Author of Teen Paranormal Fiction

Month: October 2018

The Magic of an October Snow Storm

We’re lucky to witness some of the oddest and most head-scratching weather phenomena here on the leeward side of the Rocky Mountains. From hurricane-force winds and Chinooks, to noctilucent clouds and strawberry snow. The winter months grace us with one bizarre weather system after another. It’s one of the charms of living here.

A classic Chinook arch in summer

Some cities may claim their slogan is “If you don’t like the weather wait 10 minutes”, but they’re only trying to be as weather-wacky as the Bow River valley. In the same day we can experience summer sun, torrential rain, tornado-forming weather, and wrap up the evening with a freak snowstorm or ice rain. Mornings can be graced with hoar frost and ground-level clouds (not to be confused with fog), and afternoons can be dry and hot. The weather here simply cannot make up its mind.

Freezing rain on Aspen leaves

Take today for instance. It’s a balmy +5C with a slight breeze and plenty of sun as I leave for my morning walk to the convenience store where I plan to grab a cup of coffee and check if I’ve become a millionaire or not. (I’m not, by the way, but it’s always nice to dream). Before I leave, I check my phone for the weather and prepare appropriately.

Half an hour later, I arrive at the convenience store and notice the clouds moving in—the dark, ominous harbingers of stormy weather spilling over the Rockies. By the time I get my coffee, check my ticket, and chat with the clerk, the temperature outside has dropped to -3C. A full-on winter snow storm greets me upon my exit.

But I saw this coming. No app is more used around these parts than the Environment Canada weather app. It warned me of the inevitable dump of October white.

I don my fuzzy hat and gloves, and I start my walk home with my cup of coffee. The great thing about snow is its ability to block out the world. The big fluffy flakes absorb sound from the highway and somehow manage to still the slight breeze I felt on my walk down. The world on my walk back home has become peaceful where only I exist and reality has gone into hiding.

A snow selfie!

I can’t help the big goofy grin on my face as I take my time getting back home. Only my tracks are left in the skiff of snow on the sidewalks. Here, it’s me and only me. The socially anxious side of me rejoices.

My tracks left in the snow

Once back home, I take the puppers out for a walk. Mochi enjoys the snow. She’s built well and fuzzy for this kind of weather.

My first snow!

The Boo enjoys those flakes too, even as the big fluffy white stuff turns into ice pellets that dance off the gazebo roof. She’s also built for the snow with her abhorredly thick hair that clogs up my vacuum.

My ancestors are from Siberia. I got this!

And my winter suitors, the Chickadees, come to dart in and out of the gazebo to steal millet from the feeder.

They may be tiny but they’re mighty! (and really loud)

It’s a blizzard outside my window as I sit down to write this blog post.

By the time I finish, the sky has cleared and the sun is out again.

I cherish the snow as much as I can, for tomorrow we’ll see a high of 15C and sun.

I love October.

When Life Gives you Dead Leaves . . .

Geesh. It’s been ages since my last blog post! Since my last check-in, our brutally-hot summer has changed into an unusually cold and rainy autumn. Granted autumn is my favourite season, but I can’t help but feel we’ve been cheated out of summer. Well, maybe it was just me who was cheated.

Autumn, how can I stay mad at you?

A bout of rather nasty warm-weather pneumonia at the end of June rewarded me with a fractured rib. That took away most of my summer activities: hiking, camping, and general out-and-about-ness. Three months later I’m still tender and unable to do much more than my weekly walk to the corner store for Doritos.

My Real Life Job in the oil & gas industry has become exciting. We acquired another company, went public, and are in the process of replacing everything in existence in our business. Lots of fun, lots of work, and lots of long hours.

Leaving not many hours for writing.

Then, as if I already didn’t have enough to do, we got a dog. Meet Mochi, our red sesame Shiba Inu. One look at her little face was enough to melt this stone heart and forget the fact that, not only did I have troubles finding time to write, I also had to find time to take care of her.

Having an 8-week old puppy in the house is a lot like having another child. We fuss over her when she’s awake, bend over backwards for potty training, then tip-toe around when she’s napping so we can have a few minutes of peace. So far my obsessive hovering abilities have kept her from chewing the house apart and using Boo’s cat post as a toilet. Perhaps one day my two fur babies will make friends, but for now the Boo is content to just glare at Mochi from a safe distance.

… always.

I mentioned my weekly walks before. It’s something I’m trying to stick with. No phone (other than to hatch Pokemon eggs, lol!), no music. Just me and my over-active imagination. The walks help to keep me moving and active, and they also give me a chance to think through my writing. On my walks, I’ve figured out character backstories, schemed-up plot twists, and found ways to link scenes together.

One thing I’ve realized is when life dumps dead leaves on you, you make a big-ass pile and hop in! I took my pneumonia as a chance to get to know my writing again. I took my fractured rib as a chance to find low-impact exercise that will keep my body moving. I took the hectic work life as a chance to refine my leadership and organizational skills. So far, I’m still in one piece and kicking this year’s butt.

Although I don’t see Real Life settling down any time soon, this is nothing I can’t handle. And with autumn bathing my countryside back yard in colour, I’m finding it easier to deal with the things life throws at me. My anxiety has been quiet for a few months. My last psychedelic head-trip (aka ocular migraine) was over six months ago. I’ve been watching my diet in hopes to keeps those attacks at bay.

In the world of writing, Book #4 in my Rose Cross Academy series is still truckin’ along. I have a few scenes to hammer out and link to the rest of the story line. The story is written, beginning to end, it just needs a little TLC. I’m almost done the cover too!

Book #4 cover … under construction!

With NaNoWriMo coming up, I already have my project for November in mind and I’m actually planning things out. Lately I’ve been reading fantasy novels, which are a deviation from young adult, paranormal, and horror novels. In reading fantasy, I’ve thought up my own novel and I’m going to use that for November. The story will follow a young girl who is the only non-magical member of her magical village. In my world, magic is the norm and not the exception, but to the ho-hum extent—lighting fires for cooking, growing seeds into plants, filling a glass of water. The great magic died out hundreds of years ago during a war that attempted to expunge the higher magics from the world. That great magic hides in books throughout the world, and she’s determined to find all these magic books.

So as I sit in my messy corner of the couch in which I have penned three novels and am working on about a billion more, I watch the first flakes of winter meander by my window. Really, I’m making it sound more ethereal than it actually is. In reality, I’m cold, I want a cup of coffee, and the smell of burning dust from the first furnace run of the season is making me sneeze.

Yes. Winter is coming.

And there’s a puppy chewing on my toes.

Whatcha lookin’ at?

Welp, nothing for it. Time to get back to writing. And I’ve gotta get this puppy to stop using me as a human chew toy.

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