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Tuesday 4th July 2006

There’s no business like SNOW business!

I do apologise for my absence in the food blogosphere over the last few weeks.
There are several reasons for this …

Young kiddies with miserable colds and runny noses, yurrrck! Simple winter blues.
However, the main reason is we’ve been cleaning up after suffering the coldest, frostiest, snowiest June in 34 years!

Icicles in the sun

Yes, while most of you are baking in 30+ deg C up in the northern hemisphere’s summer, running around in “flip flops”, skimpy tops and summer dress, downunder here in New Zealand I’m bulked up in 6 layers of thermals and woollens! Yet I’m still cold and frost bitten.

More icicles in the sun

On Sunday night, June 11th we had the first and biggest dump of snow since 1973. Some parts of Mainland Canterbury had up to 90cm, which is highly unusual. It is also highly unusual to have snow this low, this early in winter - most snow storms arriving around August.

More Snow Falls

Thankfully I had the foresight to full our bath tub and all our biggest pots with water after first waking up to the white stuff, as sure enough later that day we found ourselves without electricity and therefore no running water. Not to mention all vehicles trapped in our 200 metre rural driveway, with no end to the snow in sight!

Snow, snow, snow!

Being rural we have no town water or sewage supplies - we are self sufficient and pump all our water from our own well. This works fine until our electricity is lost! We don’t yet have a generator! So, while our little ones enjoyed using their hot water bottles from the night before to flush the toilet, J and I weren’t so amused!

While snow is terribly beautiful, it is also a terrible headache for us and the novelty wears very thin within a matter of hours.

Snow coats the local landscape

This first snow, subsequent snow together with the hard frosts that have followed that initial snow, have kept the temperatures right down, as you can probably imagine, bringing no to very slow thawing.

This white stuff has also been costly, with severe damage to trees, burst pipes, ruptured brass tap fittings, broken spoutings, and going through far more stock feed than expected this early, feed that was to see many farmers through the entire winter. From what insurance claims have suggested the local Press estimates the cost of the initial big snow storm to be more than $70 million in lost production and crops for local farmers.

Feeding Out in the Snow

We have been fairly lucky ourselves, we haven’t lost any stock or crops, we weren’t cooking by candlelight for too long and we were only trapped in our driveway for 4 days! Some hill country folks have been trapped without electricity, land and mobile communications for more than 2 weeks and to top it all off the government and army have had the nerve to refuse to help these people!!
Unfortunately July seems unlikely to bring an immediate reprieve from these bone-chilling conditions, with yet another polar blast and dumping snow forecast to hit us today.

All this cold weather sure makes a family hungry however and now that the camera batteries are fully charged again, stayed tuned for some deliciously warming winter recipes.

Bron

Filed under Musings

13 comments »

  1. Well, I’m rendered near speachless. Certainly, puts 100°F in some different light. This is another reason I love the blog world. June/July/August and snow are very odd to me in the same sentence.
    I await deliciouse warm winter recipes.
    The pictures are beautiful but your words speak as loud.

    Tanna — Tuesday 4th July 2006 5:44 pm

  2. Oh wow, I hope you are doing OK. It is cold here in Wellington, but . . . !

    Emma — Tuesday 4th July 2006 10:32 pm

  3. I’ve been hearing reports about the bad weather in NZ from the Boyfriend’s family. I’m sure the skiers are delighted after 2005’s warm and nearly snowless winter but it’s tough on the rest of you. Hope your electricity keeps going - water droughts in the middle of winter are hard to take!

    Caroline@Bibliocook — Tuesday 4th July 2006 11:10 pm

  4. Hi Bron,

    I was wondering what happened to you… thought maybe you were on vacation but obviously not from your photos. Wishing you warmer days or at least warmer food in the days to come!

    Written from the northern hemisphere where it’s been 95+ F for the past week!!

    Bruno

    Bruno — Wednesday 5th July 2006 2:31 am

  5. Bron! My Bron!

    I was beginning to get worried so I’m glad to see you post again. I cannot believe the snow that you’re getting! It’s hard enough to imagine snow in June but to get that much snow … wow!

    I’m happy to hear that the worst has passed and that things are getting back to normal.

    All the best and please start posting food again very soon. We miss you!

    Ivonne — Wednesday 5th July 2006 3:41 am

  6. Wow Bron, that’s a lot of snow - I shouldn’t be complaining about being hot as the summer here is so short, but your beautiful pictures made me feel a bit cooler… Hope you’re surviving the weather, take care and keep warm!

    keiko — Wednesday 5th July 2006 6:02 am

  7. I need to add you to my favorites so I can check in all the time. The snow is amazing. I am glad you have not suffered damage.

    Gabriella True — Thursday 6th July 2006 6:45 pm

  8. Wow indeed! I have never seen snow like this in New Zealand!! Brrrrr, but gorgeous pics!

    Bea at La Tartine Gourmande — Thursday 6th July 2006 10:41 pm

  9. Hi Bron,
    Welcome back. Glad to hear that you’ve defrosted since the big chill. At least we’ve had the snow for mid-winter Christmas.
    Cheers,
    Paul

    Paul — Thursday 6th July 2006 11:20 pm

  10. Wow That does look cold. Welcome back. Nice post on the tamarillos.

    barbara — Friday 7th July 2006 3:20 pm

  11. Thanks Tanna, has been pretty chilly that’s for real.

    Hi Emma, I hope the heavy rain up there hasn’t caused you any problems!

    It’s kinda funny Caroline, they had so much snow at Mt Hutt, no one could get there other than on foot for several days. Brilliant base for the school holidays though!

    What’s a vacation Bruno? ;-)
    I’ve heard others talk about them before, haven’t recently had the pleasure myself unfortunately.

    Oh I missed you too Ivonne!!

    Thanks Keiko, we are keeping fairly warm and it’s lovely weather today!

    Thank you Gabriella and Bea, does ‘look’ very pretty, doesn’t it?!

    Yes, Paul,
    unfortunately since we couldn’t get out the drive and had no warning, we didn’t have all the requirements for a mid-winter Christmas feast! Instead we had pikelets by candlelight. No doubt we’ll have more snow before long though, and I’m now better prepared! ;-)

    Thanks Barbara, yes was very cold, however we have a nice warm NW breeze this morning!

    bron — Monday 10th July 2006 12:28 pm

  12. i kept meaning to comment on the post, it’s hard to imagine that kind of weather from where I am standing. Hope you are surviving ok.

    sam

    sam — Wednesday 12th July 2006 6:42 am

  13. […] But first let me tell you all what I sent Kes, since these are some of my very favourite things - treats I always like to have one of two of in the cupboards, just in case we happen to get snowed in, if we have some unexpected guests, etc. […]

    Antipodean Blogging By Post — Thursday 13th July 2006 4:57 pm

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