Originally Posted By: Dallas69
I don't how you guys live in that weather.
It was 15 here the other day and I could not get warm.How do you go to work or school and go about living?I don't know how you ever get used to it.
Back in the 60s Sat here.
It's miserable in Texas in the summer but at least you can get around and not stranded somewhere.
I get to do this almost every winter weekend!
;^)
I'm not sure where you are in TX, but I lived in Dallas for a while and the ice storms there were like nothing I have experienced anywhere else...everything covered 1-2" thick and no salt anywhere to make the roads tolerable. I guess the good thing was that it would usually melt within a week.
We had a Noreaster yesterday and it's hard to say how much snow we had because it was so powdery and it just drifted like crazy...I'd say maybe 16" at my house. I had something to finish in the lab so I worked until about noon, the roads were terrible but I have good snow tires and AWD and most people were smart enough to just stay home so there weren't too many FWD cars with bald all seasons clogging things up. Had my wire plugged in on the too-flat sunroom roof for when we have a melt and I went out to snowblow about 7pm...miserable job and I didn't finish until 9:30 (having one car outside makes it worse), but I had a poofy LL Bean coat, ski pants, waterproof hiking boots, a ski mask, an Elmer Fudd hat, and goggles on to fight the 40mph winds and cold. My new snowblower is a real beast and can easily throw snow 50 feet, but I'm still getting used to its quirks and that slowed me down a bit. Of course, schools had all been cancelled due to the forecast.
Got up a little early this morning to shovel some windblown snow, make a path to the front door, and spread some sand...noticed a screen had blown off a window and forgot to try to retrieve it before I left. Schools were delayed 2 hours to allow time to dig the buried buses out, so the traffic was OK even though I left late. My favorite parking spot at work was about 1/3 covered in a drift, but I just parked in it, anyway, and was one of the first in the office. The roads were generally decent due to our hard working plow drivers, but some of the roads in the heart of the little city I work in were still crummy due to packed down snow from traffic during the storm...takes some time for the salt to work on those.
Like anywhere, you find the tools you need to adapt to your situation and do the best you can!