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#1
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Fuck you, Nashvillian drivers! It's just fucking snow!!!
Fuck every last one of you stupid shits that don't know how to handle winter driving!!! Every last interstate and side road in Nashville is at a standstill because YOU have to get home faster than everyone else and you wind up smashing into the drivers trying to be safe. Right now, there are no more policemen available to work wrecks, no more tow trucks to haul your asses out, ambulances can't get to emergencies. All of this is true, by the way, not just my making wildass assumptions, at least being reported on the radio.
I decided to go home. Well, the office closed so it was decided for me. And I can't even get out on the road because no one can move. So here I am back in the office ranting! Fuck, people, I don't see Minnesota falling apart when it snows. They've done just fine. It is humanly possible to get from point a to point be when it snows! Do it for fuck sake!!! Someone owes me a hotel room and room service, cause I'm gonna be stuck here for a while. |
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#2
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And it's on it's way here to Charlotte! Hooray! I know I'll be staying inside for a day or two. The panic that snow brings here is incredible to me (a former Upstate NY Yank). Man alive, people just drive like maniacs- you couldn't pay me to get on the Interstate tomorrow morning when it hits.
Sorry you're stuck, Max
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#3
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Man, I live about a mile from campus, and it was all I could do to get home. MTSU cancelled classes for the first time in like 30 years.
I wouldn't mind so much if I had some food here and my TV hadn't gone out. Damn. |
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#4
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Sure hope you all stocked up on bread, milk, and toilet paper!!
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#5
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I love being in southern cities when it snows. It makes me giggle. They are completely clueless.
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#6
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I lived in San Diego, and they had a hard time driving in DRIZZLE fer cryin' out loud!
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#7
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Oh, and here I was all smart and stocked up on groceries well in advance. Yep, got lots of movies I haven't watched, food to eat, even got my dog some food last night. I just can't get to any of it.
Traffic has been stopped on the interstate for 4 hrs according to the radio. Someone shoot me. |
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#8
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Too much Carnage Max?
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#9
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Yeah, roads were hellacious in Ohio too. I just got a ride home with an inexperienced 16-year-old friend of mine, so my "pucker" factor was rather high.
I hate driving in snow. |
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#10
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Have you noticed that it's usually the guy in the biggest fucking SUV on the market, that ends up in a ditch?
Notice to SUV drivers: 4 wheel drive does not make you God. You still have to slow the fuck down, no matter how big your truck is. Ice is slippery even if your vehicle does weigh eleventy million pounds. And driving your huge ass truck up my ass in a blizzard will not make me go faster, if your truck is so bad-ass drive in the non-plowed lane. That is all. |
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#11
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Same phenomenon here. However, there are at least a few like-minded Yankees (us included) or even Canadians residing here that can drive in snow; at least that helps a bit against the onslaught of inexperienced drivers.
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#12
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I'm just laughing at the reports of all the 2 wheel drive SUV's getting caught, while my Max's little Saturn is making it through. Glad I'm stuck at home with a bad back.
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#13
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I work at the Nashville Int. Airport, & live in Murfreesboro. 30=odd miles.
2 1/2 hours. I'm lucky I'm safe.
__________________
There's an Initiation Ceremony. It involves a Squid and a Goat. You're gonna be good friends with that Goat. The Squid will not exactly be a stranger, either. ~~Me, on the SDMB Initiation |
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#14
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Do they still have "Snowbird" to warn of all the bad weather on the TV in Nashville?
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#15
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Yeah. It makes me giggle too, when I see the cars with Northern Tags in the ditch. Cars on snow+lack of plows+overnight freezing=Ice. |
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#16
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Yeah, we have Snowbird on channel 4. Snow is still falling here, not as heavy, but it's still at about an inch per hour. Looks like we'll get about 6.5 inches.
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#17
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What pisses me off is that I work in a call center here in Nashville and every last customer service representative just went home. Pussies! Just because it's snowing doesn't mean we don't have customers to help! You're a lot safer here at your desk than you are on I-40 right now!
So it's me and the other supervisor doing the work of 13 people today. The funny thing is, one of our analysts left here at 9:30 this morning and she just called in - she's not home yet. Should've stayed at work, maybe, where we'll all nice and warm and dry and fed? Then, by the time your shift was over, most of the traffic would have cleared. Fool. You people act like you've never seen snow before. Pisses me off. Get back to work. |
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#18
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So, you're not having as much fun as HillbillyQueen?
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#19
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Well, over here in Knoxville, UT didn't shut down...their reasoning is that we're primarily a residential campus (for undergrads anyway), but professors do have the option to cancel classes. I had both of my classes today (potential rant about one in the making...I'm just not sure that I'm worked up enough about it to rant) and made it home fine. Sure, it took me 45 minutes to go 5 miles and the last 2 blocks were the only ones I felt were at all worrisome (up a steep hill), but everyone else was slowing down so I did too. And I would have anyway, even if they hadn't. Now I think I need some lunch....popcorn is sounding delightfully tasty and ever so healthy. |
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#20
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#21
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#22
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Yeah, but it's a "controlled" cluelessness....
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#23
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Oops, forgot the
![]() (how did THAT happen )
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#24
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I grew up in the North, and am now living in the South, and lemme tell ya something:
Most people are clueless no matter where they live, no matter what they drive, no matter what the weather. I know this is a fact, because if it wasn't, the SDMB would have 6 billion members.
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#25
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![]() okay, deal. |
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#26
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Heh, can't really bitch about the snow, though. Thanks to it, I get to work my job in the Stop-N-Rob tonight, since the other clerk won't be able to make it in. Think I'll bring my alarm clock and sleep since I doubt if I'll have too many customers !
__________________
***Don't ask me, I don't post here any more, and I'm probably not even reading this now.*** |
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#27
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Tell me about it! I had to go to Austin Peay this morning for a test. I was done by 9:15am. I live 22 miles from campus. I finally arrived home at 12 noon. 2 hours, 45 minutes to go 22 miles. So it isn't just Nashville, the Clarksville drivers suck, too.
NOT FUN. |
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#28
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But its delicious.
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#29
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I don't mean they shouldn't be careful and such, but it's the two or three days of mass panic that the weatherpeople instill into the public. It's like "When in trouble, when in doubt, run around, scream and shout!"
They're cancelling school events for tonight all over, cancelling classes for tomorrow, the shelves are bare (no milk, bread), and people have been talking about it for days. That's what I find funny, not that people can't drive in it. (believe me, they drive like shit in NY, too) |
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#30
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#31
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). Oh, and I did notice that they cancelled evening classes tonight...amazing. |
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#32
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![]() Always sucked having to go up Boot Hill in the snow. |
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#33
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Nashville traffic is pretty bad no matter what the weather, but this is ridiculous. They've been predicting "snow on Thursday" for the past week. Guess what? It snowed! on Thursday! The roads aren't even slick. It's just that everybody's trying to get home at the same time.
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#34
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#35
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I guess the favorite snowy-day pastime in TN is eating sammiches and drinking milk. Do people in other states run out and get bread and milk at the first sign of bad weather too? |
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#36
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__________________
Walking on water wasn't built in a day. -Jack Kerouac |
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#37
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It's not just limited to southern cities; I've lived in Canadian cities across the Prairies (where it always snows in winter, regularly), and people lose their minds on the first snow fall here, too. People - most of you were born and raised in Canada. You have cars with winter tires on them. You have ALL done this before. How can you forget how to do this over the four months of summer we have?!? (And yes, the SUVs I pass in the ditch with my front-wheel drive Sundance just make me laugh and laugh...)
Stocking up groceries because of snow though, that's a completely southern thing. I've never felt the need to stock up on food in winter, even when living in northern Manitoba, where it was about -40 for about 8 months. |
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#38
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Those ITD guys work quick.
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#39
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#40
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I'm finally home!
FIVE HOURS!!! Five damned hours!!!! That's how long it took me to get 16 miles!!! Work to home usually takes me about 45 minutes in afternoon traffic. I left 4 hours early and got home 15 minutes later than normal. Snow day my ASS! |
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#41
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But yes, it was kind of worth it to watch the real wheel drive SUVs slipping and sliding. Take that, Terrorists!!
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#42
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And as the saying goes...some things never change. |
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#43
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) In the rare classes I had with a professor who did know something, I had to content with a class full of fellow students who were upset because they couldn't turn in their papers written in crayon!
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#44
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(Dipping my cornbread in buttermilk and turning on my video fireplace...)
This is the largest snow Nashville has had in twenty years. The conditions really are different here from what they are in most other places. Nashville is a hilly city with some salt trucks. But I've never seen a snow plow. The salt trucks got caught on the interstates along with everyone else. My street is still covered with packed snow. In other parts of the city, the snow melted just a little and is now freezing into a solid sheet of ice. In an a nearby county, seven loaded school buses were hit by cars. (No one injured.) Sixteen other buses were stranded, the last I heard. Some had to return to the school because they couldn't get through. In Nashville, a TV news woman stopped to offer her meager lunch to the driver of a school bus. The driver declined and said that every time they got stuck in front of a convenience store, people would run out to give the kids food. You are right about Nashville drivers. But I see that the Yanks who visit have as much trouble as the rest of us. My latitudinally-challenged brother-in-law (from Michigan) once scoffed at letting a little snow keep us from shopping. He quit scoffing when his car went out of control on the ice. It's all in the attitude. Homegrown Southerners surrender to the snow. Many, if not most, won't be going into work tomorrow morning. It's like a holiday -- once you are home! Everything is concelled! No meetings, no classes, no malls open. You have to stay at home with your family. ![]() Look for a baby boom next October. (Hey, you can only clean out so many closets...) Meanwhile, Max, this one's for you: THWACK!! (hard snowballs, huh?) |
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#45
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A friend of mine was one of a team of archaeologist mostly from southwestern Pennsylvania who were on a dig down in Huntingdon, WV one winter. They got a couple of inches of snow and over in Kentucky, they called out the National Guard and closed the roads down. This crew of archaeologists got one of the jeeps and had a fine old time joy-riding around. An inch of snow? Wusses!
Then there was the 10 year old boy from Washington, DC who moved into the house across the street who was surprised to find out that an inch of snow means a 2 hour delay before school, not a cancellation. We do, however, cancel for 6 inches of snow. Actually, I'm happier if I don't have to drive in snow. It's much nicer looking at it through the window of my living room than it is through the windows of my car. On the other hand, the stuff that's falling now will probably be gone from the roads in 12 hours or so. CJ |
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#46
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Hey [bZoe[/b]! I saw a snowplow in Gallatin today! Of course, the guy was driving around with his blade up, so it wasn't doing a lot of good.
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#47
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Ha ha. My ex (who moved to Nashville 2 months ago) just called me to tell me that he totalled his Land Rover today. It was a choice of driving down the hill and flying into traffic or hitting a tree and stopping. So, he chose the tree. He wasn't hurt, but then he had to turn around and walk back up the hill to his apartment. So, on his way up the hill, his boss calls him and tells him not to come into work today. Hee hee! (Ii only laugh because I HATED that car, and because he's fine, just a dork!)
He was born and raised in Charleston, though, and we only get enough snow to make the yard look like it has dandruff |
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#48
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He was also amused by all the SUV roadkill. |
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#49
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Tuckerfan, maybe that was just a training run.
![]() I'm a little frightened and I'm trying not to be since there is nothing I can do. My sister and her elderly husband left a small town in West Tennessee, (about 125 miles away) at ten o'clock Thursday morning on their way to Nashville. They got within about 85 miles and that was the last anyone has heard from them. They haven't shown up at their hotel (as of 1:20 a.m. Friday) and they haven't called to cancel their reservations. They have two cell phones but don't answer either. I'm beginning to wonder if they slid off the road and out of sight. I would call the THP but I'm sure they have their hands full as it is. The irony is that this is the afore mentioned brother-in-law from Michigan. Things are worse here than we had imagined. Nashville has 6 to 9 inches instead of the 2-4 predicted. I don't ever remember a 9 inch snow here. There is an inch and a half of ice on the roads. Schools began letting out by 9 a.m. The last kids arrived home at about 10 o'clock tonight. The interstates are full of stranded vechicles in all directions. One direction is blocked by two jack-knifed trucks. Four wheel drives that worked earlier in the day (well, some of them worked) are sliding around as much as the tow trucks. One tow truck hit four cars. It's begun to snow again -- lightly. Tomorrow night we expect a low of six degrees. I know that is springtime to some of you. |
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#50
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As a Southern type person, let me assure you that snow down here is a big deal. We rarely get it, and it usually turns to ice not too long after it hits the ground. Driving is snow is a piece of cake. I drive very well when we go to Colorado in February. However, driving in snow and driving on ice are two very different things. We are not equiped with sand or salt trucks, have no snow tires etc.
And most of the wrecks are caused by the damn Yankees who fly down the interstate saying stupid things like "It's just snow!! Learn to drive in it!", shortly before they spin out in a patch of ice. ![]() No offense to all the damn Yankees that frequent the SDMB.
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