Anonymous wrote:Why the hell were you on the road in the first place?
Anonymous wrote:Eh, I'm team OP. At some point it's time to let the cars that can still travel pass. I live in NC and people are absolute idiots in bad weather. Unless it's just one slick spot, there isn't much point in trying to help an ill prepared vehicle travel in a snow storm, especially in the mountains. They should have done their best to push the car to the side and called a tow truck. They should not have been driving it without chains. Blocking the road for everyone makes no sense.
Anonymous wrote:I agree with OP. You need to keep moving on an incline or risk getting stuck.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm trying to understand why you thought your wheels might freeze in place. I grew up in Colorado and have never heard of that. We drove to school, stores, friend's homes, etc. without concern of not being able to leave due to the car being stuck to the road.
It's extremely irresponsible of you to drive through 8-9 inches of snow in your vehicle.
Tires can freeze. It's more common on older tires with worn tread. If they are stopped in place, they will have a difficult time resuming traction especially if the snow and ice are already compacted into the shallow tread. They will become another vehicle stuck on the road for emergency services to handle if they cannot get enough traction to to resume driving up the incline.
https://www.wetrytires.com/can-tires-freeze/
Anonymous wrote:I'm trying to understand why you thought your wheels might freeze in place. I grew up in Colorado and have never heard of that. We drove to school, stores, friend's homes, etc. without concern of not being able to leave due to the car being stuck to the road.
It's extremely irresponsible of you to drive through 8-9 inches of snow in your vehicle.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You probably should not have honked. You could have gotten out to either ask them to move or get the full story on why they were blocking the road. My assumption would be that they were blocking for the peoples safety.
But if you were able to safely pass them, I don’t see why you should’ve been prevented from doing so. I just think the honking and that situation might’ve been too aggressive.
Agree all around. I’m sure these folks were stressed and scared and honking does nothing to calm someone. But blocking the entire highway IS dangerous, and cars that can pass slowly should be allowed to do that.
When I lived in northern New England, I had flares in my car for stuff like this.
Anonymous wrote:You probably should not have honked. You could have gotten out to either ask them to move or get the full story on why they were blocking the road. My assumption would be that they were blocking for the peoples safety.
But if you were able to safely pass them, I don’t see why you should’ve been prevented from doing so. I just think the honking and that situation might’ve been too aggressive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They did the right thing by blocking the road for the safety of folks helping. You could be decent and help.
DP here:
You’re telling me the right etiquette for when a car has issues in a snow storm is for all other traffic to stop, thereby likely causing more people to get stranded? That doesn’t sound right.
If a car is stuck in the middle of two lanes, and others are trying to help them get out then yes, their safety is paramount. Otherwise you’re going to have a car stuck in the middle of the road with minimal visibility, no warning to oncoming traffic, and large trucks traveling. That could cause a much larger accident. Waiting 10 or even 30 minutes is not that difficult if everyone can get out safely. OP thinks her tires are going to freeze in 25-30 degree weather after 5 freaking minutes. She’s honking, driving aggressively, blocking emergency vehicle lanes because she was impatient, road raging, and rather than pulling around to help out she gets the h out of dodge. She certainly doesn’t understand the local culture. She was ill prepared and too inexperienced to be driving on the mountain in the WV snow and shouldn’t have been there to begin with.