The most beautiful song about missing snow at Christmas is one written by Steve Goodman and performed by Nitty Gritty Dirt Band. The song’s narrator looks out the window of his Hollywood Hotel on Christmas Eve and sees billboards, neon, traffic, and palm trees, and notes it’s 84 degrees.
He yearns for Colorado. The song’s refrain goes like this: “The
closest thing to heaven on this planet anywhere/is a quiet Christmas morning in the Colorado snow.”
Nothing gets me as nostalgic for Colorado. John Denver’s
“Rocky Mountain High,” maybe, a 1972 song that planted the seeds for Colorado’s
marijuana boom.
The state is not always snowbound at Christmas. I do
remember a time when it was, Christmas of 1982, the year of the Great Christmas
Eve Blizzard. Two feet of snow fell in one day. I watched it outside my walkup
apartment window in City Park South, where we could hear the zoo’s peacocks
almost every day.
Chris, alas, was trying to figure out a way to get home from
her downtown job. Buses weren’t running as businesses and government shut down.
A coworker herded Chris and four others into his 10-year-old compact car and
raced up Colfax (“The Fax”) to drop everyone off. He hoped for the best, as did
they. After maneuvering through a maze of stuck cars and two-foot drifts, Chris
was released on Cook Street. As she said later, “He just slowed down and I
jumped out.” A bit later, I saw her maneuvering the drifts, her diminutive
figure whipped by the winds and flurries. She was shrouded in snow and ice by
the time she reached the apartment. We unwrapped her carefully, fed her coffee
and soup, and soon she was able to tell her tale.
We went to sleep secure that the snow would wrap up in the
night, Santa would arrive, and we would wake up to a winter wonderland.
Chris woke up with a cold, and went back to bed. I ate,
grabbed the snow shovel, and wandered out looking for people to help. Our
neighborhood was a mix of old brick houses, apartmentized houses such as ours,
and small apartment complexes. Most of the neighbors were young but there were
some elders in the mix. I sought them out. But they knew better than to venture
out. I was able to help a driver dig out his stuck car but that was it. I
headed home.
We had other big snows but rarely ones like this. In 1982, we
were recently married and were only four years into our Denver adventure. We
still remembered snowless Florida Christmases. It snowed once in Daytona and
twice one year in Gainesville. Never a blizzard but a sprinkling could shut
down the city. And did