When we first moved to the Midwest, my winter driving skills sucked. I’d just spent 20+ years in the Portland metro area, where snowfall is rare. One inch of snow snarls traffic and shuts down the city, so I didn’t get much practice.

In a timely coincidence…

This was a Sunday. So, I was housebound for five days, too skittish to hit the road. For what was probably just a couple inches of snow.

(And La Croix? What’s up with that?!)

Once we arrived in Rapid City, I quickly adapted to getting around in the snow. Not that I had much choice; our first winter was particularly brutal, so it was either sit home and become a hermit, or man up and learn to drive in the snow. I manned up.

(A year and a half later we all became hermits. Thanks, COVID.)

I’ve gotten pretty comfortable navigating snowy roads in the years since, and no longer panic whenever the forecast calls for snow. But there are occasional exceptions, and Wednesday morning was one of ’em.

One of the first things I do after getting up is check the weather. It was 34° with a little light rain falling at 5 a.m. No biggie! But when I pulled out of the garage at 6:45, the ground was covered in snow, and the temperature had dropped to 21°.

My parting words to Tara? “I hope we didn’t get a flash freeze!”

CUE DRAMATIC MUSIC.

I knew something was up as soon as I started my car. Google Maps pops up automatically when I fire up Android Auto, and it showed 1 hour and 10 minutes to work. WTF? The drive normally takes 45 minutes! Which meant I was already hopelessly late before I even pulled out of the driveway. And when I did, it was immediately evident the roads were icy and treacherous. Driving through town, a pickup truck was going sideways down Main Street.

“What a show-off,” I muttered, but then other cars started sliding. When I started sliding too, I decided to cut my losses, turn around, and work from home. The plows were just hitting the roads, because the flash freeze (a sudden, rapid drop in temperature (often from above freezing to well below 32°) that causes moisture on surfaces like roads and sidewalks to freeze almost instantly into clear, dangerous ice, creating hazardous conditions with little warning – thanks, Google!) had caught everyone off guard. It was like driving on a skating rink. Just about the slickest roads I’ve ever experienced.

But first, I had to hit the Dunkin’ drive-through, because I’d ordered a latte and breakfast sandwich through the app before realizing how bad the roads were. I briefly considered chalking that up as a loss, but hey, ten bucks is ten bucks, and I’m a cheap bastard. Luckily, I was able to retrieve my order, and made it back home without incident.

Staying home was the smart move. Traffic was at a crawl for a 20+-mile stretch of Highway 12, my route to Madison. Between the icy roads and white-out conditions due to blowing snow, a bunch of drivers ended up in ditches. Just an ugly, ugly day to be commuting to work. My boss was totally understanding and said I should never feel badly about working from home when the weather is bad; that’s what the policy is for, and no job is worth risking life and limb for.

I love how compassionate my employer is. Thank you, CheeseGov!

No beetle, but how ’bout a deer?

Today is my Friday. Tara’s, too. We were originally planning a trip to South Dakota tomorrow for the Burning Beetle festival, but decided to bag that because, as I mentioned above: cheap bastard. (Plus, did we really want to spend 22 hours of our precious four-day weekend behind the wheel of a car? That’s a big, fat nope.) We did not, however, cancel our pre-approved PTO. Monday is already a holiday, and any opportunity to turn three days’ off into four is welcome in my book. Tara actually took Tuesday off, as well. She’s a wizard at maximizing vacation days.

We talked about spending a day in Milwaukee this weekend, doing the Historic Miller Brewery Cave tour, but it’s going to be super cold and windy and maybe snowy, so eff that. We’re going to run into Madison instead, do some errands, grab lunch. There’s playoff football on Saturday (let’s go, Broncos!) and plenty of chores around the house that need chor-ing. Oh, and I’ve got a book to write, so there’s no shortage of things to keep us busy over the long weekend.

I’m ending this post with a random photo of a sunlit deer in our backyard. The setting sun through the trees was hitting her just right.

Sort of a counterpoint to Rivergirl’s moonlit deer, if you will.


24 responses to “Slip-sliding down Main Street.”

  1. I even read before hitting the like button. Cool about the deer. Glad the bosses get the traffic/weather situation. That all sounds scary. Chuckle at he truck “showing off.” Relieved you still got your $10 order! Heck yes! Made that crazy drive worth it, and more worth it for the crazy DD employees disgruntled that they had to go to work.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The DD employees probably arrived early enough to beat the ice. I hope so, at least! I made sure to tip them for their trouble.

      It was a novelty sipping that latte from my desk in the basement. I’d never done that before.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. I’m sure they must have gotten there early, yeah. I hope they didn’t regret coming at all, since they probably didn’t get a lot of business. Very kind of you to tip them. Not such a cheap bastard after all, are you?

        Hmm… Is this latte at home going to become more of a thing for you? Your readers eagerly await the continuing saga!

        Liked by 1 person

      2. I always tip them! I don’t think they expect it, because she closed the drive-through window immediately after handing me my stuff. I practically had to yell to get her attention, ha. The DD app does not have an option to add a tip. They really should!

        I treat myself to a latte once a week, always on my way to work, but I’ve gotta admit: this was a nice change of pace. If I did it more often, I could give my business to the local coffee shop on Main Street that inexplicably doesn’t open until I’m 1/3 of the way to the office.

        Liked by 1 person

  2. I’m impressed you even tried to drive on ice. Snow is one thing, ice is an absolute beast. And your deer is lovely.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. If I had known it was that bad, I never would have left the house. But I’m proud of myself for soldiering on to Dunkin’, which was a fair distance away from where I could have turned around. I just took it really slow the whole drive home.

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  3. Not jealous! Glad you were able to work from home. With your DD order!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. My big takeaway is: maybe we need to buy an espresso maker!

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  4. You see some amazing things when the roads are a sheet of ice. Our local Dunkin’ is close enough that, if there was two feet of snow, I would still be willing to chance going there for my daily refueling. But, if there was .000001 inches of ice, I’d steal a couple of Mrs. B’s sodas to fulfill my caffeine requirement for the day, and pray the Dunkin’ employees could make it through the day without my visit. I hope your Broncos fare well, and as usual when Denver plays in the post-season, it will be warmer there than here.😳

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I wouldn’t mind having a Dunkin’ right next door, come to think of it.

      The crazy thing is, if we’d stuck to our Burning Beetle plans, we would have gone to South Dakota to warm up. They have been in the 60s when we were in the 20s, and there has been virtually no snow this winter. I feel for them!

      Liked by 1 person

  5. Even with my AWD Subaru (with studless snow tires on), I wouldn’t chance the ice. I’m pathologically afraid of it. No one in any vehicle with any level of experience can manage it, especially in our hilly western WA. I’ve had some very scary experiences in ice, so I would stay home too. A couple times I was caught out in a temperature drop on my way to school; I think I aged by about 20 years on that 10 minute drive. Glad you got to work at home but didn’t have to miss out on your latte and breakfast sandwich. Go, Seahawks! And Broncos too, I suppose. 😉

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Someone on the road report thread I was following said even the snowplows were sliding on the ice! Another person said this was the worst they’d seen in the 35 years they’ve lived here. That just sums up how treacherous it was.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. When even snowplows are sliding, it’s definitely time to get off the roads!

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  6. I should qualify that chains are somewhat effective in ice. I can’t run them though and have tire socks–which qualify as chains for a trip over the pass. (but I wouldn’t trust them in the ice)

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I owned chains when I first moved to the PNW. Used them once or twice, but they’re a real pain to put on and take off, as you are well aware!

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      1. You probably remember that we’re required to carry them (or an approved alternate) when we cross the pass in the winter. Most of the time, AWD or 4WD is enough. I’ve never heard them call for chains on ALL vehicles. If it’s that bad, they need to close the pass.

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  7. That’s a beautiful deer photo! I wish ours showed up with their own dramatic lighting.
    Good call on the work from home, there’s nothing worse than driving on ice.
    I admit to being disappointed at the loss of a burning beetle post, but there’s always next year.
    🪲🔥🪲

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I’m happy to direct you to the two previous Burning Beetle posts from the years we attended (although I’m sure you have already read them and commented!).

      The deer pic is actually about a month old. It’s been sitting on my phone waiting for a post. Your moonlit deer inspired me.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. One can never have too many burning beetle posts..

        Liked by 1 person

  8. Snow is one thing with AWD, and typically manageable unless we’re talking feet…but ice…nope. People attempting to drive in ice have clearly lost numerous brain cells or have a death wish or both. They also don’t consider who else they may kill in the process. I’m glad you have an employer who wants to keep employees alive.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Because this happened so quickly and wasn’t hyped to death (there was actually little or no talk about ice the evening before), I just think a lot of people were caught in it unexpectedly. If that front had come through even 30 minutes later, I would have been halfway to work…and subsequently screwed.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. That seems to go back to a recent comment between us regarding the inability of meteorologists to predict weather patterns with less and less accuracy. I’ve seen this freaky out of nowhere thing here a lot, but when you HAVE to go to work…that’s just scary.

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  9. I loved playing in the snow when I was a kid, but driving is an entirely different matter. It only snows maybe once every two years where we live, and then it isn’t usually cold enough for it to stick around. As someone who used to tromp to school back in the day to snowdrifts galore, I found it quite humorous when school was cancelled in California for less than two inches of snow. Enjoy your extended weekend. I’ll be watching a lot of football, even though the Packers pulled one of their famous “this is how you blow a game” stories they’re so famous for. Apparently, a 21-3 lead at half and a 15-point lead entering the 4th quarter weren’t enough.

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  10. Let’s start with the terminology. What you described is called black ice here in Michigan. When my son in law moved here from Australia he didn’t believe about it and call it an urban legend until.. he tried to drive on it and didn’t anymore. Good on you for picking up the order and I’m wondering if they give you a store credit for black ice storm emergency if you weren’t able to make in in for the pickup. Glad your boss is understanding and sounds like a good call for the weekend. As a long time winter weather commuter I so get every word of this

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