March 9, 20188 yr Stay warm and safe. Looks nasty, though my wife would think it was pretty (other than the downed limbs)
March 10, 20188 yr Todd, sorry about your situation with the storm and electricity. Hope it all changes for the better soon. Stay safe.
March 10, 20188 yr Thanks all! We aren't as bad off as others, it's easy to keep things in perspective. At the hotel now, after a warm and comfy night's sleep.We found my mother-in-law's place has power, and I believe our place does too now; we'll check after we leave the hotel.Cleanup and replacing food are the next tasks. But everyone is OK, that's the best thing. Wishing good thoughts for others!Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk HD
March 11, 20188 yr We lost power for about 12 hours which is nothing, all things considered, and we've got the generator/transfer-switch so it was really only out for 4 hours because I didn't feel like setting it all up at 2:30am when it went out. Still, a freak storm. I went to bed at 11pm and at that point we had maybe 2-3" of snow. Got up a little after 6 to start cleaning the driveway and setup temp power. We had 16"+ at that point and it was still coming down. I finally made it into work at 11am, where we were running on self-generated power. Some lines not far outside the base came down and landed on rail road lines and made for quite the lightning show for the local residents. Everything is pretty much back to normal around us at this point but there will be significant yard cleanup as the trees in the front yard took it on the chin again. Lily and I made the best of it yesterday afternoon and went out for about a mile and a half snow shoe in the woods.
March 11, 20188 yr You know, that's the difference between New England residents and DC area residents -- you all know how to handle the weather. Cheers to that.
March 11, 20188 yr 9 minutes ago, Dusty Chalk said: You know, that's the difference between New England residents and DC area residents -- you all know how to handle the weather. Cheers to that. While I cannot speak to the rest of New England, having spent winters in Minnesota, Wisconsin, and upstate NY, I can say that people in Connecticut* cannot handle their weather.
March 11, 20188 yr 7 hours ago, dsavitsk said: While I cannot speak to the rest of New England, having spent winters in Minnesota, Wisconsin, and upstate NY, I can say that people in Connecticut* cannot handle their weather. If you want inability to cope with snow, the south of England takes the prize. It can be many years between proper snowfalls, so it's cheaper to just grind to a halt occasionally than build infrastructure to cope. This is almost literally true: Edited March 11, 20188 yr by Kattefjaes
March 11, 20188 yr 8 hours ago, dsavitsk said: While I cannot speak to the rest of New England, having spent winters in Minnesota, Wisconsin, and upstate NY, I can say that people in Connecticut* cannot handle their weather. I bet they're still better than the extended DC area residents.
March 11, 20188 yr .....and, there's more coming......Monday night into Tuesday.....we did a very minimal shopping, just to have a couple days' worth of food. Also have non-perishables. Supposed to get a new washer and dryer delivered Wednesday, hope all is powered up, and cleared.....
March 11, 20188 yr Just got a notification from the weather service at work, warning of a Winter Storm Watch for Tuesday. The forecast is for 8-12" more white nonsense. [edit] Here's to hoping it's not as bad this time, Todd.
March 11, 20188 yr You too Nate, and wishing well for all in the path. Not hearing TOO much for damage possibilities, but still worried a bit, especially in areas not fully recovered/repaired.
March 12, 20188 yr ^This. And that short animation about how badly we cope with snow in the UK is so very true!
March 14, 20188 yr This storm has gone from entertaining to borderline scary. We got about 12" throughout the day of reasonably light, fluffy stuff. I went out to clear off the driveway as the forecast was calling for another 3-5" overnight and anything over a foot gets problematic, even with a tractor-mounted snow blower. It was still snowing when I started, but not hard. About a half hour into clearing it started to pick up and got crazy. I'd wager we got at least another 3" of snow in the next 30-45 minutes while I finished clearing the driveway and helped the neighbor do his. It's calmed back down but the drift on my deck is legitimately 12" higher than it was two hours ago. Hopefully it'll start to wind down... Oh, and I talked to a friend who's another 10 miles or so inland, they have 22" of snow and it's still coming down hard there.
March 14, 20188 yr Good luck Nate! We have probably about 18", thankfully we still have power. Right before the storm I cleared out some more branches from one side of our driveway, and this allowed our plow to do a good first run. Andrew did a bit of shoveling, will finish tomorrow morning so we can get our washer and dryer delivered.... Crazy days.
March 16, 20188 yr We ended up with somewhere around 24". Thankfully it let up overnight and was manageable the next morning. Here's a picture of the partially shoveled deck. I had cleaned it off after the last storm so this is entirely the doing of 24hrs of snowfall.
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