I see all these pics of snow covered decks grills and smokers. This past February we had snow and all the schools shut down and the Walmart, everyone didn’t go to work with total chaos for two straight days, fear of the roadways and have mercy if another snowflake were to fall on what we already had.
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@Mike - LA There's actually a rather significant difference in the snowfalls in the southern US vs. the northern. Yours come down close to the freezing point, we get snow a lot colder. Close to the freezing point, it devolves into an ice layer, and that's nothing but a frictionless plane. The advantage is that in 24-48 hours, it'll all be gone. Hunker down, fire up the smoker, crack a cold one and wait it out. You also don't have the gear to move it (nor could you afford it, either.) And with the steep roads I've observed in TN and GA.... yeah, I ain't gettin' on those, no way, no how. Up here, while it certainly does get slippery, it's no where near as bad as a sheet of ice.
True story: Someone I knew in college grew up in Escanaba, MI, where they got a lot of lake effect snow. Her first job out of college was down in the Dallas Ft. Worth area. The first winter she was down there, she got up one morning, saw a thin layer of snow on the ground, showered, dressed, and headed to the office. It didn't sink in that there was nobody else on her commute, the parking lot was empty, and the building was almost deserted. She'd been working for a couple of hours when a security guard noticed here. "And just what are you doin' here, little lady????" "I came to work." "DIDN'T YOU SEE THE *SNOW*!!!!!" "That? That's barely a dusting, not enough to worry about." Down there, it was. Nobody knew how to drive in it, had the wrong tires,or worse, fully worn out tires.