get ready folks heavy snow is forcast for next week. yeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee har!!!!
Doesn't sound like you've ever been caught in a snow storm on the open road at night?!?
Bring it on,the more the merrier,especially if it's too deep for me to get to work on Monday morning ;D
Quote from: Trevor_D on January 29, 2009, 17:25:18
Doesn't sound like you've ever been caught in a snow storm on the open road at night?!?
No it doesn't. Take blankets, flask of something hot and wellies...and a shovel!
My husband also takes a sleeping bag now having had two such experiences in the last few years, in one case he also got a flat tyre.
now come on folks i use to do the snow ploughing for some years ,so yes i can understand your anger of getting caught!! not nice i know and yes i have been caught out!! when the wagon gets stuck!! one year i slid into a ditch and waited 3 hours till help got to me!!. The thing is the uk gets into a panic with one wrong snow flake or if it get to a depth of 5mm we panic, then you get the idots who drive at 60mph still thinking the roads are fine!! we use to get some good snowfall years ago as per my nan the 50s were bad they had cars with no heating no gritters etc. i can remember my dad getting caught back in the 1983 i think?from work car broke down 5 miles from home and he walked in a blizzerd and a -20 wind chill.
so to all the big kids out there like me BRING IT ON LETS HAVE IT DEEP AND HAVE A SNOWFALL WE USE TO GET!!! ;D
Yes I think every one gets in a tizzy over snow. I remember getting up early, wellies etc. on and walking to work in snow. I knew the buses were not likely to be running.
the year before last we had a couple of inches of snow...
I'd gone into Reading to get some stuff and was on my way home again..
Now the majority of the roads were clear but there was a stretch of the A329 that was still covered... I'd noted this on the way in.
As I accelerated slowly up the slip road and onto the 329 a prat in a Porsche 911 roared past me, where upon he encounted the snow patch in the outside lane...
I'd slowed down noting what was going to happen.. as he crawled back into the clearer inside lane I put my foot down pulled out in the fresh snow and shot past him
But then I do drive a Landrover ;D
Sometimes driving a permanent 4x4 tank has its advantages
Quote from: Kea on January 30, 2009, 10:57:31Take blankets, flask of something hot and wellies...and a shovel!
That's exactly what I take to the allotment every time I go... Summer or winter.
I remember one week in the winter of 1978-9, when there were thirty-foot drifts in the Highlands, and people had suffocated in their cars. I was climbing in the Central Highlands that weekend, and by the time we got there, despite drifts twice the height of the local buses, local farmers had cleared the roads and everyone was carrying on as normal.
It snowed steadily all day today, we've got about two inches right now. A lot of schools have been closed here, and Social Workers were sent home at 2.30.
Meriden village green
Meriden
Marks the centre stone of England
Now here is a snowy memory;
I suppose you will all recognise the school crossing sign of the two children walking hand in hand.
Well picture this; in 1947 when walking to school the snow was so deep the snow came up to the feet of those two children and it appeared as if they were walking though a few inches of snow, when in fact the snow was excess of six foot deep at that point.
Plus I recall walking to school where on level ground the snow was up to my arm pits, and falling into a snow drift that completly engulfed me, that was bl** dy frightening I'll tell you!!
OK that was an exceptional year and I can't recall anything else like it since.
Yes there have been some years where we had extensive falls of snow but never like that.
So when I see what a few millimetres can do today it makes it all the more amazing how we coped that year.
Ah! the memories when I was just but a lad!!
Yes TG some of our higher farms were isolated for three months that winter... :o
And in the 60's -
1962-3 was a very cold winter that lasted until March. I moved from Norwich to Newcastle on Tyne in 1962 and it felt like moving to the Arctic. It was so cold that it hurt, but it really was exceptional.
That winter, my father took me and my sister sledging in the local park. they had long trousers, but I only had my school shorts. You're d**n right it hurt!
Remember the '47 winter well. Walking to school on the top of the snow that was cleared from the pavements. I believe that a by-law was passed that one had to clear the snow so that people could get about.
Where I live now, in '47, people walked 15 mls. to work & weren't late!
A few centimetres now & the whole world grinds to a halt. Nanny State!
I remember '47 as well - winter went on forever.
And in '63 I was at College. We were miles from nowhere sleeping in wooden huts originally put up to house workers at Bletchley Park. We had no electricity, no water - hot or cold - and no heating. And we were on teaching practice, except the coaches couldn't get up the lanes, so we had a two-mile walk first. (We washed, shaved & cleaned our teeth when we arrived at school!)
And that Easter we went drove down to a mate's in Devon (Don't ask - you do daft things like that when you're 19!) and when we arrived in - I think it was Bovey Tracey - we were the first outsiders they'd seen since Christmas!
And one morning in the '70s, staying with my in-laws in rural Wiltshire over the New Year, I opened the back door to meet a wall of snow covering the entire bottom storey. The water was off, the electricity was off, the phone was off, the gas was off....
And in '81, the entire school arrived one morning, but only three staff!!!
Personally, I can cope without too many more "snow events".
i want more!!!! we were lucky last night we missed it all snow turned to sleet. forcast predicted 30cm here!!!! (wrong) :(
We were promised another 300mm (1 foot) last night got about 75-100mm (3"-4")
(http://i222.photobucket.com/albums/dd27/tgalmanac/Feb%202009/P1090160.jpg)
Love your ' pic ' Tee Gee,
Now in 1947 I was 5 yrs, but I do remember my Mother left me with an Aunt while
she went shopping without me, I cried and wanted to know why I couldn't plough through
the 5 ft snow with her. !
floss xxx
It was melting a little in Birminham today. Doesn't mean it hasn't been freezing outside the city though. We've been promised more heavy snow on the way.
There were a few bees flying from one of my hives today, mostly landing in the snow and freezing to death. It's not a good characteristic in our climate, and I'll be requeening that one next summer!
no snow here anymore just sheet ice :)
Going out with rubbish later so lets hope they come to collect tomorrow !
hope ive heard right ,we are expecting another 10ins or so next week at some point??? :)
Like Tee Gee we woke up to another 3-4"... but more promised for the weekend. We've got the main roads almost clear now... :)
We have about a foot in places here. The roads are clear today, after the M1 was reduced to one lane yesterday.
I rang the council this morning to hear a recording saying that the offices were closed due bad weather. Hopefully we will be open on Monday!! ::)
walked to the shops today and got milk, fresh bread and all i need for a few days so i dont have to go out i have the heating on during the day and all the housework is done bar changing the sheets on the bed tomorrow. I have even dug out my party flask which holds enough water for 4 cups of tea so i dont have to keep boiling the kettle and if we lose the power i have hot water bottle :)
News on the allotments is that its burried under 6 inches of snow which should insulate it against the -9 frosts on there way.
dont forget to knock the snow of your fruit cages before the weight takes them down !!
Flossy, I was 4 years old in 1947, in West Sussex, and clearly remember snow falling into my wellington boots whenever I left the house. I have my mother's diary of that winter, full of her efforts to keep me and my younger sister warm, when electricity, fuel of any sort, was intermittent (she was 23 years old).
Of course, I also remember the 3 day weeks of the early 70s, when I myself had 3 very little children, no heating, no cooking, we just had to use our initiatives to keep everyone safe in the cold, including a baby who needed warm milk. Several miles from the nearest village.
I am so grateful now to live in the centre of a village with regular deliveries of food from gigantic lorries.
I remember the three day week too, but not 62-3 or 47... but I know they were terrible by current standards. :-X
Just got back from the pub -4 outside, it was -7 last night.
Very icy underfoot and still 3 or 4 inches of snow which has now frozen into sheet ice!!
More snow is forcast tomorrow :)
Nice and crunchy outside. Snow still 4 inches deep and the sky looks as though its about to dump another layer of snow. :-* :-*
Ours is all gone now, just the resembelance of a snowman in the back garden that is now a pile ice. ;D ;D ;D
Up to midnight Metcheck was promising another 3-4" for the midlands starting just after lunch today... and again Monday night... :-X
I was 7 tears old in 63 and had to hold the bags ( old coconut bags ) open for my Dad to drop cabbage into it was freezing like hell ... them days you did not have long trousers until you went to High School ( 11 years old ) so had short trousers and a pair of wellies. This was at weekends only as Schools never closed in bad weather.
I was 18mths... but at 800' up in the Pennines I bet it was hell, no central heating and double glazing then... :-X
LIVED IN A DOUBLE WALLED CARDBOARD BOX,LUXURY!!
doiuble walled cardboard box? bl**dy LUXURY!!, we had to live in a paper bag!! ;D
Around 1955 my husband and I were living at RAF Wattishma in Suffolk. Went to the pictures in Ipswich ( By bus) and when we came out 3 hours later were amazed to see about 2 inches of snow. However the busses were running and we returned to camp (Nearly) about 5 miles short and could go no further as the drifts were over a foot high. A local farmer, Bless him came along with his tractor and transported us back to camp. Health & Safety ?? I think not, we were standing on the back axle ( or sort of) but we we home and dry. It was an adventure only eclipsed by 62/63 but that is another story.
We lived in a homemade igloo, and used to drink the snow through a straw. :o ;D ;D ;D