They either drive too fast or too slow with jamming on the brakes every five seconds. No, it's most funny when I am sitting home watching on TV (especially the hysterical coverage on local news), actually on the roads--not so hilarious.
Spike ,'Potential'
Natter 31 But Looks 29
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Yeah, here it's the other drivers who scare me.
So sorry about the leaky roof, Robin! And I hope BF's back is improving despite that.
Yeah, it's crazy out there. I am very glad I only have to drive a mile to work tomorrow.
I am bummed that I haven't had time to get new shoes for my car yet. Maybe Monday afternoon, after my charts are due. Or maybe I'll drive Hank. Hank is FUN to drive in the rain!
Hank is fun all the time!
He totallly is! But it's extra fun to sploosh through the giant riverstreets and drench other cars with a wall of water. Heh.
LA rain is comedy rain, as native Californians are afraid of Water Falling From the Sky and this causes them to freak out which is amusing to transplanted east Coasters.
... and downright bloody hilarious to anyone visiting from the UK, iirc!
This year, though, the rain hysteria seems slightly tempered by the realization that while the rain is inconvenient (and the snow in the mountains is wickedly inconvenient -- people were snowed into their cars for about 15 hours, with a 200 carjam up in Big Bear), it's not like we're Sumatra or anything.
I think that the tsunami is forcing Southlanders to keep it in perspective just a bit.
AND, FWIW, east coasters freak out about whether in ways that the people in the snowbelt don't understand. Philly, Baltimore and DC become paralyzed too at the sign of any real weather. They have people at the grocery stores talking about people stocking up on toilet paper and milk.
That's true, Kat. Maybe it takes prolonged exposure to bad weather to make folks smart about it. In Milwaukee or Minneapolis, or in New England, people just put on their Long underwear in the fall, keep an eye on their car's battery, make sure they keep the driveway plowed and just go about their business, no matter how horrible it gets.
Yep. I think that's definitely true, Robin. Though instead of freaking out about the wet or the cold, folks in Ohio and other northern places freak out about the hot (the elderly are dying at home due to heat!!). And a 100 degree day here, especially in the valley, is incovenient but not really 24-7 newsworthy.
I think it's just you get used to what you know and other things cause a panic.