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Grocery Shopping at Its Best

So today I went grocery shopping at Harris Teeter at North Hills, the newest store in town.  Now,  I don’t really mind ordinary grocery shopping, but this was grocery shopping at its finest.  Fine grocery shopping?  It’s true, and I’ll list just a few of the reasons why the grocery store trip was one of the highlights of my day today.

1:  I didn’t need my umbrella.  Yes, it was raining, but I didn’t need my umbrella.  They have covered parking.  Harris Teeter has a parking deck!  Rain, wind, snow, heat—-none of that matters when you enter the grocery store through the parking deck.

2:  I got a meal in addition to my groceries.  You know how they say you shouldn’t go to the grocery store hungry?  Well, that doesn’t apply to this store.  Of course they have an in-store deli with plenty of sushi, subs, and prepared foods.  But here they also have an extra-long salad bar, a soup bar with 5 kinds of soup, and an Asian hot bar buffet with almost 20 items.  And there’s even nice tables and chairs where you can eat your food while it’s hot.  No need to stock up on those free cookie samples when you shop here.

3:  You need a map.  Seriously.  This store is HUGE.  And they actually have maps of the store in little map stands all around.  But this is Harris Teeter, so it’s not the warehouse-store kind of huge; it’s huge and stylish.

4:  This store has two levels.  You can take your cart up and down in an elevator!  Or you can take the winding staircase if you’re just there for an express lane trip.  It’s one of those things you have to see to believe—-taking your cart in an elevator in the grocery store.

So I think we may possibly have a new tourist destination in Raleigh.  Harris Teeter at North Hills, sightseeing at the grocery store.  Just like me, a lot of the shoppers there today came because they were curious about the logistics of a two-story grocery store.  Well, I’m here to tell you, it is big, beautiful, and worth checking out.

That’s Life in Raleigh.

The new Harris Teeter at North Hills
The new Harris Teeter at North Hills

It Snowed Again

And this time it was a wet snow that outlined the tree branches and created a winter wonderland effect.  It came overnight on a Friday with a few inches and the roads were essentially clear and dry by late Saturday afternoon.  That’s the kind of snowfall we like here in North Carolina!

But…we have had enough wintry precipitation this winter!  This is North Carolina, after all.  Bring on the heat and humidity.  We’re ready.  We may not even complain about it too much next time around.

That’s Life in Raleigh.

Raleigh’s Groundhog Rocks!

Thank goodness we have our very own forecasting groundhog here in Raleigh, North Carolina! Our Sir Walter Wally braved the elements and the lingering piles of snow on February 2 to join Raleigh Mayor Charles Meeker in a Groundhog Day ceremony and made a prediction for an early spring here in these parts.

While I do feel sorry for those up north for whom Punxsutawney Phil forecast six more weeks of winter, we’ve had enough winter around here already.  Several years worth, as a matter of fact.  Bring on spring!

But Sir Walter Wally, is today’s 34 degrees and rain really part of our early spring plan?!?!

That’s Life in Raleigh.

It Snowed

Yep, it snowed in Raleigh.   The most snow we’ve had in years, actually.  We only had a few inches, but it’s been a couple of years since we’ve had more than a trace.

It was beautiful, too.  So clean and pretty and made everything so quiet.

Quiet because snow does that, and quiet because our city shuts down when it snows.  See, we don’t want to spend our tax dollars on very many snowplows or snow equipment that we’ll need only a few times each decade.  We prefer to shut down our schools and slow down our pace when we get a snow that sticks.  Kind of charming, actually.  Although a lot of the charm wore off for a lot of the people around here after schools were shuttered for three consecutive days.

Oh, but the next time those kids are home because of snow may be several years away.  Enjoy it now.

That’s Life in Raleigh.

My house in the snow of January 2010
My house in the snow of January 2010

Baby, It’s Cold Outside!

So the National Weather Service is predicting that we may have the longest cold stretch in a generation, possibly lasting more than a week.  The forecast is cold:  Highs between 35 and 42 and lows between 17-25.  Oh, and we’re going to have wind chill on top of that.

Even more remarkable than this “prolonged” cold snap, though, is what I heard on my trusty weather radio this afternoon about the average temperatures here in Raleigh, North Carolina, the first week in January.  Namely that our normal average high is 50 and our normal average low is 30.  In January.

I can look back now on my summer entries regarding the heat and know those temperatures are definitely bearable in exchange for these kind of average normal temps come January.  Except for about a week every generation or so.

That’s Life in Raleigh.

The Tree of Life

That’s what it’s called.  Even though it is actually a visualization of death.  See, each light on this tree represents a life lost on a North Carolina road in the past year.  Those who died in an alcohol-related fatality are represented by red lights.  This tree has 1453 lights and 440 red lights.

This tree with its tragic lights is on the grounds of the capitol each December.  And each year our family stops and looks and reads the numbers and feels the sadness and thinks about the people and the families behind each lightbulb.   It’s powerful.

Tree of Life
Tree of Life
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