This past weekend has been pretty wild. In the past seven days, my little piece of the Upper Peninsula endured three winter storms. The last was the worst—a two-day blizzard that dumped almost four feet of snow in about 36 hours. If you do the math, that’s a little less than two inches per hour. Couple that with almost 70 mile an hour wind gusts, six- and seven-foot-tall snowdrifts, and (in some places) thunder, and you get an idea of what life has been like for a majority of Yoopers.
According to all the old timers, Saint Patrick’s Day always ushers in a really big snow event in the U.P. This year, Pat outdid himself. Most meteorologists are using the adjective “historic” to describe what we’ve just been through. We haven’t had a storm approaching this strength since 1997. That’s about 30 years ago. This summer, I’m sure some innovative entrepreneur will be selling tee shirts with the slogan “I Survived the Winter of ‘26” all over the place. I know I’m going to be haunted by the memory of this little storm for quite some time.
Marie Howe is haunted by Mother Nature . . .
The Maples
by: Marie Howe
I asked the stand of maples behind the house,
How should I live my life?
They said, shhh shhh shhh . . .
How should I live, I asked, and the leaves seemed to ripple and gleam.
A bird called from a branch in its own tongue,
And from a branch, across the yard, another bird answered.
A squirrel scrambled up a trunk
then along the length of a branch.
Stand still, I thought,
See how long you can bear that.
Try to stand still, if only for a few moments,
drinking light breathing.
It’s not easy—just standing perfectly still in a moment. Paying attention. Breathing. There’s this human impulse to talk, move, act. We all have it. Think about an uncomfortable pause in a conversation. If you’re anything like me, you want to jump in. Fill the void. Silence makes us antsy.
Tonight was the first time I’ve been out of my house (except to move snow) since Saturday evening. My wife and I had dinner and drinks with two of our best friends. In my last post, I wrote about the tension of waiting for the blizzard to begin; on Saturday, wherever I went, everyone I encountered seemed on edge, as if waiting for some kind of mass extinction event. At the pub this evening, everyone was smiling, singing, laughing. When I ordered my drink, the bartender said to me, “We all deserve this after what we’ve just been through.”
For three or so days, we’ve all been hunkered down in our homes, listening to the wind howl outside. That’s a long time to be still for anyone. But we had no choice. Even the plows were getting stuck in ten-foot-high snowdrifts.
What did I do during my hunkering down? I watched Ken Burns’ three-part documentary on the life of Ernest Hemingway; I’ve kinda been on a Hemingway kick recently. And I worked on some poems. And I thought a lot about ghosts (my sisters, parents, brother, best friend). I was so haunted by memories that I woke up in the middle of the night on Monday because I thought I heard my sister Sally call my name, and I found myself crying for no specific reason. (I was watching a Peter, Paul, and Mary concert, and I started weeping when they sang “Puff, the Magic Dragon.”)
I think ghosts are around us all the time. The dead find their voices through maple trees, birdcalls, blizzards, old songs. They remind us to pay attention to everything. Live in the moment and breathe.
That’s what I did during this extended weekend of snow and wind. I listened to my ghosts.
Saint Marty wrote a poem for tonight . . ,
I Believe in Ghosts
by: Martin Achatz
Not the kind that appear on the battlements
of Elsinore seeking revenge. Or the kind
that dance to “Sir Roger de Coverly” with
the Fezziwigs, or fill 124 Bluestone Road
with baby venom. No. My ghosts sit
with me as I write these words, guide
my nib across a white sheet of paper
until I hear their voices in my ear,
like mosquitoes on a July night. All ghosts
really want is recognition. That’s why they
hide car keys or push books off shelves
or slam doors. My 17-year-old son
does the same thing. He just wants
to be seen, heard. Here he is now,
haunting the final line of this poem.



