Sarah_Rose
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Oct 17, 2008
- Messages
- 1,800
I grew up in Calgary, Alberta. I remember a winter storm where the snow on the side streets was up above my knees. I called my boss to tell her that I wouldn't be in because I couldn't get my car out of the driveway. She told me that if I waded out to the main road, she would pick me up in her 4WD SUV.
I put on my ski pants and I went to work.
I worked as a teacher in southwestern Ontario. Between when I went into school in the morning and when school was cancelled around noon, my car was literally buried up past the doors. All the teachers helped dig each other out and push each other out of the parking lot, and then I drove home. The major streets were already plowed and it was slow going, but I got home.
In Seattle on Monday we got 3 inches of snow. The road out of our subdivision is at the bottom of a large steep hill (with a bridge over a river at the bottom of the hill - so, icy) and we don't have snow tires because it only snows once every 2 years, here. The hill is pretty dangerous right now and there are several cars that have spun out sitting on the side of the road. The DOT is still advising people to stay home if they don't absolutely have to leave their house. I am now on day 3 of being snowed in by 3 inches of snow. The storm was not nearly as bad as the snowstorm that shut down the city for a week at Christmas two years ago, but we lived downtown at that time and we had a great time walking around downtown in the snow with everyone else whose jobs were closed down for the snow.
How much snow does it take to snow you in, where you live?
I put on my ski pants and I went to work. I worked as a teacher in southwestern Ontario. Between when I went into school in the morning and when school was cancelled around noon, my car was literally buried up past the doors. All the teachers helped dig each other out and push each other out of the parking lot, and then I drove home. The major streets were already plowed and it was slow going, but I got home.
In Seattle on Monday we got 3 inches of snow. The road out of our subdivision is at the bottom of a large steep hill (with a bridge over a river at the bottom of the hill - so, icy) and we don't have snow tires because it only snows once every 2 years, here. The hill is pretty dangerous right now and there are several cars that have spun out sitting on the side of the road. The DOT is still advising people to stay home if they don't absolutely have to leave their house. I am now on day 3 of being snowed in by 3 inches of snow. The storm was not nearly as bad as the snowstorm that shut down the city for a week at Christmas two years ago, but we lived downtown at that time and we had a great time walking around downtown in the snow with everyone else whose jobs were closed down for the snow.
How much snow does it take to snow you in, where you live?




Once when the temp was 20 below and my plumbins was frozen, my car wouldn't start and there was over a foot of ice and snow on the road...my boss came and picked me up so I was at work.