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

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u/ShaggyTDawg ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ 8d 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.

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u/EVOSexyBeast 7d ago edited 7d ago

I disagree with them comparing Alabama to Alaska, infrastructure makes all the difference there.

But culture definitely plays a big part, too. The roads were bad but not undrivable the whole week like people make it sound, I drove around that whole week, albeit slowly, because I was moving from Kentucky and I got around fine. There were some other cars on the road too so I wasn’t the only one.

Walmart being closed was interesting, i’ve never seen walmart in KY close because of snow even in much worse driving conditions. There were some videos of cars sliding off the road, but people from further north know not to lock your breaks like they did in the videos on this sub.

In California they will close schools and people panic because of what we consider a normal rain shower, now that’s definitely because of culture and not infrastructure.

Take the exact same roads and driving conditions in KY vs Huntsville and people down here will freak out more because they’re not used to it. I mean you made a sticky post announcing for everyone to prepare because it’s going to get into the 20s soon…

Nothing wrong with it and nothing worth making fun of Alabamians for but culture definitely plays a role.

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u/blasek0 7d ago

Deserts have a different problem with rain where all the oil drippings that normally get washed off on a regular basis with normal rainfall dry out on the road and accumulate over the months instead, and the first bit of rain after months without it is significantly worse than a normal rainfall would be because it's picking up way more oil bits than a more comparably wet area. Relatively unique problem to the desert southwest, at least here in the states.