Ugh!- not good. The only bright light is that the east coast, being used to larger storms, does a pretty good job cleaning the streets fairly quickly, but still, it takes awhile.
I had to,move one year during a storm that dropped 33 inches, it,was brutal. Had to shovel out both places in order to move- Spring was a long time arriving.
Tomorrow is “Moving Day” for my nephew and his bride.
I already helped move a lot of stuff last weekend, but Tomorrow was supposed to be “The Big Day”. Ugh.
“I had to,move one year during a storm that dropped 33 inches, it,was brutal. Had to shovel out both places in order to move- Spring was a long time arriving.”
We are super fortunate that we do not have to move into our new home, nor sell our soon to be former home, until nice weather returns.
That is one thing that I’ve been grateful for - because cruddy weather bringing cruddy moving conditions aside, houses tend to fetch better prices in the spring. Pulling up to an otherwise decent home - which has mounds of dirty snow/ice from plows in front, bare trees, no pretty grass or flowers, and imagining yourself having to lug your furniture through sloppy conditions... we will hold off on listing. We have installed all kinds of sensors at the new house, so we can monitor things there remotely, and drive down between snowstorms for quick visits.
For now, I’m just trying to work out the plant planning, and some beds and some trees. It’s a 3/4 acre lot, and other than a few cedars too close to the “new” house - there is little else going on there.