
Winters were long in Canada. They started in August and ended in July. Nah, not really. Everything is relative. In comparison to the Southern U.S., it might be true to say so. In August, sometimes I wore my winter coat in Vancouver. In December, some days were nice enough to wear a T-shirt on a hike in the sunshine. When it did snow, the flakes dropped in chunks, like puffy cotton balls. The composition of the snow was wet, perfect for slapping together snowballs or digging out snow forts in drifts. In comparison, the snow in Colorado was mostly dry, which doesn't make such sense for being a mini crystal of ice, but how I could tell the difference? It was nearly impossible to pack the snow to make a snowball. In the South, when the news forecasts snow, the schools close before a snowflake even hits the ground. See in that neck of the woods, the snow trucks are far and few in between, so the roads are rarely plowed. This one time in Colorado, the commute to work took three hours commute because a snowstorm clogged up the highways with tons of traffic stalled in six lanes.
Winter
My Green Brain Exhibition, Vancouver, Canada
Acrylic paint on Raw Canvas
Un-stretched
Cut Jagged
2002
Artist Lisa Bisbee
14"x19"
B0159
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