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| OAFS Photo |
Woke up to this Monday roughly 12 hours later ...
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| OAFS Photo |
Anyhoo, it's still snowing as I write this, here's a few photos I took in the last hour ...
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| OAFS Photo |
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| OAFS Photo |
Now this isn't my first rodeo (blizzard, snow storm, what have you) and it probably won't be the last. So far, as of 1530 on Monday, the wind has eased up and while the snow is still falling, it's starting to taper off a bit. It's not coming down at 3.5 inches an hour, like at the height of the storm, but only 0.3 inches an hour. Praise the Lord, we haven't lost power though a lot of folks in the area have. That snow is pretty heavy as the temperatures were near freezing. Heavy and wet.
Late yesterday the governor of Little Rhody announced a travel ban starting at one time for commercial vehicles and an hour later for private travel. Yeah, I bristled a little bit at the "order" banning travel, but seeing the results today (a number of tractor trailers stranded around the region causing the first responders to deal with that as opposed to helping the power crews and dealing with real emergencies) I realize that giving the governor that sort of power is probably necessary. People are idiots. Mind you, not bad people (though there seem to be a lot more of those these days) just not real smart.
If you're out and about during a travel ban, it's an $85 ticket, do it again, you might wind up in the hoosegow. We also get parking bans in this area, if you normally park on the street, you have to move your vehicle to a parking lot (towns provide a list of those) so that the plows can get through. Don't move? They will tow your vehicle, over 300 cars were towed in Providence as of Monday morning. People just not paying attention or just being assholes. Take your pick, we have a lot of both in the region.
Ya gotta love winter, and I do. Otherwise I would've retired down south (probably Maryland or Virginia) but the heat down there in the summer is way too much (mostly the humidity). Besides which, my roots are here in New England, I'm not sure I'd be comfortable anywhere else for any length of time.
So yeah, the weather outside IS frightful but ...
Stay safe out there my fellow New Englanders (and everywhere else hit by this blizzard), see you on the morrow.






You said:
ReplyDelete"People just not paying attention or just being assholes. "
I thought those were all down here in Florida at this time of year as "snowbirds"!!!
As my beloved wife often tells me, "Shovel carefully and throw sand".
ReplyDeleteIn our ER is plenty of the ice falls, shoveling injuries and car accidents from a much milder version of your snow event up this way.
That snowfall gives you license to sit back and rest up until Mother Nature is done with her hissy fit Sarge. That kind of snow is like shoveling wet cement.........pace yourself sir.....:) Glad I got electric start on my snow thrower.
ReplyDeleteIDK Nylon, I've found it better to shovel-snow blow as it builds. Three trips this storm for 4+ inches was easier than moving wet 18-21 inches packed. Frankly my mid sized 2 stage snow blower does poorly in deep icy wet stuff, even with PAM spraying and frequent clearing of the auger.
DeleteThere is something to be said for holing up.
ReplyDeleteGlad you’re safe and warm, Sarge. Praying that will continue!
ReplyDeletejuvat