Snowmaggedon in the south of Spain
Yesterday Jose and I had the day off work for Andalucia Day so we went to visit his family in their small pueblo, El Saucejo which is about an hour and 20 minutes away from Sevilla. It has been a while since we made it out there to see everyone so it was nice to catch up with Jose's grandparents, aunts and uncles.
As we were driving up into the town (which is located at a higher altitude than Sevilla) we noticed that it had snowed. This is something that doesn't happen often and boy oh boy did it become THE topic of conversation throughout our visit. Talk about snowmaggedon. We always talk about work, family and the weather with Jose's family. Without fail. This light dusting of snow was conversation fodder in each of the 5 houses we stopped at during our visit. Each person first commented about it, talked about the last time it happened 40 years ago and then said where they were and what they were doing when they realized it had snowed. Hilarious.
The best part was the amount of snow on the ground. I think after Jose's grandpa's very scientific measuring system of poking his fingers into the snow on top of a car we came to the conclusion that it might have been 5 centimeters of snow. Baaaaaaaaaaaaahhh. SNOWMAGGEDON!! In Michigan that is nothing. Here in the south of Spain life stops. They are so cute.
As we were driving up into the town (which is located at a higher altitude than Sevilla) we noticed that it had snowed. This is something that doesn't happen often and boy oh boy did it become THE topic of conversation throughout our visit. Talk about snowmaggedon. We always talk about work, family and the weather with Jose's family. Without fail. This light dusting of snow was conversation fodder in each of the 5 houses we stopped at during our visit. Each person first commented about it, talked about the last time it happened 40 years ago and then said where they were and what they were doing when they realized it had snowed. Hilarious.
The best part was the amount of snow on the ground. I think after Jose's grandpa's very scientific measuring system of poking his fingers into the snow on top of a car we came to the conclusion that it might have been 5 centimeters of snow. Baaaaaaaaaaaaahhh. SNOWMAGGEDON!! In Michigan that is nothing. Here in the south of Spain life stops. They are so cute.
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