The one occasion the Surf would have been realy usefull, and I was in a Kia Sedona hire car!
I left Falmouth at 1500hrs yesterday and arrived home at 0510 this morning!
A true example of how poor highway management can be.
The bigest problem was not the fact the road was icy and snow bound, it was the crashes caused by incompetent morons driving with no regard to the conditions.
The Cornish authorities made a real impact on thursday night saying they were anticipating the weather, and had 80 gritting lorries and 21,000 tonnes of grit. Sadly of little use if the road is gridlocked after crashing berks bounce off one-another, the road stops flowing, the gritters cant grit, the road freezes, and more berks crash into one another.
I sat in my nice warm (but horrible) car, watched four films on the laptop, ate my chocolate, biscuits and drank my redbull, pepsimax and water and was in total calm, having prepared for it. Once the gritters and commandeered 4x4s had towed the crashed vehicles clear, the biggest problem was the number of abandoned vehicles in all of the lanes, I counted 78 between Truro and the A38 junction on the A30. The slippery road was turned into a slalom between these thoughtlessly parked vehicles, making a tricky situation far worse.
Were any of you stuck there, giggling hearing how the Army helicopters were rescuing thousands of people from their snowbound vehicles on bbc radio 2?
I saw one helicopter airlifting a fireman from his overturned engine, and the snow was less than 4 inches deep!
Anyone else stuck there?
I left Falmouth at 1500hrs yesterday and arrived home at 0510 this morning!
A true example of how poor highway management can be.
The bigest problem was not the fact the road was icy and snow bound, it was the crashes caused by incompetent morons driving with no regard to the conditions.
The Cornish authorities made a real impact on thursday night saying they were anticipating the weather, and had 80 gritting lorries and 21,000 tonnes of grit. Sadly of little use if the road is gridlocked after crashing berks bounce off one-another, the road stops flowing, the gritters cant grit, the road freezes, and more berks crash into one another.
I sat in my nice warm (but horrible) car, watched four films on the laptop, ate my chocolate, biscuits and drank my redbull, pepsimax and water and was in total calm, having prepared for it. Once the gritters and commandeered 4x4s had towed the crashed vehicles clear, the biggest problem was the number of abandoned vehicles in all of the lanes, I counted 78 between Truro and the A38 junction on the A30. The slippery road was turned into a slalom between these thoughtlessly parked vehicles, making a tricky situation far worse.
Were any of you stuck there, giggling hearing how the Army helicopters were rescuing thousands of people from their snowbound vehicles on bbc radio 2?
I saw one helicopter airlifting a fireman from his overturned engine, and the snow was less than 4 inches deep!
Anyone else stuck there?
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