This past Saturday I was the only one around. My wife was in California, for work, and the kids were at their grandparents... for spoiling.

On Friday night, I figured I'd be able to get up and hit the to-do list hard. I can see the light at the end of the tunnel and as every day gets closer to spring I'm even more eager to get a project vehicle back onto the road. But I'm not starting back on a project until this shop is done.
That's the type of behavior that gets me buried in projects.
All that said, when I woke up to 12 inches of heavy, wet snow in the yard the first words I spoke weren't about my excitement to shovel and snow blow when I looked out the window.
But, you do what it takes and you move on. However, the couch started looking like a really great plan B.
I could have fired up the snow thrower and got to work but it needed new auger paddles. I bought it used and the original owner hadn't ever changed them so it would get hung up when pushing it along. Now was a good time yo fire up the heater and get after it.
During the five minutes it too to pour 3-4 gallons of kerosene into heater I decided that these stupid EPA spouts were actually the one tangible thing I could prove came from a better time in American history. If any of you were wondering what YOU could do to make America great again, it would be to rid garages and sheds across the nation of these ridiculous contraptions.
It's nice to be able to get projects off the floor and onto the bench. I realized with this job that I should have given myself more room on either side to work from the bench sides. It was an oversight. I'm limited now due to outlet placement (specifically the one the doesn't allow the toolbox to be moved). Nothing is perfect.
The old set-up.
You can't get more wear than this.
Looking like new. This sucker tosses snow much better now, surprising for a little machine.
Tossed one of these skids on, too.
Odd that this is what was left over on the bench. Time to get clearing that snow.
I didn't use the side door all that much before I put a new door on. Now that it's my normal entry point there are some things I'd like to address. I'd like to put some sort of pavers or pathway down. As well, I want a gutter. They'll be a warm weather project.
At the end of the storm it warmed up and everything got heavy quick. This went from 12+ inches to 8+ of heavier snow. I cleared everything except the end of the driveway, which is usually the worst part. The city pluw guys don't even drop the plows it seems. They just spread chemicals and what melts or gets driven over ends up the the ends on the roadside as deep, thick, heavy snow for us to clean. It is frustrating to have a 8' stretch at the end of your driveway to have to remove. Luckily, the neighbor has a plow and he helps me with that. Speaking of, I need to buy him a 6-pack as thanks.
Here's our humble home.