Snow in the Ozarks

People are going ape-**** around here. Courts are closed Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday. My wife has moved every movable plant inside and is covering the rest with sheets like that is gonna help. Thank God the pet duck got eaten last year by the racoon or she would have it inside crapping all over the bathroom.
Pipes were wrapped several years ago. Now they take longer to both freeze AND thaw. Fill the tub with water so the wife can flush. Picked the rest of the oranges off the tree.
Now it's off to the office to send a foreclosure notice to the Chamber of Commerce.

Are you kidding or do you really have that many problems with pipes?
 
I grew up about .5 mile south of Lake Ontario in suburban Rochester. The economic damage that would be done if people gave up life for 2' of snow is not tolerable.
During my MPA program in Spokane, I had a retired Army officer classmate who had spent most of his career at Ft. Drum as an EM then college at Syracuse or Utica, then back to Ft. Drum. Triple digit snow the first month there, then it got cold. He was the only person beside me who sneered at the mindset in Spokane. He agreed with me that the "winter storms" in the area were not even close to storms - they were flurries with negligent plowing.
When I was trucking, most of what I did was Illinois to Maine. I'd much rather do that than go down South where the resources and tools were abysmal. My brother lives outside of Little Rock, and is not impressed with the cowardly responses to a bit of snow. His pharmacy closed mid-afternoon when the snow was not even forecast to start late PM, long after regular closing.
It is all perspective. If you grew up in the South and not have exposure like mine, snow is a far different concept. I once ran into some flatbedders from down south somewhere who had taken paper mill machinery to a mill in Northern Maine in the dead of winter. They were mostly unprepared - to an extent that was almost cruel. Their company ran almost entirely down south, so no one at any level was prepared past the idea calling a photo of white powder "snow".
 
Woke up this morning to about 3inches on the ground with more falling. Also have 'drifts' of 6inches:D. Like a ghost town outside, quiet and nobody heading out to work. Should be ice under the snow because I heard sleet and rain last night when I went to bed.
 
The good thing about -27 is that it ain't -40!
 

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I guess I'm in the banana belt compared to much of the US. Today, it's 25 deg and clear. It got down to 20 deg yesterday morning.

We don't get much snow here in the lowlands by the water. The white stuff generally stays in the mountains where it belongs.

Cold weather comes from the Eastern side of the state and typically carries little moisture, so it doesn't snow. Called on offshore flow, it also results in hot summer weather. The other frequent weather pattern is called an onshore flow. It's moist air coming in off the Pacific. Warmer, moist air means rain but no snow and moderate summer temperatures.
 
Are you kidding or do you really have that many problems with pipes?

I would guess that older homes down there were not built with the thought of freezing weather.
Old house raised about 2 feet on piers. That's how they were built way back when. One day I'm gonna get the envie to replace all the pipes with pex when it's not snowing and below freezing-but generally that feeling passes when the weather gets nice enough to actually do the work. Kinda like fixing the roof. It inly leaks when it rains :D
 
Bless you and all the first responders for all that you do! I grew up in New York and clearly remember blizzards. My dad and I
would get up early and dig out his car to go to work. Then the snow plow came through and buried it again. That's when I learned new words..

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Woke up this morning to about 3inches on the ground with more falling. Also have 'drifts' of 6inches:D. Like a ghost town outside, quiet and nobody heading out to work. Should be ice under the snow because I heard sleet and rain last night when I went to bed.
*
Don't mind snow. Ice, freezing rain, and even worse, one of those buried under snow is a big hell no.
 
^^
Time to consider staying home. I rarely need to leave the house if it is actually that bad out. I also hate chains for driving. Our Super C platform has 2 axles (it is a tandem) worth of switch controlled chains.
 
Not the most I've ever seen but close. I'm guessing we got between three and five inches. I'm not sure because I didn't go outside and won't until it's gone, probably tomorrow. I normally feed the deer but got Jr. to do it today. I don't own any cold weather clothes or boots and at 77 years old I probably won't buy any, unless I run into something cheap at a thrift store. Then I gotta figure out where I'm going to keep it. Most of the places south of here, including my brother Louisiana Joe and Cajun Lawyer got more than we did.
 

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