You may have seen these photos. If you live in the US, you have because they made national news, but if you don't live in the US, well, here's what our last few days have looked like.
The COLD arctic air coming in from Canada over the not yet frozen Great Lakes produces this. This photo was from yesterday, Monday. The air was arctic, the wind very strong, the snow light enough to blow around.
It took eight hours to clean this up. The schools in the western half of Michigan were all closed so they bussed people from this mess to a nearby high school to get them out of their cars and warm, then tow truck drivers played a game of pick up sticks for eight hours untangling the mess. In addition to the snow, it was/is brutally cold. Brutal.
This isn't normal, this is not ABnormal. It happens more on roads in snow belts, areas where the snow just hits differently. It happens close to the lakeshore with high winds. It happens when you get high winds and snow so light it's like dust and causes white outs where you can't see past your windshield. And it happens when you insist on driving dry July road speeds. People do. Luckily, in this, no one was killed.
We heeded the pleas and stayed home. No errand or even job is worth this.


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