Winter finally hit SoFL. We awoke to temps just above freezing, ~35F ~2C. But at least the wind was howling.
Hw cold was it?
There were frozen iguanas littering parking lots. At breakfast about 1/3rd of the spaces were obstructed by inert, paralyzed, but fully still living, iguanas. Bright green, 2-4 feet long. So Florida.
They’ll be fine tomorrow when it warms up again. Unless some warm-blooded predator eats them meanwhile.
Just 28 days to get our rants in? Life is so unfair.
I try to take a neighborhood walk most days. People, if you cannot find a way to keep your sidewalks clear of snow and ice, you should move to Arizona.
Here on the North Shore of Boston, it’s been in the low teens for a few days, and the water in the drain trap of our only tub/shower has frozen twice now, so it doesn’t drain. (Unfortunately, there’s no way to put a pipe heater on the trap.) I’ve been pouring a gallon of boiling water down the drain every night before going to bed, which seemed to help.
But it happened again this morning.
The only option is to open the access panel and blow hot air from a hair dryer onto the overflow pipe above the trap and wait for the heat to work its way down to the block. I also pour boiling water down the drain, bail it out with a bucket after it’s cooled a while, repeat.
It takes a while. My wife’s been waiting to take her shower for a couple of hours now.
The temps are supposed to get above freezing this week. Let’s hope that helps.
If you cannot find a place where the city keeps the streets and sidewalks clear of snow and ice, you should move to a place that has decent government services .
How do you define “residential sidewalk”? Unless it’s private property, I consider it the city’s responsibility to keep the streets and sidewalks clear. That’s part of why I pay property taxes. A sidewalk in front of your home is not (and certainly should not be) private property.
I know that’s often the case, but I’ve never lived anywhere where they didn’t. The concept of “this is city property, but it’s your responsibility to maintain it” sounds strangely contradictory to this here believer in social democracy.
Right. Back in the day, in my official capacity as a long-haired hippie, I spent about half a year in Vancouver, including some of the winter months. There’s virtually no snow, hence the city probably has very little in the way of snow-clearing equipment.
There are other places, as @Spoons has pointed out elsewhere, that do get snow but don’t do a great job of clearing public thoroughfares. I’ve never lived in such places and find the whole concept alien to me. It sounds like a culture that’s gravitated to favouring lower property taxes over public services.