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Here comes winter

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Comments

  • edited December 1
    No idea on whether rear steer helps on slush. My car is AWD, with a rear bias, and has rear steering. But it is rather slight. Just a few degrees. Still, it makes the mid-size car feel more like a smaller car. Too much rear steer can apparently make some occupants queasy. Many AWD cars are front biased. The problem in any case is that tires fighting for grip have less 'steer-ability", if that is a word.

    I was once heading straight at another car on ice and brakes locked, and no steering ability, as a result. As a last ditch effort, against all instinct, I took my foot off the brake, regained steering, and was able to avoid the collision. THAT was a learning experience. This was before ABS.
  • "against all instinct, I took my foot off the brake, regained steering"

    Yes sir- that's the trick.
  • OMG. I just never, ever want to have to deal with snow ever again. Looks pretty on the mountains. It can stay up there.
  • Surprise! @Crash. Most of us who live in snow areas probably feel the same way. When I lived in Berkeley and Bradenton friends would ask if I missed the snow and I'd always tell them I know where it is if I do.
  • edited December 2
    Mark said:

    Surprise! @Crash. Most of us who live in snow areas probably feel the same way. When I lived in Berkeley and Bradenton friends would ask if I missed the snow and I'd always tell them I know where it is if I do.

    The nice thing about winter to me is the solitude. So quiet in the neighborhood. You don't hibernate like bears do, but life slows to a crawl. I don't mind running the blower. I'll say we've had close to 2 feet of snow in very short order. Most unusual for so early in the year. Some winters we don't see 2 feet. No place is perfect. I was in the Florida Keys 2 years ago in December and nearly roasted in 95 degree heat + high humidity.

    The gym where I work out is a 30-40 minute drive away. But the blower I'll work out with today is just a few steps away. - :)
  • edited December 2
    There is a stillness I enjoyed indoors while it snows, even a raging and windy snowstorm. All else just sucks. I've got a mind to start a New Year resolution, and get out more, to the beach.
    Christmas lights with Santa and Mrs. Claus at Honolulu Hale:
    image
  • Time for 'A Christmas Story'.
  • My all-time favorite Christmas commercial. No snow at all.
    Basically unchanged 15 second spot from the 1970's.

  • This is pretty cool

  • edited December 2
    There's a good episode of "Little House on the Prairie" staring Michael Landon where they get buried by several feet of snow on Christmas Eve. I've watched it a number of times. All-time favorite of mine. Never grows old. (I'm tempted to say the title is "A Christmas to Remember.")

    I find Polar Express with Tom Hanks also great. Some of the scenes are exceptional if you don't mind a little animation thrown in.
  • edited December 2
    If I had to pick a favorite Christmas movie, it would not be one of the obvious ones, like "A Wonderful Life" or "Christmas Story", both good. It would be "Scrooged" with Bill Murray. or "Hook" with Robin Williams.

    I do like Polar Express.
  • edited December 2
    hank said, "The nice thing about winter to me is the solitude."
    Early morning like 3AM, contractor decided to remove about 1 " of snow at the nursing home across the street! I can handle the snowplowing at 6 AM , but not 3 AM.
  • Derf said:

    hank said, "The nice thing about winter to me is the solitude." Early morning like 3AM, contractor decided to remove about 1 " of snow at the nursing home across the street! I can handle the snowplowing at 6 AM , but not 3 AM.

    Ouch! My neighborhood has been quiet. I think over half the people are wintering in the South. But one loud snowplow is one too many.
  • edited December 2
    "Early morning like 3AM, contractor decided to remove about 1 " of snow at the nursing home across the street!
    I can handle the snowplowing at 6 AM , but not 3 AM."

    There outa be a law against this!
  • edited December 2
    Years ago, I lived in ski country south of Buffalo. Only place I ever lived where the Town took responsibility for plowing the public sidewalks. We had to do our own, leading to the front steps. So much snow. The workers might show up at 4:00 a.m. in their sit-down plows which had a zipper-up canvas enclosure and heater. We were at the corner house. Whenever they needed to hit reverse, the INFERNAL, SCORCHING LOUD suck-ass beeping noise filled the entire town. 4:00 a.m. Same with the road plows. And being at the corner, even in Spring, Summer and Fall, the giant logging trucks had to STOP for the Stop Sign and gear-up again. MONSTROUSLY LOUD, stoopid, useless, absurd, needless, unnecessary, goofy and ridiculously ludicrous, all around. And letting myself get a bit personal here, I was born with a trait no one knew anything about until the 1990s:
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sensory_processing_sensitivity.

    For others, the way-too-loud sensory inputs are just like water off a duck's back. For yours truly, it feels literally like I'm being assaulted. Will someone rescue me and take me back to wherever I came from? I must have been kidnapped as an infant and brought to this awful planet.
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