Wheres Me Jumper? wrote: » its ok to admit your argument is empty. just 'cos you panic over a few inches of snow, doesn't mean we all have to. i was in the local Polish shop earlier, and we all had a great laugh about the Irish reaction to snow. i explained to the girls it was mainly a Dublin thing.
Charlie19 wrote: » Oh dear.https://twitter.com/GardaTraffic/status/969529183503355904?s=19
facehugger99 wrote: » http://www.bbc.com/ Says it all. No mention of the weather until the story about Ireland shutting down - embarrassing.
Collie D wrote: » Is it just this part of the country (NE Dublin) that seems to be getting the worst of the last 48 hours now? Thought it would be starting to ease by now
Franz Von Peppercorn wrote: » Ireland has rarely seen snow like this. Anyway I doubt you’ve ever left your parish. The bitterist Irish people about Ireland never leave, but live their miserable little lives in some village somewhere whining about de Dublin gubbrrmint
facehugger99 wrote: » You need to broaden your life experiences. Travel a bit. Experience life outside the narrow parochialism of your home turf. It would do you good - toughen you up a bit.
mdwexford wrote: » There's always a few muppets pretending it's no big deal. I've never seen snow like this in my life. It's like something out of a disaster movie. Knee deep at a minimum everywhere around me, some cars completely covered. It's been coming down for about 28 hours now with no let up.
optogirl wrote: » not everybody puts store in appearing 'tough'.
Wheres Me Jumper? wrote: » ' i'm not disagreeing with the presence of snow (i actually had to shovel some earlier you know!!!:eek:), just our girly, hysterical, Dublin-centric, woosie reaction to it.
paleoperson wrote: » Temperatures dropped to a whopping minus 4 in a lot of places. :rolleyes: Really smashing records there. The entire thing could have been summarized by this: "Snow expected near the end of the week, as usual with freezing temperatures best stay at home Thursday and Friday unless you have a clear route". It's not even cold. We're getting that "cold Siberian air", but even though it's cold it's a lot drier, so it feels much better. We keep getting screwed in Ireland by high humidity air that's fairly cold, and then people think we're weenies because we're complaining about 5 degrees. Maybe it's the fact that they were actually able to predict the freezing weather a few days in advance is part of why they got so excited over it.
mdwexford wrote: » I've never seen snow like this in my life. It's like something out of a disaster movie.
facehugger99 wrote: » The UK haven't closed down their country because they have a bit of backbone. They faced down the Germans twice while we cowered in their shadow. A couple of inches of snow are going to see them closing down schools and public transport for a few days. Listening to our politicians telling is to stay indoors in case someone has a boo-boo is cringe-inducing.
misstearheus wrote: » So what can one do to optimally ensure the pipes don't freeze and how bad do things have to get for them to actually go?!?