Anonymous wrote:Long live the Pittsburgh chair!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you park in our spaces that we’ve shoveled, you’re going to have a cracked windshield when you get back.
Already done it a half dozen times since last Monday. Just a little thump at the passenger side lower corner of the windshield with one of those orange plastic rescue hammers. Puts a little tiny crack that will spread quickly the next time the defroster is turned on. People won’t even notice it at first, they’ll think rock caused it.
Learned this nasty little trick in Buffalo years ago. Those people are SERIOUS about parking space etiquette up there. You NEVER park in someone else’s spot they shoveled out.
Not even the least bit sorry. And no one can prove a thing.
I can’t believe being this guy and then still feeling you are the keeper of etiquette.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it is horribly rude to take someone's hard-earned/shoveled parking spot in a storm such as the one we have had. It is more than rude and rings of the person's sense of entitlement.
However, it is not illegal to steal that spot so there is that. But, yes, in the world of "snow etiquette" a person should not take another's spot ever.
Question. I worked overnight in the hospital through the weekend storm. Parked in hospital garage. Drove home (very carefully) on Monday. All spots within about a mile radius of my home are blocked off with chairs. What do I do here? Other than just go back and park at the hospital garage and commit to living on my work unit for the next 3 weeks until the snow melts, because I am not allowed to park on my street due to the fact that it snowed a few days ago and there are chairs and cones blocking all the spots (since everyone is back to work etc and driving around normally)
Park in one you can see while you shovel yours out.
We have a driveway but I know my neighbors and their schedules fairly well, and I moved a chair so I could free my driveway space for my house cleaner. But I kept an eye on it (working from home) and the neighbor could have texted me if they came home early for some reason. But they didn't, and I just put the chair back when I was done.
Every single spot on my block and the next block up is shoveled out and blocked with chairs. Not joking. There is no spot for me to dig out. They are all dug out! And marked with cones! I’ve been parking in spots 6-7 blocks away (I’ve dug out a few in the last week since I’m able bodied) but it’s ridiculous for people to decide I’ll never park on my block again because I was working in the ER during the storm and wasn’t here for the digging on Monday morning. Like, when can I park on my block again? March? People are ridiculous. Monday morning when they all drive into work yet again and block their spots yet again, I’m throwing all the chairs in the trash.
So you live in a spot where you routinely can’t park on your street. What is your problem then? Park on other streets like normal.
Anonymous wrote:But so if someone is on your block to work, like a plumber or a tutor or whatever, where are they supposed to park?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you park in our spaces that we’ve shoveled, you’re going to have a cracked windshield when you get back.
Already done it a half dozen times since last Monday. Just a little thump at the passenger side lower corner of the windshield with one of those orange plastic rescue hammers. Puts a little tiny crack that will spread quickly the next time the defroster is turned on. People won’t even notice it at first, they’ll think rock caused it.
Learned this nasty little trick in Buffalo years ago. Those people are SERIOUS about parking space etiquette up there. You NEVER park in someone else’s spot they shoveled out.
Not even the least bit sorry. And no one can prove a thing.
I can’t believe being this guy and then still feeling you are the keeper of etiquette.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The people who say "no" to saving spaces always have big SUVs or trucks. Or do a poor job of clearing their space.
If you put in the time to do a good job cleaning out a spot, it's yours until it melts. If everyone actually did a good job, no one would need to "spaces." But just because you half assed it, doesn't mean I did, and it doesn't mean you get my thoroughly cleared spot.
Where are you getting these rules? On a public street, there is no saving spaces. That is universal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The people who say "no" to saving spaces always have big SUVs or trucks. Or do a poor job of clearing their space.
If you put in the time to do a good job cleaning out a spot, it's yours until it melts. If everyone actually did a good job, no one would need to "spaces." But just because you half assed it, doesn't mean I did, and it doesn't mean you get my thoroughly cleared spot.
Just saying that in Boston, where this practice is kind of famous, you get the storm day and the next day. They even announce on the news when you have to remove your space saver.![]()
Anonymous wrote:If you park in our spaces that we’ve shoveled, you’re going to have a cracked windshield when you get back.
Already done it a half dozen times since last Monday. Just a little thump at the passenger side lower corner of the windshield with one of those orange plastic rescue hammers. Puts a little tiny crack that will spread quickly the next time the defroster is turned on. People won’t even notice it at first, they’ll think rock caused it.
Learned this nasty little trick in Buffalo years ago. Those people are SERIOUS about parking space etiquette up there. You NEVER park in someone else’s spot they shoveled out.
Not even the least bit sorry. And no one can prove a thing.
Anonymous wrote:The people who say "no" to saving spaces always have big SUVs or trucks. Or do a poor job of clearing their space.
If you put in the time to do a good job cleaning out a spot, it's yours until it melts. If everyone actually did a good job, no one would need to "spaces." But just because you half assed it, doesn't mean I did, and it doesn't mean you get my thoroughly cleared spot.
Anonymous wrote:If you park in our spaces that we’ve shoveled, you’re going to have a cracked windshield when you get back.
Already done it a half dozen times since last Monday. Just a little thump at the passenger side lower corner of the windshield with one of those orange plastic rescue hammers. Puts a little tiny crack that will spread quickly the next time the defroster is turned on. People won’t even notice it at first, they’ll think rock caused it.
Learned this nasty little trick in Buffalo years ago. Those people are SERIOUS about parking space etiquette up there. You NEVER park in someone else’s spot they shoveled out.
Not even the least bit sorry. And no one can prove a thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:During some snow storm years ago, my husband had to get into work to do something quickly. He had a truck and got out of his spot without issue. I stayed outside and shoveled it. It was snowing so much that I planned to just keep shoveling the spot until he got back.
My neighbor from Rochester pulled up and started back in to take the space! I was standing in the spot with a shovel! There's no way someone from Rochester didn't know better.
During a storm and for the day after, be nice.
After a day, the spots are up for grabs.
So what happened?
I stayed standing there, she rolled down the window, and I said "You're from Rochester and I'm from Boston. We both know snow etiquette." She must have gone down the street because I kept working on the spot.
She was such a nasty neighbor. Never friendly. I don't think she stuck around very long. Maybe she's taking spots in a new neighborhood now!
Anonymous wrote:The people who say "no" to saving spaces always have big SUVs or trucks. Or do a poor job of clearing their space.
If you put in the time to do a good job cleaning out a spot, it's yours until it melts. If everyone actually did a good job, no one would need to "spaces." But just because you half assed it, doesn't mean I did, and it doesn't mean you get my thoroughly cleared spot.