Last week we had two days of spring weather in New York.
This was less than two weeks after a snowstorm that had many office workers
working from home.
Over Presidents Day weekend, I was upstate at the Mohonk Mountain House on a family
vacation. My father-in-law and I decided to try our hand at skiing. Although we
were skiing novices, we did well and zipped along on the daring Huguenot ski
trail. As we made our way up a hillside, we came across an employee of the
property who was maintaining the trails with a snowmobile. He noted that the
snow was starting to soften so he was glad to be near the end of his rounds. We
were lucky to have taken the opportunity to ski when we had it; the warm weather
made the ski and snowshoe trails more difficult to use the following days. One
day when we went to the outdoor ice rink, we found it closed with the ice
having melted.
This past Saturday I took my two older daughters to a local
playground and we spent most of our time outside with no jackets on at all. I
was outdoors for an hour wearing nothing heavier than a short-sleeve cotton
t-shirt and I was fine. The back of my big bald head even got a little
sunburned.
In the office where I work, a few weeks ago some of my
coworkers were using space heaters to help stay warm. This past week we opened
the windows and even ran one of the air conditioners on the fan setting to
circulate air. Two days I went to work without a coat (wore blazer jacket
because I had meetings and because it’s still winter, damn it).
Isn’t this nice?
Was the popular refrain, to which I say, “No!”
Please allow me to dump refreshingly cold water on your
optimism. I may be a curmudgeon but I’m right. It’s not healthy for our part of
the world to have 70-degree weather in January. If this were Florida or parts
of the South or Southwest it would be another story. But February is for winter
weather.
One of the benefits of living in the Northeast is getting to
experience all the seasons fully. We get the best fall foliage in the world and
a pleasant spring; we have both very hot summers and (usually) very cold
winters.
Maybe a rare Spring-like day here and there is no big deal,
but this kind of thing is happening with increased regularity and that’s not
good. And I don’t mean for first-world problems like slushy ski trails and
cranky middle-aged office workers. We need our seasons to keep our life in the
balance it needs to be. Real-world important stuff like health and agriculture are thrown
for a loop when temperatures spike unexpectedly.
I hate the heat and would rather stand in the cold until my
face is hardened into a red, wind-burned grimace than be the summer sweat hog I
become every year. I understand the weather gets warm and I adapt to that as
best I can. At least let me have my winter.
What this may also indicate is that this year may be another
record warm year and that we are due for another long, hot summer.
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