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Any weather forecast mentioning snow this year, did it in the company of
words like flurries, showers, and dusting. That changed for today and some
minor accumulation was expected. The snow itself wouldn't be bad all the
meteorologists, agreed but the timing would be horrible. The snow hit the
morning rush hour but that wasn't a problem for me. I had more or less
planned on being in Louisville for the afternoon but it wasn't necessary.
I waited until the snow stopped falling and rush hour was long past. It
was near noon when I pulled out on the almost pristine snow.
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Of course, the snow was hardly pristine on public roads. For the most
part, roads were clear although a few slick spots remained and a couple of
cars were "parked" well off the pavement in spots their drivers
certainly had not intended. Things remained messy in Kentucky. The
pavement was essentially clear but problems still occurred. On I-71, I
passed a couple brave fellows testing the effectiveness of their
iridescent vests.
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Just when I was starting to think that all trouble spots were behind me
and that running out of windshield washer fluid was my only concern,
traffic slowed then stopped. And it stayed stopped. A fellow next to me
took advantage of the stop to roll down his window and squirt some cleaner
on his windshield and run the wipers. A few minutes later he briefly
stepped outside to spray and wipe the windshield by hand. A few more
minutes and he was back outside almost leisurely improving on his
windshield cleaning and getting his side window, too.
Roughly half an hour after we had stopped, both lanes suddenly started
moving and almost instantly shot to around 40 MPH. Things slowed after a
mile or two but we continued to move as everyone smoothly merged into a
single line. A broken down semi made the single line necessary and I'm
guessing had been the reason for the entire episode. I can't quite fit all
that together in my head though.
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The path Garmin chose to my motel passed right by the
Louisville
Water Tower Park and snapping a few pictures of the 1860 tower seemed
appropriate. A museum at the tower is closed for the winter. A more
readable version of that sign is here.
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Any thoughts about freely roaming around downtown Louisville were pushed
aside by the snow and temperature. I did venture outside for dinner and
passed these well supported walls on the way. There's a lot more to the
story but I do know that it was the city of Louisville that forced
developers to save the cast iron facades. Well done, Louisville.
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Dinner was at Against
the Grain Brewery. It's in an old train station and part of
Louisville Slugger Field where the AAA Bats play.
Those copper clad tanks look pretty good above the bar. I enjoyed a pint
of Saladbarity Baltic Porter while perusing the menu then washed down my
smoked-on-site pulled pork and Weisenberger
Gouda Grits with Bring the Family Brown Porter.
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