I need help understanding how people can't drive in two inches of snow. Ideally, someone who grew up driving competently in a foot of snow and then got transplanted to a place that shuts down for flurries will answer here somewhere. Do we have anyone like that?
So tell me, does it have to do with the ice/sleet? Are the roads just slicker there with two inches of snow than they are in places that regularly get dumped on? Or do people try to brake/accelerate/turn/go the same speed that they would on a dry road, and that's what causes all the accidents? Basically I want to know, if I went to Atlanta right now and took my car out, would I find it significantly harder to navigate the roads there than I do here when we get, say, 8 or 9 inches? I mean based on road conditions alone, not traffic.
Re: If you identify as a cold-weather person but have lived in the South...
No we don't have salt or sand trucks they treat with this de icing liquid after the storm. With literally one huge ice storm every couple of years it doesn't make sense for cities to invest heavily in dei icing trucks.
I do find that at least in Texas they are really good about preparing us for storms and canceling schools. The other issue is we only have two built in snow days. I don't know how many you guys have? Last year we didn't use one this year we have used 4 and it would have been more except there was a weekend involved.
I'm really not trying to poke fun or roll my eyes at the people who are stranded on the side of the road somewhere, that would be awful. I'm just wondering if the conditions are such that a person who is used to driving in snow in a FWD vehicle that has all-weather tires and ABS would get out there and say "Holy shit!" right before spinning out.
Yesterday, my giant 4wd Explorer and I slid across 4 lanes of traffic. The problem here vs a cold weather winter is that the roads aren't cold enough for the snow to just blow around or get plowed off, it melts. Then it freezes. They don't plow or salt enough to help so all the roads are black ice covered in dry snow( not the wet kind that packs down and has any traction).
The drivers down here also have no idea how to handle it. We saw a guy yesterday try to turn around on an icy hill ( uphill). He obviously slid back down and into traffic.
Mn also plowed at least the highways, which doesn't happen here and there are also 4 million people who were all trying to leave work at the same time ( a cluster on any other day ) but add in the snow and ice and you have Snowpocalypse '14.
"Be the Lego Lady"
"Be the Lego Lady"
Fun story: I was never allowed to drive in snow or ice while I lived at home because my mom is overprotective, so one night while I was working seconds and newly married, a HUGE ice storm hit (millions of dollars in damage huge). DH told me to call him when I got off and he would come pick me up. 11:00 rolls around and I call him. And call and call and call. No answer. So I braved it all the way out to the boonies where we lived, petrified the whole way. Solid ice on the roads, still coming down, a narrow two lane road. I finally make it home. He fell asleep. Thanks babe. Way to watch out for your wife. Okay, so maybe that story was anti-climatic. But it was scary. And now I can drive in it.
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Diagnosed PCOS '03, TTC #1 Since March '09
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