KTMLew01
Team Owner
Re-rebooted PC and it's happy now. Odly had shut it down last night and just fired it up again this morning. Sumping went sideways. All better now!
Eh, I just need to get far enough south that the local roads don't freeze. Our neighborhood had privately maintained roads, so the state isn't going to salt or scrape them. There's one lightly-traveled road out of the local area that crosses a bridge over a salt marsh, and it's not going to be a priority to get scraped. If there's any frozen accumulation, we're not getting out of the neighborhood and it's five or six frozen miles to the nearest resource, a convenience store. And if we lose electricity...I'm thinking Bermuda. Looks like gonna be cold clear down to mid Florida. Then week after maybe get even colder!
Northern states have the resources to deal with these conditions. It's not worth having dedicated equipment for something that only happens every two or three years, either personally or at the state level.The kind of weather being predicted for the south is an every week occurrence to your neighbors to the north and yet somehow they survive.
For the people that are there during the storm. That's why I said to stay home, because of the roads and their icy conditions. Because you don't have the resources and the experience of navigating those conditions. There's no need to travel in that. The good thing is that snow and ice both naturally melt, most times quickly so the wintery conditions won't last long.Northern states have the resources to deal with these conditions. It's not worth having dedicated equipment for something that only happens every two or three years, either personally or at the state level.
But if I leave, it will be before it gets bad, just as I do for hurricanes. I have the resources to relocate to better conditions and see no reason I shouldn't.
Oh, I agree completely, and hunkered down many times back when I was still working and on the 'Essential' list. I know I don't have the experience.For the people that are there during the storm. That's why I said to stay home, because of the roads and their icy conditions. Because you don't have the resources and the experience of navigating those conditions. There's no need to travel in that.
I am not the conspiracy type but if I were it would be to connect the weather forecasters with the stores. The grocery store was packed earlier today with long lines, crews were restocking the shelves and they were still out of whole milk and a few other things.
The hardware store was almost out of generators with only some display models.Things like extension cords were sold out too.
We will be okay for the most part. I have propane heaters and a propane camping stove plus another closed in place to use the little stove that isn't a part of the normal living space.
We do quick three or four minute showers when the power is out to conserve the hot water and they almost always get it back on before we loose all of the hot water.
I also have a big 4 wheel drive silverado that has AC outlets to charge the phones etc. I can even get to my brothers house and bring him here to ensure he has a warm place and hot meals.
I might buy a generator in the spring after things calm down. I would want to do that in a non rushed deal in order to safely wire it to the breaker or create a seperate dedicated one. I just do not want to mess that, sometimes we go three or four years without an outage. I would have to run the thing more often just to cycle the fluids and power etc to keep everything in working order when needed.
I'm barely 1000 feet off a wide tidal estuary and maybe two miles north of the Atlantic coast.Where me and @Charlie Spencer are at, we're likely going to luck out because of our proximity to the Atlantic Ocean.
Chrrently things will freeze here in Greenville from Saturday night through sometime Monday afternoon with 95% precipitation.This is still going to be a bad storm for most of the Carolinas.
Where me and @Charlie Spencer are at, we're likely going to luck out because of our proximity to the Atlantic Ocean.
I've wondered about that for a few years. It seems reliance on 'on demand' services, navigation utilities, immediate communications, and other technology tools have reduced the need to plan ahead. There are advantages to that but it seems to me not needing to plan ahead is resulting in an inability to plan ahead when needed or when those tools aren't available.People these days don’t know how to prepare ahead of time.
I work retail, and retail managers are expected to try convincing their employees that it’s worth the risk to try driving in dangerous weather conditions just so we can keep the store open for the customers silly enough to get out and come shopping. People these days don’t know how to prepare ahead of time. They’ve been talking about the storm for a week, but there’s still gonna be people without things they need.
Fortunately, I worked IT in manufacturing. A mixed-precipitation storm barely started one afternoon and the plant manager sent everyone home an hour early. Essential people were to report an hour late so we'd have daylight, and everyone else =if safely possible=. The roads had half-cleared and I was able to keep at least two tires on asphalt. I got close to the plant with no problem (other than Hardee's not being openAnother time, when I worked IT for the county, there was an ice storm and the roads were all closed and schools and everything were closed. They called essential personnel in ...