Me, neither. I get to stay home and watch it fall - whenever we get a real snowfall this winter. When we do get snow I'm really glad I don't have to drive in it. I can wait until the roads are plowed.
It's never a white Christmas in L.A., but it has been raining for the past two days and doesn't seem like it's going to let up anytime soon. So I think it might be a wet and rainy Christmas here too.
I hate driving and walking in it, but I have to admit, the sound of the rain falling outside the window is kind of relaxing.
I've often wondered how the standard of a "white Christmas" came to be. Most of the planet doesn't have a white one. Β―\_(γ)_/Β― It can't all be due to the song of the same name.
I'm with you on the relaxing rain sound. We've had so little rain this year that it's become almost a novelty. And I sure don't mind not having to shovel the white stuff. It'll be at least some time in January before we see any more.
We will have a wet Christmas this year and I'm okay with that. I still enjoy my Christmas lights.
π π
I forget what part of the country you're in, but here in Minnesota we're having the warmest December ever. 50β forecast highs for this weekend. It's pretty weird.
Good ol' climate change. I suspect we may have a winter drought here, if that's a thing. Last year we were inundated with snow. Every two or three days we got more snow. Two inches here, four inches there, with a few 6-inch+ snowstorms thrown in. It got really annoying to have to shovel so often.
You mean global warming. "Climate change" sounds too innocuous for such a devasting phenomenon. I guess people don't want to hear the truth and would rather sweep things under the rug. So they came up with a less-threatening description.