When it comes to trekking around our frigid, snow-saturated cities this winter, misery does love company -- and has plenty of it.
Everybody's having a hard time getting around, but some have to deal with it throughout their entire work shift. Plenty of folks have jobs that keep them out in the clogged, slippery streets -- bus drivers, emergency medical technicians, highway salters/plowers, long-haul truckers, pizza deliverers, mail carriers and newspaper deliverers, to name a few.
Beyond work-related winter agonies, just try maneuvering a baby stroller -- not to mention a wheelchair -- through sidewalk slalom moguls and ankle-deep slush.
We asked a few intrepid souls how they do it, while keeping tempers checked and spirits up.
For Randy Lundeen and Dave Deters, who between them have nearly 60 years of experience as paramedics, a bad snow can mean the difference between life and death. Not theirs, but those of the sick and injured people who need to get to Hennepin County Medical Center pronto.
Lundeen recalled a recent run to south Minneapolis after a major snow dump.
"Every route we tried was blocked by somebody trying to get a stuck car free, or people walking small kids and dogs down the middle of the road because sidewalks weren't cleared," he said.
He wound up parking a block and a half away from the patient's apartment, carrying both a stretcher and a shovel. They sometimes have to salt, sand and chop away at ice themselves.