Welcome to the Misadventures of Widowhood blog!

Welcome to my World---Woman, widow, senior citizen seeking to live out my days with a sense of whimsy as I search for inner peace and friendships. Jeez, that sounds like a profile on a dating app and I have zero interest in them, having lost my soul mate of 42 years. Life was good until it wasn't when my husband had a massive stroke and I spent the next 12 1/2 years as his caregiver. This blog has documented the pain and heartache of loss, my dark humor, my sweetest memories and, yes, even my pity parties and finally, moving past it all. And now I’m ready for a new start, in a new location---a continuum care campus in West Michigan, U.S.A. Some people say I have a quirky sense of humor that shows up from time to time in this blog. Others say I make some keen observations about life and growing older. Stick around, read a while. I'm sure we'll have things in common. Your comments are welcome and encouraged. Jean

Saturday, January 25, 2020

Snow Plowing Memories at the Guy-Land Cafteria


When I drove up to the Guy-Land Cafeteria I thought I’d hit the jackpot. Parked out front was a line of snowplows, reminding me of all the years my husband’s crew did the same after a hard night behind the wheel. It was 11:30 in the morning so these guys were running very late. Most snowplow contracts state, “Plowing is done between midnight and 7:00 AM. The 2” trigger depth must be met by midnight to ensure service by 7:00 AM.” Some people don’t seem to read those contracts and they’ll be on the phone complaining at 6:00 if there’s an inch of snow on their driveway. The later the snow comes the bigger the chance that the plow drivers will be sitting in rush hour traffic not able to get around their route. That’s why they don’t promise/contract daytime plowing. That’s not to say they don’t plow in the daytime. They do, especially if there’s a major blizzard with no end in sight when they’ll plow around the clock. 

Snowplowing is a business that is extremely hard on human bodies and trucks. But there wasn’t a single aspect of plowing that Don didn’t like except maybe the lack of sleep. Even on the nights when we didn’t have to plow we were either up checking lots for that 2” trigger point or to tidying up the edges of our lots or cleaning up where a car or semi had been parked overnight. Even if there was no snow for several days in a row we couldn’t sleep because our days and nights got twisted around.

After going through the cafeteria line to put in my order and pay, I picked a table near the snowplowers hoping to hear about their night. I already knew they weren’t county or city plowers, but I wanted to know if they were they driveway plowers or commercial contractors like we were. Each class of plowers has a different kind of tale to tell. My favorite story is about playing what we called rat hockey. Once in a while a rat would venture out on a parking lot of a large multiplex movie theater where we had just freshly plowed and it was escorted across the lot with two or three trucks chasing him, turning our plows blades back and forth to make the rat fly across the icy surface. We’d “steal” the rat from each other when it was sliding to flick it again until he was at the edge of the lot and he’d run on top of a snow bank. As far as we could tell no rat ever got hurt but it’s a wonder none of us never collided. But the drivers at the Guy-Land cafeteria were driveway plowers who were more apt to tell stories about half naked woman standing in front of windows without the drapery pulled. 

I just got nicely settled at my table ready to relish the eavesdropping opportunity when the snowplowers left, a huge disappointment. If I was a gutsy person and I’d had more time I might have asked if I could do a ride-along sometime. People asked us that often enough to call it a ‘thing’ and I used to ball my husband out for letting strangers into his truck in the middle of the night. One guy in particular was a frequent ride-a-long. He slept in a dumpster at the movie theater and Don was a sucker for giving him a chance to warm up. Me? There were aspects of plowing that I liked but for the most part I wasn’t a fan of leaving a warm house to go out in the worst weather. Cold. Dark. At times dangerous. And I wouldn’t have worked for anyone else. I got privileges the other plowers never enjoyed. For example, I was never sent to the smaller lots we contracted because I didn’t want to be plowing alone. I stayed on the theater or mall where help was near-by if a hydraulic line broke or the bolts holding the cutting blade snapped. The guys could deal with this stuff but I’d call Don to fix my woes.

I plowed snow for seventeen years and even before that I was a ride-long on nights when they’d been plowing non-stop and Don needed a distraction to help keep him awake. It was on one of those nights when I ended up behind the wheel and I don’t mind saying I was a natural at it. I knew plow patterns and techniques from watching him, of course, but it also takes a certain amount of logic to do commercial lots because the conditions of the snow, the time of the day, the number of cars parked overnight, etc., all factored into to the plow patterns. Don always bragged that I was the best plower he’d ever had and he wasn’t puffing me up. I was good and I’d seen my share of guys who actually caused more work on the lots than they needed to do just by the way they went about things. People are usually surprised when I say I’ve lost my confidence driving in the winter and to that I say, “Give me a heavy pickup truck with a flashing yellow light on top and put me on the road in the middle of the night when few other drivers are out there and I’d get my confidence back.” 

Back in my day of plowing women snow plowers were extremely rare---I may have been the first in the city---and I used to love the expression on people’s faces when I’d climb out of my truck to go inside the Guy-Land Cafeteria with our crew. A woman plower doesn't even turn a head in this century. In 2018 a woman in town even won the annual snowplow rodeo. The crew I saw at the cafeteria? They had one woman and a half dozen guys, just like we had. ©

NOTE: Photo at the top is of Don and me in front of the smallest of three front-end loaders that we used to stack snow on the malls and theater where we plowed. We called them Poppa, Mamma and Baby.

26 comments:

  1. Those snowplows would have nothing to do here in NEO. We've got temps in the 40's and 50's! Unless they can move heavy fog, they can just sit back and enjoy their coffee and stories.

    Have a lovely and restful Christmas, Jean. You and Levi have earned a peaceful break with some treats and maybe some favourite music.

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    1. In case anyone is wondering why a January post is appearing with a December comment it's because I had it in my scheduler for back then, but I decided to bump it out to a different date so I could publish something else in it's place but I accidentally made it go live just long enough for Nance to see it and comment.

      I did have a lovely Christmas. LOL

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  2. That’s interesting (the date originally published!)
    I am fortunate that my neighbor is a snow plow driver for the county and normally when he returns from his shift, he plows out all the neighbors!
    BTW I tried to post a couple of times while I was in England for a few months but my posts vanished when I pressed publish. Now I have returned to this side of the Atlantic!
    Regards,
    Leze

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    1. My husband always did the same thing in the neighborhood has your neighbor with the plow.

      Welcome back to this side of the Pond.

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  3. Thank you very much for this post. I hired a plow service for my driveway this year for the first time and thought it was a cushy job since it takes very few minutes to clear the driveway with a plow. Now I know better and will appreciate the drivers more, knowing it isn't an easy job.

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    1. Not only that the equipment is expensive to maintain and the liability insurance is very costly...those two factors don't change if we have a light winter.

      Driveway plowers have it the worst in terms of stress because they might have a 100 contracts thus a 100 bosses to call and complain. Taking less contracts isn't the answer because then they couldn't afford the insurance.

      I don't know what to think of the new Uber-like app that people are using to get their driveways plowed. I follow a neighborhood forum and people are always trying to find a driveway plower in the middle of a snowstorm, like they didn't know it was going to snow in Michigan.

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  4. Thanks for the education! Commercial plowing is a lot different from Andy's DIY plowing our dirt roads.

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    1. When my husband first started plowing he plowed a dirt parking lot. If I'm remembering right it wasn't fun, especially if the ground wasn't frozen solid.

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  5. I think you should go back on the next snow and ask for a ridealong. They would be happy to take you -- one of their own!

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    1. If I did, at least now I'm too old to be viewed as hitting on one of the guys. LOL

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  6. My husband died November 2014 and that winter came early and with a vengeance after several years of almost no snow to speak of. Now I had 2 properties with 3 big drive ways to shovel...by myself. Somehow I got through that winter of blizzard after snowstorm by shovelling like a maniac and through the kindness of a neighbour with a snowblower. I hired a service to do the plowing for me, from then on. I don’t begrudge any snow removal service the $.

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    1. Me neither. It's that way with a lot of businesses, it's it. You think they look easy from the outside but once you learn what it really entails you have better appreciation. When I started out as a floral design people would come through on tours and says, "I'd do your job for free!" Made it hard to get raises because our boss thought we could be replaced easily.

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    2. Sorry, make that November of 2013 (he died on the 14th so I often get that screwed up). I also had 2 looooong sidewalks to keep shovelled as the property I live at now is on a downtown corner lot. Yeah, I hear you about people not understanding the job. JD worked in a golf pro shop as he was apprenticing to be a golf pro - minimum wage, long hours (and short season) - yeah he got to golf for free but there was no time to do so. Yet people constantly told him that he was living their dream!

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    3. Gotta be a lot of jobs are where people under estimate the work involved.

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  7. Gosh, you have some great stories! And I have no doubt you were a great plow driver...you seem to have many talents. :-)

    We live on a private road and we moved in in mid-December. Before moving in, we had the house interior painted (wild colors, long story) and drove out one snowy day to see how it was coming. I was thrilled to see the road and driveways all neatly plowed, as it hadn't occurred to me that the county wasn't about to clear them. Ha!

    The association hires the plowing every year and we all pay up front. It's really off and on lately, and some years I think the guy makes money and others he must be close to losing money. I always wondered why they show up at 3AM but your explanation makes total sense. We are told to stake our driveways, and my DH swears they use them as targets based on how many stakes he loses every year, but our driveway is narrow and I know I couldn't navigate it as well as they do, especially when there is a new foot of snow with the challenge of where to heap it.

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    1. Love your driveway staking story. I have a drive way that is three stalls wide and they still knock them over. In Michigan those markers are mainly used for the first couple of plows so they'll know where the driveway is but after that it's easier to judge where the edges are. It's easy to lose money plowing snow, bidding large jobs is a real serious process.

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  8. Wow! Who knew you did this kind of kickass grueling work? We only see city/county snow plows here on the west coast and not very often because it doesn't get very deep very often. Just goes to show how different winter life is in different parts of the US, and how little those of us who've never had to deal with it on a yearly basis understand about how hard it can be to get around for several months of the year. I'm impressed!

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    1. When we were out west one October it snowed a LOT and my husband, of course, wanted to know why no one was plowing out the businesses. Imagine our shock when he told us (and was right) that the sun would burn it off by noon. That just doesn't happen here. You get it off or risk it freezing into ruts that stay the whole winter. Where I live we get an averages 64 inches of snow per year. The US average is 28 inches of snow per year.

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  9. A snowplow rodeo? I know you're not kidding, but my gosh -- if that's not proof there are worlds all around us we know nothing about, I don't know what would be. I just loved this post: partly for the funny stories(the rat), partly for the memories (digging out the driveway, only to have the plow come by again), and partly just for the details I didn't know about the business. There's a whole world of workers out there when most of us are sleeping. I'd just never really thought about the snow-plowers!

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    1. Snowplow rodeos are not unique to Michigan. They are competitions between public works from all over the state and between states. They are held in the fall on course laid out in a parks. Each Public Works facility is allowed to send one two man team and all the contestants use the same trucks provided for them and they can't practice on the course ahead of time. They bring in junk cars that they have to plow around, mail boxes, garbage bins and rolling balls that simulate little kids running between parked cars into the road and other obstacles to simulate alleys, etc. It's a timed competition and the regional winners moves up to go the state and then intrastate competitions.

      People who work through out the night are interesting. Back when we did there were only a few restaurants open all night so we'd run into lots of police and public works workers getting thermos' filled, other plowers in the winter doing the same and parking lot maintenance people in the summers. And of course, teens and homeless people. Delivery men dropping bakery, produce and dairy to grocery stores, too. We used to get a lot of semi drivers looking for places to park while they waited for their stores to open so they could drop off a load.

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  10. It sounds like something I would have loved to do--when I was younger.
    I noticed you weren't on my blog list as having posted, so I came here to see if you were all right and there...just as it should be...is your Saturday post.

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    1. You would have loved it Judy. My husband had 3-4 female plowers that followed me and it gave them all a powerful feeling to be doing something that people thought was strictly a male thing. One even learned to run a frontend loader which is something I refused to do.

      My blog roll seems to be malfunctioning and it's driving me crazy. I've spent hours online trying to find answers and help. If it doesn't get fixed I may give up blogging if no one can find me. There is a theory that because I had published this post for five minutes then drafted it again to publish a few weeks later that that is why it won't advance on blog rolls. If true, my post tomorrow, 1/29 should show up. If not I'm going to cry!

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  11. This was a fun read...lot of good memories for you!

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  12. I can barely park my big ass Nissan Titan so I'd be a Menace behind the wheel of a Snow Plow! *LMAO* The Man is worried about learning to use the John Deere Tractor Mower that The Sellers left us as a generous Housewarming Gift. We got the name of the Young Man who used to use it to mow the grass for the previous owner so we'll probably use him... The Man hasn't driven anything since his Brain Damage, so I am thinking this would be the most logical decision now that I know The Man is nervous about doing it. He had been so excited to do it, til he really considered all things. *Winks*

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    1. I'll be your granddaughter could learn to drive that John Deere It's not a big one or hard. Women here cut a lot of grass. If I was in your situation I'd hire the man who used to do it for one season, study how he does it---the pattern and then give it a try yourself. By then all your unpacking will be done and Prince T will be a bit older and will actually remember to wear her shoes when cutting the grass.

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