in the snow this morning. I took a grand total of 99 pictures, then came back and edited them down to just 9. I went out rather early, so although there was a lot of light reflecting from the snow, it wasn’t really daylight yet. As a result a lot of the pictures were rather grainy. I also took a lens that I’m not really used to using (70mm macro), so it took me a while to get the hang of it.

I ended up concentrating mainly on single leaves. Some were still just about clinging on to the trees, others were lying in the snow. I’m honestly not sure what’s going on with this one! It’s clearly not attached to a tree, so it must be lying on the ground, but somehow it looks as though it’s floating.

I particularly like looking at the largest version of this one. It’s still rather grainy, but you can see an absolutely amazing amount of detail of the structure of the leaf.

Snow Day!

A snow day’s pretty exciting in the south of England, and seeing as I had to go out in it anyway, I figured I might as well take the camera with me.

If the slideshow embedded above doesn’t work in your browser, you can also see all of my snowy photos on Flickr.

Baby, it’s cold outside…

Snow! In October!
Usual for many parts of the world, I’m sure, but quite unusual in my little corner.

I spent an hour first thing this morning walking around with the camera, trying to catch the atmosphere of such a crisp, cold, icy morning in the middle of what ought to be Autumn.

 Snow in October

I walked through the woods, which had no snow at all, but everything was bathed in the most glorious morning sunshine.

Snow in October

The colours were simply stunning. All of the yellows and golds of the fallen leaves, covered with a light dusting of frozen snow just starting to melt.

Snow in October

I’m very tempted to have some of these images made up into greetings cards, to sell at the next Art Market.

Inspired by Soule Mama, I’m also considering the idea of making a calendar of seasonal pictures. I think mine would have to be a little desk calendar though, rather than a big sumptuous wall planner. Because I only ever use my photos online, my camera’s set to a relatively low resolution.

Time to change the settings, or hijack Paul’s fancy SLR, perhaps?