Please let us know how you are.
Lots of snow here, but nothing scary. We play musical cars at the
condo to get our parking spaces plowed out.
Gary McGath <garym@REMOVEmcgathREMOVE.com> wrote:
Lots of snow here, but nothing scary. We play musical cars at the
condo to get our parking spaces plowed out.
What happens with cars whose owners are out of town or otherwise not available to move them?
On 1/30/22 10:52 PM, Keith F. Lynch wrote:
Gary McGath <garym@REMOVEmcgathREMOVE.com> wrote:
Lots of snow here, but nothing scary. We play musical cars at the
condo to get our parking spaces plowed out.
What happens with cars whose owners are out of town or otherwise not
available to move them?
I don't know if there were any, but presumably the plows would plow
around them. That happened with me on a previous occasion, when I didn't
move my car till after the plow had gone through.
Gary McGath <garym@REMOVEmcgathREMOVE.com> wrote:
Lots of snow here, but nothing scary. We play musical cars at the
condo to get our parking spaces plowed out.
What happens with cars whose owners are out of town or otherwise not >available to move them?
Please let us know how you are.
On 1/30/2022 9:24 AM, eleeper@optonline.net wrote:
Please let us know how you are.
18-20 inches of powdery snow here. Power stayed on throughout the
storm, and no emergencies required us to head out until after the
plows had done their thing. Come spring, we'll undoubtedly find
tree "bits" on the ground to clean up, but I don't know of any
significant damage.
In article <st8dil$95o$1@dont-email.me>,
Gary McGath <garym@REMOVEmcgathREMOVE.com> wrote:
On 1/30/22 10:52 PM, Keith F. Lynch wrote:From which I assume that the snow was not so very deep as to
Gary McGath <garym@REMOVEmcgathREMOVE.com> wrote:
Lots of snow here, but nothing scary. We play musical cars at the
condo to get our parking spaces plowed out.
What happens with cars whose owners are out of town or otherwise not
available to move them?
I don't know if there were any, but presumably the plows would plow
around them. That happened with me on a previous occasion, when I didn't
move my car till after the plow had gone through.
prevent the car from moving.
On 1/31/22 9:18 AM, Dorothy J Heydt wrote:
In article <st8dil$95o$1...@dont-email.me>,On that earlier occasion, no. If anyone's car didn't get moved
Gary McGath <ga...@REMOVEmcgathREMOVE.com> wrote:
On 1/30/22 10:52 PM, Keith F. Lynch wrote:From which I assume that the snow was not so very deep as to
Gary McGath <ga...@REMOVEmcgathREMOVE.com> wrote:
Lots of snow here, but nothing scary. We play musical cars at the
condo to get our parking spaces plowed out.
What happens with cars whose owners are out of town or otherwise not
available to move them?
I don't know if there were any, but presumably the plows would plow
around them. That happened with me on a previous occasion, when I didn't >> move my car till after the plow had gone through.
prevent the car from moving.
yesterday, they'd have to do some shoveling.
For that matter, yesterday I had to get the snow off my car and out from under the tires before I could move. According to one report, the
deepest snow in New Hampshire this weekend was 13.5 inches, not very far
from here but right on the coast.
--
Please let us know how you are.
Please let us know how you are.
In article <11631764-0978-47c3-b11a-8beeeb221c6bn@googlegroups.com>, evelynchimelisleeper@gmail.com () wrote:
Please let us know how you are.
No snow here in the south of England. :-)
I think the last really bad snow fall here was in 2009 - an opera I was
due to go and see in London that night was cancelled and the opera house phoned me at lunchtime to tell me.
This does mean that when it does snow, nobody knows how to drive. About
20 years ago, it started to snow as I left for work. By the time my
train arrived at my destination it was a couple of centimetres deep. I walked past a school that was closed because the teachers couldn't get it
and when I got to the office I was one of the first in. Most people
drove in and we were up a slight hill and nobody could work out how to
drive up it.
But I did grow up in the north of England in the sixties when we
regularly got a metre of snow each year and once my school was closed for
a week. And I remember the big freeze of '63 which lasted from Boxing
day to the beginning of March, and that affected the whole country.
My sister still lives in the north and she did lose power for a couple of days before Christmas. She was lucky. Some areas were without power for over a week.
In article <20220201113731.1b81bf56a9c5981f814f0848@127.0.0.1>, admin@127.0.0.1 (Kerr-Mudd, John) wrote:
I doubt that very much. We might have had snowfalls of over 3 feet
occasionally [maybe? I recall in 68 we had 5ft drifts, but more like
2ft average], but not metres, not back then!
My school was on the top of a hill.
I doubt that very much. We might have had snowfalls of over 3 feet occasionally [maybe? I recall in 68 we had 5ft drifts, but more like
2ft average], but not metres, not back then!
On 2/1/22 7:44 AM, Paul Dormer wrote:
In article <20220201113731.1b81...@127.0.0.1>,
ad...@127.0.0.1 (Kerr-Mudd, John) wrote:
I doubt that very much. We might have had snowfalls of over 3 feet
occasionally [maybe? I recall in 68 we had 5ft drifts, but more like
2ft average], but not metres, not back then!
My school was on the top of a hill."And we walked 20 miles to the schoolhouse,
Barefoot and uphill -- both ways!
In blizzards summer and winter,
Back in the good old days."
(Frank Hayes, "When I Was a Boy")
--
Gary McGath http://www.mcgath.com
On 2/1/22 7:44 AM, Paul Dormer wrote:
In article <20220201113731.1b81...@127.0.0.1>,
ad...@127.0.0.1 (Kerr-Mudd, John) wrote:
I doubt that very much. We might have had snowfalls of over 3 feet
occasionally [maybe? I recall in 68 we had 5ft drifts, but more like
2ft average], but not metres, not back then!
My school was on the top of a hill."And we walked 20 miles to the schoolhouse,
Barefoot and uphill -- both ways!
In blizzards summer and winter,
Back in the good old days."
(Frank Hayes, "When I Was a Boy")
--
* [quote]
Norwich's 22 inches of snow was the highest reported number in the state.
[/quote] -
https://www.norwichbulletin.com/story/news/2022/01/30/ct-blizzard-snowfall-totals-norwich-windham-county-new-london-county/9259948002/
On Tuesday, February 1, 2022 at 10:52:33 AM UTC-5, Kevrob wrote:[more snip]
[snip]
Aaaahhh! Yorkshire exports trainspotters!
https://www.norwichbulletin.com/story/news/local/2022/02/01/norwich-featured-groton-mans-youtube-series-ct-train-history/9238147002/
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