Those were the days. Now you would probably lose your license doing the same thing...Back in the early 80's we would go the the mall parking lot after a storm ,and the lot was cleared and empty of cars. To practice "defensive driving". What a great place for donuts, fish tails, skids, ect.
That reminds me of the time I saw a woman at a gas station adding 3 quarts of oil to a brand new car. Usually I just let people do their thing but when she got a 4th quart from the store I had to ask. She said the salesman told her to check the oil every so often because it could burn some during break in. Sounds like solid advice. She pulled the dipstick out and showed me that the oil was only half full. Meaning half way up the dipstick!When I was 16 years old the next door neighbor’s wife was stuck in the driveway. She was just learning to drive as her husband had Parkinson’s and this was her first winter. I could hear her spinning the tires so I thought I would go give her some help. When I got there she was sprinkling some ashes under the front tires of her two wheel drive car. I asked her why the front tires and she replied that the back ones were turning just fine but the front ones were not. I stood there stunned and tried not to laugh. Then she proceeded to get in the car, put it in reverse and backed right out!
They were still teaching that in drivers ed in Middlebury VT in 91'. If it was our driving block, then we drove. Didn't matter what the weather was doing.
Au contrairé, sir! They are still available here! They are highly spoken of in a couple of automotive forums I have inhabited.They were actually winter spec. retreads with bits of cork embeded in the rubber. As the tire wore the cork pieces were lost leaving the rubber full of tiny dimples in the aggressive tread. Those things were so much better traction than anything made since that I continued to buy and use them exclusively on my F150 plow truck well into the late 80”s. They are not made now and retreads have all but died out anyway.
I wish more people up here would learn this!After that I got serious about 4wd and/or chains in those conditions.
I can not tell you how many times me and my two wheel drive pickup went to the scene to find a 4x4 truck or jeep well off the road. Drivers would bitch that these roads are terrible. I'd have to tell them that there are a bunch of two wheel drive vehicles with blue lights that made it to the accident just fine.I wish more people up here would learn this!
It ain't just a "North East" phenomenon 1 snowflake and people forget how to driveWhat I find crazy living in the Northeast is that a large portion of our population completely forgets how to drive in the snow from one year to the next. The first few snow storms of the year are a guaranteed $h!tshow on the roadways here.
You could add rain drop to that…it’s not just snow.It ain't just a "North East" phenomenon 1 snowflake and people forget how to drive
When I was in college back in the early 1960s one of my roommates was from Montreal. He asked me if I would drive him home for a weekend, and I said yes. I can remember this like it was yesterday, when the snow started falling we were just entering the area around McGill University and had to go up a steep hill to get to where he lived. I couldn't believe that the people of Montreal didn't know how to drive in the snow! I had no problem getting up the hill but I had to drive around the cars that were stuck. I did have about 200 pounds of sand in the trunk, and snow tires. He was amazed that I could drive in the snow as well as I did that day. To me, it was a natural occurrence that I learned to drive in the snow. I don't believe that the people in the Northeast forget how to drive in snow, I believe that they never learned how to drive in snow!What I find crazy living in the Northeast is that a large portion of our population completely forgets how to drive in the snow from one year to the next. The first few snow storms of the year are a guaranteed $h!tshow on the roadways here.