Before driving to our rented cabin, I stopped at the lakeshore for a gourmet feast at Mickey D, but developed butterflies in my stomach, not entirely caused by my grilled chicken sandwich, as I watched the snow falling harder and harder and piling up deeper and deeper. Will I be unable to reach the cabin through the blizzard, I wondered, because I insisted on having a lousy sandwich?
Finishing the sandwich quickly, and tossing out most of the fries, I drove up Ski Run Blvd., near the base area on the California side of Heavenly Valley, streets and roads becoming ever more slippery and treacherous, and anxiously maneuvered my car into the cabin's driveway.
I was soon joined by the others. Relatives and friends from the Bay Area -- Sonoma, Healdsburg, and San Francisco. The word had gotten around that the Sierras were in for a major storm, and some of them prudently arrived hours earlier than they had originally planned. By 4 p.m., all nine of our group had arrived, bearing wine, food, skis and boards, and their ever present wit and enthusiasm.
That was Saturday. There was to be no skiing that day, nor any o
A few determined souls did find a cab driver willing to venture out to the cabin on Saturday night and haul them through the blizzard to a raucous rock show at one of the Nevada casinos. Those of us with more sense and gentility settled down to a peaceful regimen of billiards tournaments, wining and snacking, good talk, and a DVD marathon that lasted until 2:30 a.m. A magnificent trio of cinematic accomplishment: "West Side Story," "What About Bob," and "Terminator 2."
We were happy peeps.
Back at the cabin, once Denny had bravely shoveled a foot of snow from its cover, the hot tub awaited. One by one, each of us laughed and squealed his or her barefoot way across the snowy deck and jumped, beer clutched in hand, into the super-heated water. Aching quads immersed in boiling water. T'was good.
Heaven may prove to have as many facets as it has inhabitants. If so, I'm sure there's some heavenly corner, for those of us so inclined, where you can sit immersed in bubbling, steaming water with your friends and relatives, a cold beer in hand, watching distant snow-covered mountains grow fiery in the dying sun.
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