I changed the image to black-and-white. I was so so tired from shoveling snow that I didn't use my normal thought processes before releasing the shutter. I realized hours later that I should have known this scene "needs" to be presented in monochrome.
The record here is 28 inches and is about 90 years old. We still have bout one-third of the storm to go, so it's possible that we'll break the record.
Seeing your comment made me cuss at you under my breath.
![Big Grin](https://cdn.cambridgeincolour.com/forums/images/smilies2/biggrin.png)
That's because at the time that I took the photo, my estimate is that we had received 20 inches of snow and that I had shoveled 28 inches of it. (The blizzard winds blow old snow from other areas onto the new snow in the areas that I have to shovel.) I have shoveled my driveway and sidewalk four times and have at least two more times to go.
Even so, I got back to liking you again
![Big Grin](https://cdn.cambridgeincolour.com/forums/images/smilies2/biggrin.png)
when I had an experience I thought I would never have: I experienced complete whiteout. I stood in the middle of my block, which is a normal length for American suburbia, and could not see the houses at either end of the street. I was ending a 40-minute walk, some of it in snow up to my knees and all of it in a howling wind with a wind chill of about 0 degrees Fahrenheit, and my tiredness enhanced the experience. I love new experiences and it was really amazing to wonder what a true whiteout in the wilderness is like with no landmarks such as the houses in my neighborhood to provide bearings.