fallsfromtrees wrote:I know this is the free range forum, but hasn't this drifted (not a snow drift) a little far from the original topic of
Driving in Snow
So what you are saying, 'trees, is that we managed to slip and slide off the road? Well, I can't speak for anyone else, but I live in North Carolina, and I don't have to learn to drive in the snow!
1. People in North Carolina can't drive in any weather.
2. What's snow?
3. If by snow you mean that white stuff that rarely falls here on the coast? Well, we just panic at first flakes, rush to the nearest grocer, and fill our carts, cars, trunks, under seats, and glove compartments with food. And will even tie food to the tops of our cars. (I've seen it, although it was beer.) Then, we'll crash into each other trying to get the stuff home. There we'll stay and peek at the stuff from our windows.
It's okay, because 3 flakes falling is a smile.
9 flakes falling gets a prayer from kids cause on the 10th flake, schools are cancelled.
Can't call in to work. The boss and his secretary are snowed in too.
Normally if we do manage to see a white Christmas, the bottom falls out, dumps an impossible amount (5 inches) and causes flat roofed structures (really) to collapse.
In fact, we got snow last year and people are still complaining because they haven't recovered. I joined this forum because my fiancée and I were stranded at the beach. The only salt that people in Carolina stock, is in their cupboards.
Santa even got stuck in the snow here. He wasn't expecting it either.
We're not expecting to get any this year. Statistically speaking, we've had our one snow for this ten year period and it rarely happens back to back. (Here near the beach)
North Carolinians are more preoccupied with trying to learn to
walk in it. I attended undergrad study near the mountains of North Carolina where there be snow. It was hillarious seeing people trying to walk across campus. One minute there's hustling and bustling. The next minute there's busting and cussing. One person would fall and it'd start a human avalanche, traveling toward you at the speed of sound. The sound was "Shit!" Even shit rolls in the snow. Girls still try to wear heels on campus? The men will refuse to walk near a girl. Sooner or later she's going to take a tumble and self preservation will cause her to reach out and touch someone for support. Result -> domino effect. Mountainous regions of North Carolina result in school campuses that are hilly. Snow on steep streets teach you all about physics.
As Carolinians, we have to learn to walk in snow first. Or we'll never
make it to our cars.