So, a serious, HOPE YOU ARE ALL DOING WELL
Plus a question from someone on the WEST COAST.
Here in Western Oregon (Eugene -- GO University of Oregon Ducks), we seldom get snow. And when we do, maybe once or twice a winter 3 inches or so.
The snow we do get is always very wet, very heavy and horrible to drive in or to shovel. It almost always causes power outages.
Every three to five years, we get a foot to two feet of this wet muck in one heavy snowfall. That causes real power issues, etc.
This usually covers the entire major population corridor from Portland to Roseburg along Interstate 5. This never merits much of a blip on the national news and no horror stories in the national media. We just deal with it.
My question, I guess, is that I thought you folks on the Eastern Seaboard were used to lots of snow?
Am I mistaken? Or is it just sort of like our usual fall/winter/spring rain in the Pacific Northwest?
Here it rains constantly from September through May, but it is usually just light rain 24/7. So, is what you guys get "light snow" throughout the winter months, so the heavy stuff throws a wrench into things?