Colorado winters can range from warm to blizzard – and this is in a single week. In our rural area, residents debate over when to overcome the storm and when to give up and stay in. Some people don’t give up easily.  

For example, I had just moved to a small farm town a few months before a smothering blizzard struck. The wind was throwing fistfuls of snow into the air outside my cozy office, and I could make out ghost-like fronts of stores hidden by the storm. 

It was an excellent day to stay inside. Which, obviously, was what all the farmers in the area thought because the street was packed with their pickups. They’d come to town to swap stories and drink coffee during the storm. Inside, of course.

I have another story about persevering in a winter storm.

I was a teenager celebrating the snowstorm that had swept through our farm the night before. School was canceled – the reason for my celebration – and our family was sipping hot chocolate. 

Today was calm. We gathered around our heater and celebrated the notion of a leisurely day without the mad rush to catch the school bus.

Then Mom noticed a milk truck lumber to a stop at the top of the next hill.

Our house sat at the top of a hill. The dirt road that skirted our property continued down a draw before rising again to the top of the next hill a mile away.

At the top of that next hill sat a shiny milk truck, rocking with indecision. The large semi-trailer contemplated its regular route.

Blocking its way was the heavy snow that had been driven into the draw. Whiteness had blotted out the road in the valley, and none of us had any idea how deep the drifts were.

The truck gathered itself like a sprinter in the blocks, rocking forward and back. 

We didn’t have time to pop the popcorn, but we all gathered around windows to watch the show.

“Don’t do it,” Mom said.

“Go for it!” said one brother.

The other brother countered: “He won’t go.”

The truck rocked forward and back with indecision and then took recoiled before barreling down the hill.

The valley suddenly exploded in white as the truck entered the drift.

“He won’t make it,” Mom said. The snow flurry continued, though. The truck was making progress, we thought.

But then, as the flakes filtered back down to the ground, we could see the truck. The snow had draped itself victoriously over the hood and gripped the doors. The truck hadn’t gotten a quarter of the way through the valley’s snowpack.

Dad trekked down in his tractor. Unlike over-confident milk trucks, tractors can go about anywhere. Some neighbors came, too, and together they managed to tow the truck back to its starting blocks.

Dad reported that the snow was packed like concrete around the engine.

In Colorado winters, sometimes it’s fun to slog to town to drink coffee and swap stories with the other travelers. And sometimes it’s wiser to park that milk truck and wait for another day.

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