r/HuntsvilleAlabama ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ 8d ago

Reminder: Start prepping for cold weather Events

The 10-15 day models are consistently showing it's going to get substantially colder by middle/late next week (Jan 8-ish). It's shaping up to be a pretty substantial cold as well.

With this cold, obviously comes the chance for frozen precipitation. Anyone saying it will definitely happen is lying, there are no definites this far out. But conditions are likely to support it happening, so might as well plan and prep for it.

Since we're 1.5-2 weeks out from it, go ahead and start gradually doing all of your extreme cold weather prep. Buy whatever supplies you use. Refill gas cans for generators. Get battery packs charged up. Make sure laundry is all done (at least washed and dried) a few days before the cold.

Comment below for your typical routines to give others ideas.

Edit: if we do end up having a weather episode, us mods will organize a megathread or two. Probably one with information, and one with pictures/videos/misc ice/snow banter

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u/Upset_Sun3307 8d ago

Y'all know people live in places like Alaska right?.... I think we'll be just fine. If your driving on snow or ice just remember to downshift vs hitting your brakes to slow down so you don't loose traction

14

u/ShaggyTDawg ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ 7d ago

You know this isn't Alaska right? We don't have resources to maintain snowed/iced roads to the same extent the north does. No one here has winter tires, chains, or studded tires. Our roads don't have as wide of a shoulder as a lot of the north does, so sliding off the road becomes a more severe situation more easily.

I wish people would quit making it like it's just the people's fault for why we have such an issue. It's the infrastructure and economics of it that plays a huge part.

-11

u/Upset_Sun3307 7d ago

I grew up driving in Chicago so the stuff we see down here is nothing. That last ice storm we had last year,yea I went about my day normally just drove a bit slower.

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u/ShaggyTDawg ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ 7d ago

Tell me... How are the mountains in Chicago?

1

u/gumbysweiner 7d ago

A lot of people at work had to stay there because they lived on the mountain and couldn't get up.

-12

u/Upset_Sun3307 7d ago

Just say your scared... Unless you live on Monte Sano or Green Mountain there really aren't many mountains in the Huntsville area. Soo yea if it's icy don't go up there

7

u/ShaggyTDawg ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ 7d ago edited 7d ago

There's plenty of pretty steep grades on regular roads in the area. Madison has a pretty decent mountain in the middle of it, Monrovia has two, and lots and lots of hilly roads and driveways (my own included, and I don't live on any mountain). Lots of people live on Green Mtn and Monte Sano. So there's large portions of the area that are affected by either living on or near hilly/mountainous terrain. No amount of "driving slow" or "experience from up north" can make a car not slide down a steep driveway. And nothing you can do if there's a mountain between you and where you need to go.

Also... you're*

6

u/csquared2525 7d ago

I love how bro just keeps comparing his driving experiences and situations from states up NORTH that see snow and ice all the time and not basing his view on reality of what it’s like in ALABAMA.

1

u/Upset_Sun3307 7d ago

I've been driving in Alabama for the better part of 20 years.... So I've experienced both. The weather we get here really isn't a big deal like everyone makes it to be.

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u/bujoojoo 7d ago

That’s because there are 40 snow plows/de-icing machines for every square mile in northern cities and Huntsville has 2 guys in the back of a pickup shoveling play sand out on the parkway.  Kinda makes a difference…