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Todd Watson

The Snowstorm From Hades

Written by Todd Watson
2/8/2013 4 comments
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For those of you in the Northeast, I feel for you.

The coming snowstorm sounds like a monster and reminds me of my first big storm when I was living in the New York area, the "Blizzard of 1996."

If memory serves, it really kicked in on Sunday, Jan. 7. I was living in the White Plains area and had walked down to a local bar so I could watch a Dallas Cowboys football game on the TV there.

I remember the snow starting to fall in the first half. By the end of the game, snow completely covered the sidewalk outside.

I walked home through the snow, and it was still coming down pretty consistently and pretty heavily.

I had no idea.

When I awakened the next morning, I looked outside, and snow was piled up halfway up the door of a car parked across the street.

I was speechless. Growing up in north Texas, it was a huge deal to ever see any snow. To see it fall like there was an endless supply... well, I couldn't quite believe what I was seeing.

New York City had pretty much shut down. Before it was all over, they were dumping snow into the Hudson River, as there was nowhere else to put it.

IBM offices were closed on Monday, and I think Tuesday, that week, but I remember being able to work from home through a phone line. Yes, a phone line. You know, with a modem. Where you dialed up to your server and got that really annoying connecting noise when the modem finally coupled.

I can still hear that sound today, 17 years later, like it was yesterday.

My recommendation to my friends in New York, Boston, and in between: Run to the store, buy yourself plenty of food and water, a bottle of whiskey, some candles, and batteries, and just hibernate.

If it's good enough for bears, it's good enough for we humans, especially in a major snowstorm. Sounds like a perfectly good opportunity to read that latest book you've been putting off.

Oh, that, and make sure you go out and play in the snow. You don't want to let all that white stuff go to waste.

P.S. I'm expecting to fly up to New York City on Monday for a business trip, so I'd appreciate you all clearing the runways at JFK sometime over the weekend. 'Kay, thanks!

Channel: Environment
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Kim Davis
Thinkernetter
Friday February 22, 2013 4:56:57 PM
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Despite the excitement, we've surely had much less snow in NYC this winter than usual.

Joanne Goldman
Thinkernetter
Sunday February 17, 2013 6:40:14 PM
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Todd, Nemo hit Long Island faster and more severely than predicted.  Anyone with a mobile app for current weather alerts would have faired better than those with only half an ear to the updates.  Original predictions, as late as 2:00 pm, had the heaviest snow coming at about 6:00 pm.  In reality, it started coming down heavy at 4:00 pm.  Alerts with timely news probably saved lots of people from getting caught in the worst of it.

Todd Watson
Thinkernetter
Sunday February 17, 2013 2:25:59 PM
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Joanne, yes, NYC definitely missed the brunt of Nemo.  In fact, the weather was pretty pleasant most of the week.  Friday afternoon was darn near spring like in NYC.  But by today (Sunday), it was back down in the 20s, the wind was blowing, and I'm ready to get back on that plane to Austin!

Joanne Goldman
Thinkernetter
Tuesday February 12, 2013 8:58:18 PM
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By now, Todd, you're in the New York area, and the storm has passed.  The record-breaking levels of snow left many at home for more days than expected.  Not as many lost power as was anticipated, thanks to lower than anticipated wind gusts.  Perhaps Sandy knocked down so many of the trees, that Nemo couldn't find as many to break power lines.

I spent most of the storm glued to the good, old-fashioned television, with my trusty iPad by my side.  I wonder how many people, huddled together in their homes, reached for similar devices, not to mention mobile devices, laptops and the like.  As bad as the storm was, it would have been unbearable without the technology that keeps us connected on snowy nights in February.

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