Freebrd
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jun 17, 2003
- Posts
- 2,665
Country boy can survive.
hell yeah!
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Country boy can survive.
When snow event hits:
City dwellers:
Get in their Prius or wannabe SUV and attempt to flee the city.
Jam up roads and get stuck in massive traffic jam.
Sit in car until out of gas then walk to store, fire station, school, etc. to spend the night.
Sit there and wait until the government can send someone to rescue them.
Country dwellers:
Wait until there is at least one inch of snow and ice on the ground.
Jump in pickup trucks, jeeps, ATV's, Honda Accord,(basically anything with wheels and an engine) and hit the road.
Have loads of fun driving and sliding all over the place.
If someone gets stuck, grab the chain out of the back and pull them out.
Go home and sit by the fire with hot GF.
Country boy can survive.
It was the multiple 18-wheelers jackknifed every few hundred yards which brought everything to a halt, apparently. Guess those truckers don't know how to drive. Maybe need driving lessons from Snooki and her jersey guido buds.
It's like no one looks more than 10 feet in front of their car.
I work in Rome, GA. (RMG) I live less than 20 miles away. It took me almost 4 hours to get home. I drove carefully as I passed the snow plow that had slid off of the 4-lane highway into the ditch. The problem happened in ATL and other places, when the schools and employers all decided to close at the same time. It was double rush hour traffic. 19-20 degrees outside. As the snow was compacted by all of the traffic it turned into a sheet of ice that was about an inch thick. Untreated roads, no salt, no sand, no tire chains. Our snow is not like MSP snow. It's usually pretty wet and sticky. I haven't driven much in snow up north but when I did I noticed it was not nearly as slippery as down south. Not sure why. I'm no expert....just an observation.
Bingo! How can the plow and salt trucks work if every school and business in metro ATL unleashes the hounds at noon? That's a traffic disaster when its clear and dry out.
Plus, the various weather outlets had predicted 2" of snow for all of metro ATL since Saturday so I fail to see how this shocked the governor, the mayors, the bosses and the superintendents.