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squinty wrote:Safety isn't a lever on a gun, a guard on a knife or any other mechanical device. Safety is a behavior.
Doctor Jest wrote:I am hoping that shoveling the snow off the roof over top of the gutters will allow what little sunshine there is to melt the ice, though the temp is still well below freezing.
PistolPete wrote:Locked, but left here as an example why the PAW will suck beyond imagination. You people can't even get along when there isn't stress and starvation. Imagine what a bunch of raving lunatics you'll be when you have to skip a couple meals and wipe with the Sears catalog.

Doctor Jest wrote:Yeah, I read that earlier in the thread, but the idea bothers me. I know salt can damage concrete. I just had a new roof installed this past summer, and it cost me about 6 grand. I'd be really hesitant to toss salt or CaCl up there unless I was sure it would not damage the shingles.
But I do feel better that I got some of that off the roof. Hopefully you're right and a little sunshine will help with the ice.
Shoveling the driveway has gotten to be a daily ritual, and my back is beginning to resent it.
PistolPete wrote:Locked, but left here as an example why the PAW will suck beyond imagination. You people can't even get along when there isn't stress and starvation. Imagine what a bunch of raving lunatics you'll be when you have to skip a couple meals and wipe with the Sears catalog.

Doctor Jest wrote:I saw a method dealing with this on a local news station's web site. they suggested filling socks with calcium chloride aand placing them in teh gutters (before the snow, I would think). Anyway, here is the link:
http://www.thepittsburghchannel.com/wea ... etail.html
ZombieGranny wrote:ozwyn, might try a fondue pot.
It'll heat up things, and probably not be considered a stove by anyone.
Around here, you can get them for $3 - $4 at the used store, and $15 - $20 new.
CLEAR CUT wrote:I eat hot food because I dig pain and it's far cheaper than paying a dominatrix to kick me in the balls repeatedly.
Necrodamus wrote:Dont put yourself in a situation that is going to put you in a situation.

Finch wrote:i got some serious "ice daming" in my gutters causing a small leak (really just a water spot)
what a pain. I went out on the latter an cleared about 4 feet of roof up from the gutter that did the trick. Lucckally i have a cap cod so its not so high to the gutter.
My new neighbors gutters broke due to the weight they have a "bi-level"
PistolPete wrote:Locked, but left here as an example why the PAW will suck beyond imagination. You people can't even get along when there isn't stress and starvation. Imagine what a bunch of raving lunatics you'll be when you have to skip a couple meals and wipe with the Sears catalog.
MaxRite wrote:BigBossMan wrote:My AR is a precision weapon.
Couldn't agree more. It is a precision weapon. It will jam at the precise moment you need it the most.

CLEAR CUT wrote:I eat hot food because I dig pain and it's far cheaper than paying a dominatrix to kick me in the balls repeatedly.
Necrodamus wrote:Dont put yourself in a situation that is going to put you in a situation.
STRONG WINDS WILL DEVELOP ACROSS THE MID ATLANTIC TONIGHT AND FRIDAY. NORTHWEST WINDS OF 25 TO 35 MPH MAY GUST TO 60 MPH OVERNIGHT AND FRIDAY.
WINDS THIS STRONG WILL CAUSE DANGEROUS TRAVEL CONDITIONS...AND MAY KNOCK DOWN TREES AND POWER LINES.
JoergS wrote:The power of 30 English longbowmen, at your fingertips... sweet.
Vicarious_Lee wrote:I have boners in places I didn't even know I had dicks.![]()
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MaxRite wrote:BigBossMan wrote:My AR is a precision weapon.
Couldn't agree more. It is a precision weapon. It will jam at the precise moment you need it the most.

Feb 28, 1:26 AM EST
Thousands still lack power after Northeast storm
By NORMA LOVE
Associated Press Writers
CONCORD, N.H. (AP) -- Frustration turned to resignation Saturday for hundreds of thousands of people in the Northeast struggling to survive another day waiting for utility crews to restore electricity after powerful storms socked the region with heavy snow, rain and hurricane-force winds.
The region was left to deal with the fallout of gusting winds that created near-blizzard conditions this week in what was the third strong storm this month for some areas. Parts of New York got more than 2 feet of snow while some areas of coastal New England were drenched with flooding rains.
One man was killed by a falling snow-laden tree branch in Central Park in New York City, and two people in Candia, N.H., died in a house fire caused by improperly using a propane heater to stay warm, fire officials said.
The highest wind reported from the storm was 91 mph off the coast of Portsmouth, N.H. - well above hurricane force of 74 mph. Gusts also hit 60 mph or more from the mountains of West Virginia to New York's Long Island and Massachusetts.
Frustration was beginning to show on Charlotte Letteney's face Saturday at Concord High School, one of 24 shelters in New Hampshire. Letteney, 64, of Allenstown, arrived Friday night with her 66-year-old husband, who is a paraplegic, two granddaughters, her grandson-in-law and 6-month-old great-grandson.
The family left their mobile home when the temperature dropped to 46 degrees and Letteney's hands had gone numb, leaving behind four parrots in covered cages and a couple of days' worth of food for their dog, Bosco. They have no car - a city van brought them to the shelter - and no way to get home to feed the animals or to let the dog out.
"He'll go out in the kitchen, and I'll have to sterilize my floor," Letteney said.
The Letteneys are among more than 1 million customers across the Northeast who lost power because of the storm, and as of Saturday afternoon more than half of them were still without electricity. New Hampshire's electrical grid was the hardest hit, with more than a quarter-million customers still without power. New York had more than 160,000 outages and Maine about 67,000.
Some residents were warned they'll be without electricity for up to a week, as uprooted trees and fallen utility poles hindered utility crews.
Bow, N.H., Assistant Fire Chief Dick Pistey compared the situation two years ago during a powerful ice storm when ice quickly coated trees, bringing down tree limbs and power lines, leaving millions without power - some for two weeks.
"It's deja vu all over again," Pistey said.
In Londonderry, N.H., Irene Stanley, 68, was sitting in a rocking chair next to a wood stove to keep warm, her royal blue beta fish in its container nearby. Stanley, who managed without power for nearly two weeks during the ice storm two years ago, said her mission for the day was to buy batteries to keep her radio operating.
In York, Maine, 70-year-old lobsterman Pat White, was able to use his generator to help cook a pancake breakfast Saturday to feed his neighbors who were without power - a father, his daughter and her baby. White and his wife, Enid, were planning what to serve them for dinner.
"We've got to use up some of the stuff in the refrigerator," he said.
Nick Vermette, 49, a safety specialist for Central Maine Power, the state's largest utility, was supervising crews restoring power in Portland on Saturday. He said the 17-hour days are exhausting.
"By the time you drive home take a shower, try to get to sleep, get up and come back, you're averaging four to five hours sleep," he said.
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Associated Press Writer Kathy McCormack contributed to this report.

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