Musefan wrote: » Management company cleared the road and behind cars so we could get out, but it was a tight squeeze and we cleared a bit more from around our car and ferried it away to the grass where it wouldn't get in the way. The neighbour pulled his car out there and just kicked all the snow on his side over behind our car so he could get out :mad:
samih wrote: » So more importantly did your husband agree that there was sufficient amount of snow in the past week to lose that 5 yoyo bet?
Musefan wrote: » Yup! I've been flashing the cash :P
cnocbui wrote: » Is Oak Park a bunch of houses next an entrance to Phoenix Park?
patneve2 wrote: » 99% of snow has thawed here, just a few patches here and there in sheltered areas. Wonder when I will see 20cm of snow here again ...
gerrybhoy wrote: » another cold blast?
gozunda wrote: » I would like to nominate this memorable snowfall/ cold event with its own unique name. I propose - The Big Freeze of 2018 How that sound?
seamus wrote: » Yeah, definitely a "different worlds" thing going on here. Drove from D16 where there were still foot-high drifts blocking paths and lining the roads, out to Blackrock where there are just a few small patches of stuff here and there. Even hearing locals in the shop at lunch talking about how it was "all a bit overblown" and "there was no need to shut the whole country down". Meanwhile yesterday morning it took my wife 90 minutes to walk the 3km roundtrip to a pharmacy. Kind of mad how people's experiences differed so widely despite only being a few KM apart.
Charles Babbage wrote: » Notably, it hardly froze at all. Temperatures were usually close to zero, hence the difference between Blackrock and D16 mentioned, one degree warmer in Blackrock made a difference. In 2010 base temps were much lower and so a degree warmer at the coast was still well below freezing.
gozunda wrote: » Interestingly when much of the rest of the country was getting snow for the first 2 days - it froze fairly hard here. Getting down to -8c. The snow only arrivedd the night that Storm Emma was predicted to make landfall. From Monday 26th thru to Thursday was this first time sincec 2010 that it was noticeable with the cold actually radiating from the ground up during the day. Daytime temps were just about clearing freezing with little if any thaw until Sunday. That said I am @ 130 m asl and close to the Galtees. Anyways I suggested of the top of me head "The Big Freeze of 2018" If you have another suggestion - call it out
Nettle Soup wrote: » Is the local graveyard on a height with an east facing slope?
wakka12 wrote: » Id say the big snow would be more accurate!
sryanbruen wrote: » Again, very original. :rolleyes:https://www.google.ie/search?q=the+big+snow+of+january+1982&oq=the+big+snow+of+january+1982&aqs=chrome..69i57j69i60l4j69i59.9173j0j4&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8
gozunda wrote: » Sryan - Do you have a good suggestion? We have to call it something cap'n!!
Cork Boy 53 wrote: » That would be slush. Are the roads clear now? ME are forecasting sharp frost for tonight and those footpaths will much worse. There is still an orange warning in place for Leinster until at least tomorrow morning.
Cork Boy 53 wrote: » I see Leo has stated today that people may be found dead in their homes as a result of the severe weather conditions.http://www.msn.com/en-ie/news/newsireland/leo-varadkar-we-may-find-people-dead-in-their-homes-in-the-coming-days/ar-BBJSee1?li=BBr5KbJ
sryanbruen wrote: » Bread Crisis of 2018