I'd forgotten how white snow is. 
I mean, I've seen snow in NYC,  of course. We just had a whole snowstorm full of it. It swirled around,  piled up, and ended up coating my cell phone even though it was  hidden in the depths of my coat pocket. From my bedroom window, my  roommate and I watched snowflakes float lazily to the ground as we laughed  and pointed at people who were slipping and falling in the snow on Ninth  Avenue. But I had forgotten how pure and blindingly white snow actually  can be...until I went home to Canandaigua.
As I drove in the family minivan--actually, I was being driven since I haven't been behind the wheel since August and no one trusts me to drive in the winter--I passed lawns and  fields and hills that were blanketed in blindingly white, sparkly bright  snow. Completely smooth and untouched. The kind of snow that hurts your  eyes. Basically, the snow's so bright, you have to wear shades.
The best part about this brilliantly white snow is that it stayed  brilliantly white. All ten days of my trip. Sure, the two feet closest  to the curb became grossly brown, and it really put a damper on my plans  to trek around the outdoor outlet center. And the Wegmans parking lot  was full of disgusting slush. But the snow made everything else look  like a picture print by Currier and Ives. 
Now that I'm back in Manhattan, I'm trying as hard as possible to  keep that perfect snowy image in my head. Especially when I see city  workers throwing all snow remnants into the street, hoping that cars  will reduce it to slush. Which really just adds insult to injury. Not only is city snow immediately gray, it's  also trampled on by millions of pedestrians and thousands of cars. The  snow's beauty is completely destroyed, kind of like when Mary Poppins  slums it with the chimney sweeps on the roof and gets all sooty. Only  worse.
It seems as though there's a legal limit to the snow here; however, I  did have one brief shining moment of snowy glory in Manhattan. Picture  it: a crisp, sunny afternoon on the Radio City roof with snow up to my  knees. No one had been on the roof yet (probably because it was  dangerous and forbidden), so a friend and I ran and jumped and slid and  made snow angels. Being from Florida, he had never made a snow angel,  and being an adult, I hadn't attempted one in at least 15 years. It was thrilling.
But even that was just a tease. We had 100 square feet of snow on the roof, which is roughly the size of my parents' backyard. If you're into snow,  upstate is where it's at. No contest. In short, there's simply not a  more congenial spot for snowily-ever-aftering than there in upstate New  York.
Those snow angels atop the roof--like real angels from the heavens, gently landing in the snow! Love it!
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