I love anything
you do with snow in it, it just looks amazing.
-LSB-...] sand but have you ever
done it with snow?
I bet a lot of you have made a volcano from sand but have you ever
done it with snow?
Lauren Dujanovich, who works at the Grange Community Kitchen in Hamburg, thought she was
done with snow this season.
So the subject invented a reason that had nothing to
do with snow: the shovel was for cleaning out a chicken coup, he said, as a chicken was the last...
I know its supposed to be spring but it will be a couple more weeks before this winter leaves us for good because I am so
done with snow & cold.
It may have had something to
do with the snow dumped on us and the fact that school and activities were pretty much cancelled every day.
I'm praying we're
done with the snow and I'm looking ahead with optimism.
Honestly I am hoping that we are
done with the snow for this year!
Oh I hope we're finally
done with the snow until next winter.
I hope we're
done with snow this year!
i love everything that has to
do with snow, just like lorelai gilmore, so i was excited to head back to michigan for my vacation to have a reunion with snow.
Something to
do with the snow itself... He looked back at his tracks in the snow covering the canal path.
«Our city doesn't seem to have the same issue that Edmonton
does with snow removal.»
I'm praying we're
done with the snow and I'm looking ahead with optimism.
Steve, I still don't know what agriculture on the S. Platte River has to
do with snow melt on the Colorado.
I'm praying we're
done with the snow and I'm looking ahead with optimism.
I hope you are all finally
done with the snow where you live?
I'm in mental spring mode, but have not nested to reflect that just yet (might have something to
do with the snow we got less than a week ago!).
Not exact matches
In the guiding world, if I'm
with a group and I don't really like the terrain or the
snow that's laid upon it, I can deviate.
The region
does get a fair amount of
snow, though, which means that Midwesterners have to work
with what they have when it comes to winter activities like sledding.
I remember shoveling
snow one afternoon in my driveway, thinking through the past few years, and I essentially had a revelation: I'm
done with all of this.
The
snow starts flying in November and doesn't go away completely until March or April (this year is an exception, but I'm sure we'll get loaded up
with snow pretty soon).
I've been keeping busy, preparing for classes that were supposed to start yesterday, reading a book for a review due at the end of the month, shoveling the driveway (the first one on the block to
do so,
with the only emulator being the ex-Marine across the street), and watching DVDs we rented in anticipation of the great blizzard of 2011 (8 inches of
snow and ice!).
I've been snowbound since Sunday evening, stuck at home
with kids who resent the fact that there are no
snow days in homeschool, a wife who wonders why I don't have a job in south Florida (but only on cold winter days), and two animals (a neurotic dog who keeps asking to go out and then to come in, and a kitten that is constantly hunting my various appendages).
They
do this
with me, especially, but they stopped today, immediately, when Reverend
Snow came in.
Yes now she can babble mindlessly about talking snakes, talking fiery bushes, big boats that held 250,000 species of beetle along
with wooly mammoths and
snow leopards, guys that floated into the clouds in front of everyone (yet somehow the Jews and Arabs still just don't buy that he was the saviour), parted water / wine to water / walking on water / healing water, food from the sky....
But I remain perplexed at the fact that Patricia
Snow, along
with many other reviewers,
does not find this lesson being taught.
The creation that used to rejoice
with us and to remind us of the beauty and bounty of God now groans
with us as rain and
snow do not come to feed our crops and as the earth grumbles and the waters spit out death.
After heavy
snow fall in the area, he's been clearing sidewalks around an elementary school, explaining to a local news station, «I don't want kids or parents having to go through the
snow and possibly trip or hurt themselves... The community has supported me immensely
with my struggles and tough times as I had a leg amputated and my fight
with brain cancer.
Taking my cue from their tips including let the season be your guide and don't overlook the the sophistication of an all green - and - white presentation,
With this inspiration, I'm sharing a lite
snow white dip accompanied by winter crudité.
While I don't enjoy the coldness that comes
with snow fall, I am (just a tiny bit) hoping that when I go back to CT for winter break, it
snows and becomes a «white Christmas» after all.
Next thing you know, it'll be spring and we'll be
done with all this
snow (count your blessings if you live somewhere it doesn't
snow).
Mexico: Mexican chocolate shortbread cookies — dark chocolate, spiced
with cinnamon and cayenne pepper Mexican Wedding Cakes — these are known by many names — snowballs cookies, Russian tea cakes, or polvorones — made
with lots of butter, flour, powdered sugar and finely chopped nuts, rolled into balls, and profusely dusted
with sugar, they
do resemble
snow balls indeed.
On
snow days my mother who worked at Fantini Bakery in Haverhill, Mass would bring me in
with her and I remember that there was a spot where the loaves that didn't come out just right went.
Day - after - day has been grey
with snow, followed - up by rain or a «wintery mix» — doesn't the phrase «wintery mix» just give you the shivers?
It may not be autumn any longer (the 4 inches of
snow we got last night made this very clear), but that
does not mean that baking
with pumpkin is over.
Just as I equate
snow with the holiday season, so I
do with candied nuts: crunchy, a bit salty, and sweet, I can (and
do!)
Unlike many New Englanders, I actually love snowfall... at least the first half dozen of the winter; come March, I'm
done with the heaps of
snow.
Oh my, this is just so on time, as the autumn — that,, actually, looks more like winter, given all the
snow it's been covering us
with lately — sure
did take over where I live, and I just can't afford getting sick right now.
We are getting 6 ″ of
snow tomorrow, and all I want to
do is curl up next to a fire
with a glass of this tasty mulled wine.
Its ridiculous but I don't mind because I love the
snow plus I have nowhere to go usually so I'm completely fine
with being
snowed in.
Well, that's not going to happen, but we thought we'd
do our part
with these
Snow - Capped Macaroons from Food Network magazine.
I don't miss the icy roads, shoveling
snow, or coming up
with creative ways to cover every inch of skin before going outside.
This soup
does take a while, but
with 30 inches of
snow outside, I wasn't going anywhere!!
With a snow - covered mountain making a rather romantic backdrop to greet us with upon arriving back to Hobart, the chilly temperatures did not evoke cravings of the delicious ice - cream, so instead I set about recreating the brownies last week
With a
snow - covered mountain making a rather romantic backdrop to greet us
with upon arriving back to Hobart, the chilly temperatures did not evoke cravings of the delicious ice - cream, so instead I set about recreating the brownies last week
with upon arriving back to Hobart, the chilly temperatures
did not evoke cravings of the delicious ice - cream, so instead I set about recreating the brownies last weekend.
how about using fluff for
snow or icing and any «glue» really ------ if it can be stored horizontally to dry it
does harden nicely ----- vertical art
with fluff
does tend to drip or slide a bit ------ Once dry its fine to be vertical.
Whilst the rest of the family played outside all day like normal
snow - loving folks, I came inside early and started whipping up chillis (like Chicken Chilli and White Chicken Chili) and soups (like this Instant Pot Chicken Soup
with Noodles) as any normal food blogger would
do.
As if we didn't already have enough
snow, a few days ago, we were blessed
with another 12 inches in less than 12 hours.
I can't share your dislike of winter — it is summer and raging hot days that fills me
with dread (not to mention bushfires) but
snow is still a novelty for me — though I
did love the edinburgh winters but I have heard how harsh canadian winters can be and am not sure I would cope