RustyGate wrote: » Point is the red alert has being going on for two days now, and that weather is still only just arriving. And it's that period I have a problem with. We all got through 2009 and 2010 without this blanket closure nonsense for a regular cold spell. Tonight is something different.
d'Oracle wrote: » That is nonsense. We do not have the infrastructure to handle this weather.
leahyl wrote: » What’s with the ME radar showing a big band of precipitation over Cork City and it’s bone dry
Franz Von Peppercorn wrote: » They weren’t off by miles. You are confusing the forecasts with today’s red warning. The idea was to give people time to go home.
skeleton_boy wrote: » No, the worst hasn't even come yet.
Artane2002 wrote: » I know it's snow but are the big water droplets on the window bugging anyone?
Loughc wrote: » When is the worse due?
patneve2 wrote: » After midnight most likely
sryanbruen wrote: » Definitely! :mad:
Hooks Golf Handicap wrote: » My only fear is that all the snow maps have a big hole in them on the South Kildare/Carlow border, exactly where I live.
MrMischief wrote: » I went out and cleaned the windows believe it or now - 5 mins later back again.
Paully D wrote: » TV stations etc now starting to go. Hi Emma.
acronym Chilli wrote: » What infrastructure really though? To keep cars and transport moving on the roads the main thing is to mandate winter tyres say Oct to April. Those are generally better than summer tyres even in just cold wet weather. There are also credible four season tyres that would be legit in Germany/Canada as winter tyres (e.g. I have Michelin Cross Climates, have had Hankook Optimieren 4S too and they were good). I'm not out driving though as I know almost nobody else has proper tyres for the conditions. Long run, the extra cost is just an extra set of steel rims. No extra tyre cost since you spread the wear across two sets of tyres. To keep footpaths clear, each house needs a brush and a snow shovel. In German towns you are responsible to shovel a track in front of your house wide enough for pedestrian to pass. With flats/apartments there's a rota so depending on luck someone gets job to shovel. If you don't do it there's a first e since now the council has to clear paths. We've invested already in some ploughing and salt/grit plant. However, many parts of Germany don't get much more snow than we do but manage fine (e.g. NRW, definitely not every year that e.g . Münster has heavy snow, and many roads are not ploughed when it does happen).