Red Squirrel
No Lifer
Southerners arent the only stupid fucks. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f85bdCzrNkY
Haha that has to be embarrassing lol.
Southerners arent the only stupid fucks. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f85bdCzrNkY
BS. Everyone know the coefficient of friction is different down here.(thick coating of solid ice) + (worst possible timing) = gridlock
Add-in some dumbass drivers and you get a nasty situation.
Atlanta has some of the worst traffic conditions - no matter the season. Gridlock happens with normal weather too. Last year, the ice came very rapidly at the exact time when there would have been traffic problems regardless of weather. It was impossible for the trucks to get out and do anything about it because they were stuck in gridlock with the rest of traffic.
Just a confluence of bad coincidences.
I think it's hilarious that the critics in this thread keep comparing snowfall inches when it had far less to do with the snow than THE THICK SHEETS OF ICE covering everything. It was an ice storm people, not a snow storm. I've seen ice storms do just as much damage when I spent a winter in Princeton, WV in early 1998. Power was out for a week, giant boulders were blocking roads, landslides wiped out entire roads... they are lucky they weren't Atlanta.
If only those cops had that cold northern determination then their car would magically grip the ice.That first video I posted earlier, I started out facing a stop light up ahead. I've witnessed police cruisers (those aggressive-looking Dodges) stopping at the light and then just sliding backward to the bottom of the hill. It's not even a steep hill.
It's a yankee skill you know, to magically create friction in places where there is none at all. I think it comes along with the rudeness and bad attitudes.
:rofl:
:rofl:
Southern Ice will forever have a special place in my heart.
Our trees definitely take a beating since we usually don't get much winter.What? Like the ice wasn't bringing down trees and poles on Atlanta's roads? It was. There were trees down everywhere, though not nearly as many as there were during a certain blizzard in the '90s.
It cakes onto everything and weighs it down beyond the limits. Even when a pole can handle all the extra weight on the attached lines that are ice-encrusted, it can't handle it with the crown of an ice-covered tree sags onto the line too and it certainly can't handle it when trees out-right topple from the extra weight.
No but...
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Oh...and I found you!
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What can be done, any advice. Hes running low on gas.
20 hours and counting....
Oh, I completely forgot about this post!
He made it home alright, Spent the night in his car though. Hope everybody up north stays safe.
What? Like the ice wasn't bringing down trees and poles on Atlanta's roads? It was. There were trees down everywhere, though not nearly as many as there were during a certain blizzard in the '90s.
It cakes onto everything and weighs it down beyond the limits. Even when a pole can handle all the extra weight on the attached lines that are ice-encrusted, it can't handle it when the crown of an ice-covered tree sags onto the line too and it certainly can't handle it when trees out-right topple onto it from the extra weight.
Of particular concern: We have a *LOT* of pine trees in GA. The ones we have out here seem pretty distinct from the others I see around the country. They grow really fast, and really tall (relative to the size of the trunk). There's no taproot and the entire root system of these pines is nowhere near as deep as it would be for most other tree species. Even giant ones get blown down in wind storms.
The adaptation of long-thin needles prevents it from holding much snow or catching much wind, so they generally don't need much anchoring in the ground. Due to their extremely rapid growth, the wood is weak and splintery. Couple that with the fact that they shed their lower branches all the time, no matter how big / heavy.
Unlike snow, a nasty ice storm causes ice to stick to the needles and weighs the branches down a lot. The lower branches (the biggest ones) fall off and destroy buildings, vehicles, utility lines, etc.
LMFAO
HAHAHAHAHAAAAAA
Are you really saying we don't have a lot of pine trees here in MI?
Where most Christmas trees come from?
Including...you know...the really big ones?
BWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAAA