Natter 42, the Universe, and Everything
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, flaming otters, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
It might possibly, maybe snow here. There are six things forecast to happen that might mean snow, but there's no promise that those will happen and even if they do then it still might not snow.
That's been the forecast for a few days. No one wants to say "it will snow" because there's always a chance it won't. Since 1991 it's snowed 4 times. In 1989 we had 1" of snow but mostly it's the kind of snow that melts as soon as it hits anything.
That President's Day storm stranded my sister in Philly. She was on her way back from Italy to Seattle and had what was supposed to be a two-hour layover. It turned into four days, and even though my mom and brother only live 45 minutes from the airport, they couldn't get out to pick her up until her third evening.
East coast snowfall reactions provide plenty of comedy for us living in those areas which live with ice and snow all winter.
ETA: Not the snows themselves, the reactions.
I just realised that I agreed to go over someone's head yesterday on a business requirement we didn't like.
Well, the bulk of the realisation is that I don't know how high to go, because I don't know any of the people upstream of the person I want to sidestep.
I should go to lunch instead.
eta:
East coast snows provide plenty of comedy for us in those areas which live with ice and snow all winter.
There aren't places on the east coast that have ice and snow all winter? Is it a coastal exposure thing?
Because my neighbors and I had to shovel our street out. It never got plowed
Yarg. That must've been a lot of work. The complex brought in heavy machinery to clear out the snow in the parking lot. And dump trucks to take it off the property. It was crazy. OTOH, that was the most thorough snow removal job they ever did. Now it is pretty much ignored if it is under a foot.
There aren't places on the east coast that have ice and snow all winter? Is it a coastal exposure thing
There are, but the ones who get more snow don't go wacky and have banner headlines about impending doom. Plus saying "east cost areas who normally don't get much in the way of snow, and whose climate is influenced by the gulfstream, not including those states that aren't, like inland of many states, including main, vermont, new hampshire and new york, which has the great lakes on the western side, providing Buffalo with excess lake effect snow...." gets kind of clunky.
We are also amused by Texas snowfall reactions.
ETA: I also edited my first post immediately after posting, while you were posting, apparently. I added that the reactions of the east coasters were amusing, not the fact of snow itself.
I wouldn't count Buffalo as East Coast, the same way I wouldn't count Pittsburgh. They're eastern, but not coast.
I've hit the afternoon slump where my reaction to work is "run away!! run away!!"
I mean, I normally react like that to my job, but usually I can keep from flinging myself out of my desk chair and running from the most foul, cruel, and bad-tempered work order from Caerbannog.
Of course, in DC, predicting the possibility of snow usually results in people rushing to the store and stocking up on milk, bread, etc.
Yeah. And I have to stop at the Safeway on the way home to pick up fruit juice.
Chicago's Streets and San department freaks out about any snow forecasts over 2 inches, but that's because every politician in the city knows the consequences of not plowing the streets--you get voted out next election.
I remember the winter of 1979. After one weekend storm, most of Chicago's schools were closed for a week. In my area, schools were closed one day (oddly enough, Tuesday instead of Monday).
We are also amused by Texas snowfall reactions.
I'll also note that northerners don't take summer heat very well.
Jesse, me either, but it is a city in a state that is on the east coast. I was exaggerating a bit in response, I'm afraid.