So it's the heaviest snowfall for ten thousand years, and the country has ground to a halt. As usual, we get people whining about how they got cold on their way to work, how it was so tough to sit in their warm cars for an extra half hour, or demanding that we invest in more gritting trucks instead of the NHS for the one day a year when it snows. Radios yelp the latest ice-based statistics excitedly, and the newspapers all come up with snow-related puns for their front pages. It's a ridiculous spectacle.
And yet I wouldn't want it any other way. What's the fun in having a country who can cope with everything? In the rest of Europe, snow is no different to rain or high winds for them. They just live through it. But in the UK, it retains that magic that makes a snow day an event worthy of a four page spread in the Guardian. With worldwide media, society seems to be becoming far harder to impress. To retain that childlike wonder is something we should enjoy, and I certainly do.
Still, it'd be even more enjoyable without the stupid gritter truck demands of some people.
Hello old friend
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I only ever seem to post things on here that relate to the fact that I
haven't blogged for a while. This is because blogging about me getting
pissed off at...
15 years ago
2 comments:
I did hear one woman complaining that because the council didn't grit her road, she was trapped and unable to get to work. She lived down a single-track lane with around 4 houses at the end.
I say lived, because I'm told she died of hypothermia. Ironically, the ambulance couldn't get to her because the roads hadn't be gritted.
Ah, well. You win some, you lose some.
p.s. Strictly speaking, the death part is made up, but it would be so much more interesting if it were true.
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