Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: I'm so glad I moved to Florida! Good luck people, and yes-clean off the cars.
Enjoy! When you get wiped out by a hurricane in October, we’ll send hugs.
I don't live in a flood zone, my brand new house is built to the latest hurricane standards, and I didn't even lose power during Irma.
Anonymous wrote: I'm so glad I moved to Florida! Good luck people, and yes-clean off the cars.
Anonymous wrote:I did my best -- its too high for me to reach all of it. Sorry.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I did my best -- its too high for me to reach all of it. Sorry.
Don’t drive a big stupid vehicle then. If you can’t takr care of it properly you shouldn’t drive it.
Anonymous wrote:So I've never lived anywhere with snow and have only recently moved here. We do have a garage and I refused to drive in the snow today (too scared), but it never would have crossed my mind to clean off the top of the car and bumpers had my car been outside and I needed to drive it. I just assumed the fluffy snow would just softly blow into the air when I drove. I'm so glad I read this thread because the thought of it turning into a sheet of ice that could fall on a pedestrian, the car behind me or my own windshield is terrifying. Despite all the snark on here, I did learn something and will never drive a snowy car without cleaning it off. Thanks for the PSA!
That's not true. Snow slabs flying off can travel hundreds of feet on the highway.Anonymous wrote:Clearing off a car isn't that hard.
But really - if you are driving so close to the car in front of you that you're really worried about snow flying off their car and smacking into you - you are driving too close. Slow down and back off. If snow on the road freaks you out too much even for that, stay home. Then you won't need to waste so much energy worrying about what other people do.
Open the door and stand on the tread.Anonymous wrote:I did my best -- its too high for me to reach all of it. Sorry.
Anonymous wrote:I did my best -- its too high for me to reach all of it. Sorry.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Clearing off a car isn't that hard.
But really - if you are driving so close to the car in front of you that you're really worried about snow flying off their car and smacking into you - you are driving too close. Slow down and back off. If snow on the road freaks you out too much even for that, stay home. Then you won't need to waste so much energy worrying about what other people do.
Agree that people shouldn't be tailgating, but have you ever seen how high/far the big sheets of snow/ice fly? They catch air and don't come right down.
Right. It's not snow blowing off; it's a solid 1" sheet of ice that melts from the underside and then takes off like a paper airplane landing smack on the windshield of the car 20' behind two lanes over. Or at least that's what happened to me.
Anonymous wrote:I did my best -- its too high for me to reach all of it. Sorry.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good lord people. Snow falling off of cars is not a felony. You do what you can. Step stool with telescoping broom? Are you effing kidding.
-Bostonian who rolls her eyes at the panic.
I find it hard to believe that you're an actual Bostonian saying that. As a New Englander, I can say that you rarely see the massive pile ups on top of cars that you see here--then again, maybe you're just a true Masshole. Or an outright moron.
Clear the f@cking snow off the top of your car you lazy hag, before you kill someone.
DP here. First of all, I don't think you are from New England, because New Englanders generally take "masshole" to be a compliment. Second of all, first PP should know better if she is from Massachusetts - clean off your damn car. So, I doubt either of you are from there, because you sound like complete idiots.
I'm from CT, and we certainly don't use it as a term of endearment. Maybe you Massholes like it, but then again....yeah.