[Amidst all this silliness on my blog, let me say quite seriously that
my thoughts and prayers are with those suffering in the Northeast. It
appears that the storm was absolutely devastating up there, and it's no
laughing matter. These posts are not intended to capitalize on the
suffering of others. My mom was exceedingly blessed to have been spared
the ravages of this storm, and I am truly thankful. These posts are intended
as whimsical, humorous accounts of Doris and my weekend in Virginia, and
in no way should be interpreted as callous to the suffering of others.]
True confessions: this trip east never was about Sandy. At least, not until Sandy made it all about Sandy. You see, mom's old HP laptop had gotten kind of slow, barnacle-encrusted, weedy. So, mom asked the kids to select and install a new laptop for her. I was elected the chief laptop setter-upper by my siblings. Consequently, this trip was on the calendar long before Sandy was a butterfly's breath.
As it happens, I just got lucky. Sandy happened to visit the same weekend I did; thus, we got to see one another (from afar, as it turned out).
My big sister says that I am a bad-weather magnet, that I just draw it to me. If that's the case, my bad weather magnet got degaussed last winter. Perhaps I've been "re-gaussed" this winter [is that a word?].
Sandy never did live up to her billing, at least not in Lancaster County, Virginia. Tuesday was a gray, rainy day, little bit of wind, certainly nothing exciting. We took mom out to lunch at Willaby's on the Rappahannock and enjoyed some great seafood.
I finished up the laptop install, and last night said our goodbyes to Rosy the mop dog
This morning we pulled out of Broad Reach about 5:30 AM. It's a long drive anyway, and we weren't sure what we'd find in West Virginia.
I love the drive from Charlottesville west, on Interstate 64 and a short portion on 81. This was just one of the beautiful views from the highway.
As I said, we weren't sure what we'd find in West Virginia. We found snow. It snowed for several hours as we drove through, but it didn't cause any problems for us.
Thankfully the roads themselves were in good shape. Temperature never got below 31 during our drive. We stopped for lunch in Beckley, West Virginia.
So the great Sandy adventure is over, and, for the Cobb clan anyway, all is well. Thank You, Lord.
Parting thoughts: enjoying snow is like eating peanuts. You always want a little more. Just think: snow in October! What wonders does the winter hold in store? Yahoo!
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