fuzzi's Chicken Journal

Dry snow. Soooo… water that isn’t wet? Or is that a weird way to distinguish regular snow from slushy snow?
Our cat (Psycho Kitty) loves dry snow. She bats and flips it around and generally disappears in her own cloud of snow while playing.

Skiers call dry snow powder. Perfect for skiing; doesn’t stick to the bottom of your skis, and a lot easier for turns and all, instead of hurtling down the side of the mountain over a sheet of ice.

Ober Gatlinburg (are they still around?) was notorious for frozen granular conditions. Feels a lot like concrete when you fall.
 
If snow accumulates then I use a snow shovel to scoop the snow away from the fence gate, and chicken coop doors. Dry snow can be swept off steps with a broom IF done so before stepping on the surface.
We’d have to get way more snow than normal to affect the door into the run, which is about a foot off the ground. And the big doors into the coop /for clean-out) are waist-high for me. So blizzard of ‘93 type snow event I guess.

We do sweep snow off our porch and steps, though.
 
Our cat (Psycho Kitty) loves dry snow. She bats and flips it around and generally disappears in her own cloud of snow while playing.

Skiers call dry snow powder. Perfect for skiing; doesn’t stick to the bottom of your skis, and a lot easier for turns and all, instead of hurtling down the side of the mountain over a sheet of ice.

Ober Gatlinburg (are they still around?) was notorious for frozen granular conditions. Feels a lot like concrete when you fall.
Powder - that's what I've always called it. Now I can picture "dry" snow. Great powder skiing in the Swiss Alps. Ober is still there but I never skiied there. The few times I've skiied as an adult I made the drive over to NC, to go to Sugar or Beech.
 

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