flexagon: (home)
flexagon ([personal profile] flexagon) wrote2020-10-01 08:29 pm

Let's talk covid winter planning

Here's a topic that's been coming up among my co-workers, here and in my discussion circles: winter is coming. Seriously though. Here in the Northeast that means months of cold and dark, in which the outdoors will be passable but far less inviting than it has been for the last span of the pandemic. People who count on outdoor exercise will suffer, as will everyone who was doing backyard hangouts, and there won't be the parties and gatherings we often have in the holiday season as a counterpoint. Covid is ticking up again, not down, where I live, and people forced indoors in drier air might not be a good scene in that regard.

So I've been asking people what their plan is... I know of folks buying electric blankets and fire pits and heated seats in an attempt to extend backyard-sitting season. [personal profile] norwoodbridge is one of these, and recently got a startlingly sleek-looking "fire pit" that looks like a coffee table.

For myself: I recently made repeating every-four-weeks plans with two different friends ([personal profile] apfelsingail and [personal profile] coraline) so that I can basically make ONE plan and have a bit of human contact all winter if it keeps working for everyone. I have another friend with whom I take a walk every two weeks, I see Norwood every two weeks (these alternate), and there's a monthly discussion circle that I attend every other time or so. This might shrink my social circle, but the exchange is that it's easy. This might be a good winter for "easy".

What's your plan, so far?
elbren: (Default)

[personal profile] elbren 2020-10-02 06:43 am (UTC)(link)
snowshoes. hoping to keep up the hiking routine.
i'm really hoping local museums are accessible through the winter - the ones around here were never crowded, and it'd be easy to meter occupancy and require masks, and if we can keep our community rates down, it'd be good to have an inside alternative from time to time.