It’s not often that I advocate breaking the law, as well as shattering the social compact that binds Minnesotans together in our most perilous times, but the alternative is shattering your hip.
Here’s the heresy, as hot and straight as I can serve it: Don’t shovel your walk. Everyone will be better off.
Now, let me qualify that a bit before the Minneapolis Snow Police SWAT team shows up at my door.
As you may have noticed, we have been provided, free of charge, with a generous ration of snow, courtesy of the Thanksgiving Snow Nightmare Crisis of 2019. We’ll be talking about that one for years, right?
“Well, they started warning us about the Death Storm a few days before, and I didn’t pay no mind until the TV stations sent reporters to the airport to interview people who had changed their flights and were leaving a day early. That’s when I realized our lives were at stake.”
No, we won’t say that. It wasn’t a bad storm. And, yes, I went out in advance for bread, milk and toilet paper. But something in my bones said the storm was oversold, and I’d be fine with a baguette, a school-lunch carton of skim and a single roll.
The storm had a few phases. The first ration of snow I removed with the snowblower, which is a one-stage machine. (The difference between a one-stage and a two-stage is that no one with a two-stage ever wishes they had a one-stage.)
Then came more snow, which was either a heavy dusting or a light coating — you need a meteorologist’s license to know the difference.