Yes, yes, yes. We are wimps in Seattle when it comes to snow, but in our defense, we do have some mighty steep hills. Plus it is a pretty rare occurrence, so the city didn't even own snow plows until a few years ago.

But, you've never had such entertainment as walking around Seattle and watching people try to drive when it snows!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qzBdW1OVcWw

On 8/27/12 6:33 PM, James Thiele wrote:
Yeah, when I was a kid in South Dakota we had seven feet of snow one
weekend we only got one day off from school. My dad walked two miles
to work at a TV station that day in snowshoes.

On Mon, Aug 27, 2012 at 4:16 PM, Rohit Patnaik <[email protected]> wrote:
Haha, I know what you mean. Over 7 years of grade school and 4 years of
university in Minnesota, there were exactly 2 days where classes were
canceled due to snow. Both of those were "Snowpocalypse" level catastrophes
where we got multiple feet of snow over a 10 or 12 hour period.

On Mon, Aug 27, 2012 at 1:35 PM, Toby Champion <[email protected]>
wrote:

And a day like that, I learned after moving here from Missouri (lots of
snow, much of the time), is called a "snow day".


On 8/19/12 10:57 PM, Maria McKinley wrote:

Usually once or twice a year. And generally when it does, everything
shuts down and employers are sympathetic to people living on steep hills
(lots of us). I wouldn't worry too much about it. Unless you drive a stick
shift and have to parallel park on said hill every day. ;-)

cheers,
maria

On 8/19/12 10:10 PM, Rohit Patnaik wrote:

One last thing. You've all mentioned that it does occasionally snow
here. Does anyone have a ballpark figure for how often that occurs? The
reason I'm asking is that one of the apartments I'm looking at in
Bellevue is at the top of a rather steep hill. If it snows a lot or ices
up on a regular basis in the winter, my car is definitely going to have
trouble with that slope. Is that something I should be concerned about,
or is it a rare enough occurrence that I shouldn't worry too much about
it?

Thanks again,
Rohit Patnaik

On Tue, Aug 14, 2012 at 9:55 PM, Rohit Patnaik <[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

     Wow, so many good responses from everyone. This thread has
     definitely been useful in helping to reduce the guesswork in
     preparing for winter. Now I'm really looking forward to meeting you
     all in person in September.

     Thanks again,
     Rohit Patnaik


     On Tue, Aug 14, 2012 at 6:52 PM, Mike Orr <[email protected]
     <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

         Randolph:
          > Anything that doesn't get dried will stay wet through the
         winter and, probably start growing mold.

         Keep furniture and boxes an inch away from walls That'll prevent
         trapped moisture and mold from growing behind them.

         According to my friend who's a third-generation Seattlite, in
the
         1950s there were routinely 5' snows every year. I've never seen
more
         than 1', once in the 70s, once in the 80s, then not for a long
time
         until 2008 and 2010 (or give or take a year, whenever the
         snowpocolypses were).Some years it snows for an hour or two and
is
         gone. Some years there's a couple inches on the ground for a
         week, but
         it's always gone in three weeks.  Temperatures hover around 32
         degrees, so it melts in the daytime and refreezes in the evening
and
         causes trecherous ice. That's why there are so many car
         accidents and
         thus why most people stay home when it's on the ground. Seattle
         never
         had snowplows until recently and it still only has a few. Both
         snowpocolypses led to the non-reelection of the mayors, so
         there's now
         a street map and transit map of which streets will be plowed. So
on
         Capitol Hill here, it's Pine Street and Broadway.

         Temperatures may get down to the 20s or 10s for a day or two,
         but not
         for several days. The ocean winds keep the temperature stable.
One
         interesting phenomenon is that the ocean winds drop all their
         rain and
         snow on the west side of the mountain ranges, so the east sides
are
         unusually dry and warm. This occurs on both the Olympics and the
         Cascades and the Bitterroots. Seattle is kind of medium in terms
of
         storms/rain/snow because the winds are partially diverted around
it
         through Everett and I think Olympia-ish.  Portland gets cold
winds
         from the east through the Columbia River Gorge gap in the
Cascades.

         For summers, you're experiencing it. The northwest has been
         described
         as the land of the long Springs and Falls. The sun comes out
         intermittently in late May and becomes more reliable in mid-July
         till
         the end of August. It may last intermittently through September
and
         October up until just before Thanksgiving. So the farmers'
         markets are
         generally open May-November.

         Winters expect rain or clouds most days, with occasional clear
cold
         days that may last for a half-week or a week. In December and
         January
         the sun comes up after 8am and goes down before 5pm, so you're
going
         to work and back in the dark.

         --
         Mike Orr <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>>








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