corwin
Diamond Member
Damn....I almost forgot your plea for advice....send him a link to this thread so he can laugh while he dies from hypothermia :awe:What can be done, any advice. Hes running low on gas.
20 hours and counting....
Damn....I almost forgot your plea for advice....send him a link to this thread so he can laugh while he dies from hypothermia :awe:What can be done, any advice. Hes running low on gas.
20 hours and counting....
I think you should just be thankful he's giving your sister's hoohaa a break. 😉
You guys have no idea on the magnitude of the gridlock. No superior snow driving ability is going to help you if the traffic is at standstill and not moving. Imagine moving 1 block in like 2-3 hours. Imagine 5 million people moving all at once and the roads are frozen in inches of ice and snow. Probably 40% of people living in Atlanta are Yankees. I lived in Chicago for 4 years and drove there and in Canada during the winter. That's cakewalk to what I experienced yesterday. I was slipping and sliding everywhere. I'm thankful I got home after 7 hours without an accident.
Hilarious atlanta basically shut down over a few inches. In upstate NY it would have a monumental blizzard to produce the results of what is happening down there.
corwin, i agree but they knew it was gonna be bad and could have said "dont fing drive anywhere"
which they did someplaces, driving bans and whatnot
Really? You guys cannot drive 5mph and be safe? just take your foot off the gas and brake and you will crawl along and things will be fine.
Just slow the hell down and snow isn't that hard to handle.
Yet, during the last two years, when I lived on Cape Cod, when it'd hit close to 90F in the area, the "Heat emergency" screaming, waving of arms, sort of like Chicken Little, would happen. NY, PA, MA, Ct....all would get into a tizzy about temps during the summer that the south would, and did, laugh out loud about.
It's all what each area is used to. You certainly cannot expect an area that averages under 1" of snow every year to be anywhere near as prepared or experienced to deal with snow and ice like what happened yesterday, although much of it was self-inflicted.
And that's what was so stupid. The storm wasn't something sudden, yet schools weren't closed, gov't workers drove into work, etc., etc. Then, at noon when it was starting to get bad, the gov't workers were sent home, schools were closed and students sent home, putting hundreds of thousands of drivers onto roads that weren't in the best of shape.
That and the inexperience of drivers in the south dealing with snow and ice that's rarely seen every decade, and you have what amounted to self-inflicted gridlock that could have been avoided if some sense had been used, like closing the schools yesterday, telling non-essential employees to stay home, etc.
The level of stupidity shown by the current administrations in GA and Atlanta (city and county and even state level) is mind boggling.
Been there, done that. Hurricane Rita evacuation. 3 hour drive from Houston to. San Antonio became 14 hours in 100 degree heat. A friend who evacuated to Dallas took 40 hours instead of 5. 😱
(At one point a guy on the frontage road lost it. He revved his engine and then slammed into the car in front of him, threw it in reverse and hit the car in back of him, and then threw open his door and ran off screaming into the woods. )
Turn the car off and be patient. Not going anywhere, so save the gas.
Get out of his car and walk somewhere?
You do know the heater doesn't run of the battery right? The fan does but the heater itself does not...You need to run the engine to keep the battery charged to run the heater to stave off the cold. This is why, among a host of other emergency things, I keep several of those sheets of emergency heat retention foil in my car.
You do know the heater doesn't run of the battery right? The fan does but the heater itself does not...
You need to run the engine to keep the battery charged to run the heater to stave off the cold. This is why, among a host of other emergency things, I keep several of those sheets of emergency heat retention foil in my car.
Same. I keep mylar blankets, some 18 hour body heating pads, light sticks, flashlight and duct tape in a bag in my truck. People have laughed at me as being some doomsday prepper. 🙄
I also keep a gallon of water and a fire extinguisher. I'd be having a picnic watching everyone else freeze to death around me.
You need to run the engine to keep the battery charged to run the heater to stave off the cold. This is why, among a host of other emergency things, I keep several of those sheets of emergency heat retention foil in my car.
All of that (and more) really doesn't take up much space in the trunk, and only makes sense to have along. You may never need any of it, but if you do, you'll be happy to have it.
Fixed. 😛
Yet, during the last two years, when I lived on Cape Cod, when it'd hit close to 90F in the area, the "Heat emergency" screaming, waving of arms, sort of like Chicken Little, would happen. NY, PA, MA, Ct....all would get into a tizzy about temps during the summer that the south would, and did, laugh out loud about.
It's funny because if the governments in the South had made a big deal about the snow/cold in the same way the Northeast did about the heat, then all of this could've been avoided.
Hear AL got pounded. SunnyD, got an update/