![]() |
People have been going out for gelato, though. |
Weather like this makes me appreciate our tapparelle, the exterior blinds that have replaced shutters on many buildings here, part of the array of protective household armor that Italians can't feel safe without. (Fidenza is a quiet town without a lot of crime, but our apartment came with a steel door with multiple locks reminiscent of the barricades people used to live behind in the East Village in the 1970s.)
The blinds roll up and down on the outside of the windows, and when they're shut tight they function like blackout curtains; when they're up they disappear into a box above the window.
You can also lower them but not shut them tight, allowing some air flow and making a pretty polka-dot pattern. I love the way they look when they're at half-mast like this.
Our sedentary life is also giving me time for a last-minute flurry of blog posts. I've had a number of things I've been wanting to record before they stop seeming strange and interesting to me (for example, our polka-dot blinds), and so I'm planning to do a lot of writing as I sit here in the dark. Those of you who aren't trapped by climate change can catch up with me at your leisure.
2 comments:
It's not the heat--well it IS the heat, but for an East Coast kvetcher it's mostly it's the humidity. How does that factor into your climate oppression?
Yes, there's plenty of humidity, too. And with it, glamorous (to a West Coaster) thunderstorms that lower the temperature, but only temporarily. But it's always humid here--it's the extreme heat that's almost intolerable.
Post a Comment