I had something else planned. I wanted to go and check on how various plants were faring in our garden in the village. But it's snowing today, so perhaps this week that shall remain... a mystery. I'll have to wait for another five days or so and wonder if the experiment of populating the near-the-fence grounds with stuff from somewhere else... that started a bit later than this time last year ... is succeeding.
Creating pocket expansions of plants that I like is my latest hobby. A crocus is nice. Two of those are fine. But two here and two there... and perhaps another two somewhere else... that is the direction. Same for the rest of the green stuff. Strawberries (native) check. Lavender (not native) check. Bamboo (absolutely not native) check.
Anyway... the weekend will be more indoors than that. Perhaps I'll get to see the photos I took during the previous weeks and perhaps I'll go picking and selecting older ones, as well, to soon be printed.
Snow must prevent you from doing a lot of things I guess, outside things especially. Does it snow for long there? How many months of the year?
Well, we're a very small country but with diverse relief. So, above 1500 m altitude it'often snowing and in the mountains above 2000 m altitude it stays for about five or six months. But here in this town... it might be gone tomorrow and not show up again until the end of Winter. Or it might snow again, who knows. It has been more than a decade since it stayed for longer than a week around here.
Last week we were in a mountain close by, less than 1000 m altitude but there was enough snow remaining under the sun so that the kid could mount a sleigh and have some fun.
We have snow here in Australia but only in certain parts and my area is not one of them. It would be strange for me having to live with snow.
I was surprised that your snow is so unpredictable and inconsistent.