The_Valeyard wrote: » February - March St. Patrick's day is always freezing. Winter be around by then.
Dr Crayfish wrote: » Right but the two worst winters 5 years ago or so were both at full steam in Dec and Jan
The_Valeyard wrote: » We can only hope. Could use some time off work. "Hey roads are closed, cant make it in" *Load up some battlefield 1*
Dr Crayfish wrote: » I was still cycling to work, in Dublin. As long as you go slow and keep your wheels in the parts where the cars have been driving already it's not that bad.
The_Valeyard wrote: » No, its too dangerous. Far too dangerous to get to work. It be a health and safety issue. Icey and snow filled roads, cars abandoned, roads block, nothing moving, women having babies on the side of the road, zombie sheep roaming. Its just safer to take the day off.
MadDog76 wrote: » A cyclist going really slow in car tracks on an icy road ........... what could possibly go wrong!??!!! :rolleyes:
Flimpson wrote: » Kind of chilly? Last night was like a giant freezer. And I'm not a cold person. It was very mild at Christmas for sure, but a few weeks before that there was a sharp cold. Having boiler problems I remember it well. Irish winters have always had a large share of mild and wet conditions with bits and bobs of fresh, frosty weather thrown in.
Dr Crayfish wrote: » 12c tomorrow is forecast. I'm pretty sure there were days last June and July that struggled to reach 12c. Weird bloody weather.