December
17, 2006:
Today
started out cool, overcast and calm, but by noon the sky cleared and the
rest of the afternoon was lovely. The fresh snow made everything white and
sparkling. Consensus at the coffee table was that we got about three
inches of fresh snow.
It snowed
most of Friday, Friday night and Saturday, but never very heavily.
However, the wind really came up on Saturday and made it look like a good
old-fashioned blizzard. We had to go to Kelvington; the road was
snow-covered pretty well all the way, and some of it looked like ice under
the snow. By mid-afternoon, when we came home, the highway was definitely
heavy, visibility was limited, and the yellow line was nowhere in sight.
Luckily there wasn’t much traffic, because it was hard to tell where the
edge of the highway was. We sure didn’t linger in Kelvington.
Irene
Crane-Genaille is manager of the Cove. She decided to put on a Christmas
supper for the staff tonight; then expanded it to include the coffee
regulars, then to include everyone in the area. The result was another
community pot-luck supper with almost fifty people attending. Irene
personally supplied all the meat, and people brought salads, casseroles,
desserts, etc. It was a fantastic meal, and a great visiting time.
Perigord was well represented, and almost the entire population of Marean
Lake was there. Thanks to Irene for a great evening!
The Cove
will close at 4 PM on Christmas Eve and re-open Boxing Day. They plan to
keep it open for New Year’s Eve and New Year’s Day too, so
snowmobilers don’t have to worry about a supply of gas.
Many
of the coffee row regulars are snowmobilers, in fact the farmers and
outfitters use them in their businesses. One of them asked Alex if he
wasn’t a snowmobiler, and Alex said no, he had one once when the boys
were at home but never since. I think the enthusiasts wonder what is wrong
with those of us that don’t partake of the sport, but if they could hear
themselves at the coffee table, they might twig. They are constantly in
search of parts, or moaning about machines not running properly, or
gulping fuel like a semi trailer. The rest of us thank our lucky stars we
never got hooked!
I noticed a
sign on the front of Slobodian’s Pharmacy in Porcupine Plain advertising
prints from digital sources, so went in to check it out. The machine looks
like a computer; it has slots for all the various camera cards plus CDs,
and when you plug in your card instructions come up on a touch-sensitive
screen. Follow the instructions and it will display all the images on your
card. Tell it what you want it to do (you can print out any or all of the
images) and it prints out an invoice. Take it to the cashier & pay for
it, the cashier will enter a password and the machine will print your
pictures. I thought it did a very good job, for 29¢ a 4 X 6 print.
That’s cheaper than you could do it yourself with your own printer. I
didn’t play with it enough to find out if prints could be cropped or
otherwise edited before printing. I believe it will write your pictures to
CD if you want, as well.
Since many
papers don’t publish over Christmas and New Year, we are going to take
the next couple of weeks off. Doreen and I would like to wish all of you a
very Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!