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Shortly after our author Katherine J. Wu, “a born-and-bred Californian,” moved to Boston, she was met with an epic snowstorm—one so unhealthy that town ran out of locations to dump the snow piles. As you may think about, she wasn’t thrilled. However now, greater than eight years later, local weather change is threatening winter snow in Boston and the remainder of New England, she writes: “Snow might sometime cowl New England’s panorama for less than about six weeks a 12 months, about half the norm of latest many years.”
In the event you don’t love snow, that may not sound like such a tragedy. However, as Katie notes, “nature’s dandruff” has actual advantages for Earth’s natural world. It acts as an insulator for fragile soil, “swaddling it like a fluffy down coat,” she writes. “Vegetation and microbes thrive beneath it. Animals burrow within it to evade predators.”
Snow, after all, additionally has a means of displaying us the fantastic thing about the world in a brand new means. “I ponder how I’ll describe snow to a era that may solely hardly ever get to see it—how I’ll clarify to youngsters of the longer term why Norman Rockwell work look so white,” Katie writes. She may look to those strains from The Atlantic, written in 1862 by an nameless contributor, concerning the calm of the morning after a snowstorm:
The air sparkles just like the snow; every little thing appears dry and resonant, just like the wooden of a violin … On such a day, the universe appears to carry however three pure tints—blue, white, and inexperienced … That sensation we poor mortals usually have, of being simply on the sting of infinite magnificence, but with at all times a lingering movie between, by no means presses down extra carefully than on days like this.
Right now, we’re taking a second to understand snow—and among the sudden items it brings when it falls.
On Snow

For Adults, Snow Days Really feel Like Divine Permission to Relaxation
By Helena Fitzgerald
Snow is an excuse to give attention to magnificence as a substitute of productiveness, journey as a substitute of accomplishment.

By Kate Cray
Spoons below pillows, ice cubes in the bathroom, and different rituals to name forth snow

By Cullen Murphy
Watching it, understanding it, and forecasting it’s a surprisingly giant and complicated endeavor.
Nonetheless Curious?
Different Diversions
P.S.
I’ll depart you with a snow reality from the 1862 Atlantic article that charmed me: In line with the author, snow has been referred to as “wooly water, or moist wool” by some all through historical past. (The comparability between snow and wool additionally exists in a Biblical psalm.)
— Isabel