Back in the mid 1970’s we had a winter like this when I was stationed in New England.
It would snow and then the temperature would drop into the 20s. Then it would warm up just enough to snow again and the temperature would drop again. The weather cycled like this for weeks.
There was about 4 feet of snow covering everything. The only place it seemed to melt was on the eaves of roofs where heat from the walls melted it. On the outside, it looked like a cave with a stalactite of ice coming down. the problem was when this happened over the front step. The system assured that the porch in front was constantly ice covered.
Also, it produced an ice dam on the roof which made the water back up under the shingles.
I haven’t been able to take the Jeep out to play in snow like that in quite some years now. We still get some snow around here in Kansas but nothing like the depth and drifts like we used to. Really starting to miss that.
Is p.j trolling in their pjs? Brazil’s hottest July, August, September and October on record. Second hottest summer in Texas ever. Drought in the remnants of the once vast Amazon jungle. 100 degrees in the ocean off Florida. I don’t even want to know what went down in India; it’s become the poster child for “wet-bulb temperature” as a lethal threat. Welcome to Hell.
Enter.Name.Here 10 months ago
(singing) “There’s NO business like SNOW business like NO business I knooooowwwwwww….”
priyansh.jeziel 10 months ago
Obviously, “man-made gloBULL warming” hasn’t kicked in yet. (Or else there are no MEDIA ‘experts’ around to pontificate on it)
BigDaveGlass 10 months ago
Just under 10 feet down, Should be well insulated then…….
Gent 10 months ago
Ah this must be begin of ice age.
The Orange Mailman 10 months ago
Take the elevator.
My First Premium Member 10 months ago
About 3 meters? What part of the world do you live in?
jagedlo 10 months ago
or about 10 feet…
rockyridge1977 10 months ago
Metric system???….3 shovel lengths!!!!!!
dflak 10 months ago
Back in the mid 1970’s we had a winter like this when I was stationed in New England.
It would snow and then the temperature would drop into the 20s. Then it would warm up just enough to snow again and the temperature would drop again. The weather cycled like this for weeks.
There was about 4 feet of snow covering everything. The only place it seemed to melt was on the eaves of roofs where heat from the walls melted it. On the outside, it looked like a cave with a stalactite of ice coming down. the problem was when this happened over the front step. The system assured that the porch in front was constantly ice covered.
Also, it produced an ice dam on the roof which made the water back up under the shingles.
I wound up shoveling my roof.
rshive 10 months ago
Lots of snow, it would seem.
NRHAWK Premium Member 10 months ago
I haven’t been able to take the Jeep out to play in snow like that in quite some years now. We still get some snow around here in Kansas but nothing like the depth and drifts like we used to. Really starting to miss that.
pabsfx-comics 10 months ago
>
mindjob 10 months ago
They’ve been using the metric system for a long time now
ladykat 10 months ago
You’re going to have a lot of digging to do.
davidlwashburn 10 months ago
So the shovel is how he got out.
Raging Moderate 10 months ago
Cavemen went metric?
R Humble 10 months ago
I doubt the unit of measure cavemen used was metric
David Huie Green LoveJoyAndPeace 10 months ago
It is very good to know they are on the metric system. Would not want to be thought backward.
dpatrickryan Premium Member 10 months ago
Is it just me, or is it a little jarring to see a reference to “metres” in such a very American comic? Though, it is misspelled, so there’s that…
Zebrastripes 10 months ago
Just like flat-Earthers, it’s gotta smack them in the head to believe it!
Keep digging!
gammaguy 10 months ago
At-cave emptier.
Frer Squirrel 10 months ago
Buffalo?
Watchdog 10 months ago
Canada BC
Cerabooge 10 months ago
Is p.j trolling in their pjs? Brazil’s hottest July, August, September and October on record. Second hottest summer in Texas ever. Drought in the remnants of the once vast Amazon jungle. 100 degrees in the ocean off Florida. I don’t even want to know what went down in India; it’s become the poster child for “wet-bulb temperature” as a lethal threat. Welcome to Hell.
tcviii Premium Member 10 months ago
Technically, the meter as a unit of measurement was not invented BC. I think it was in the 1700s.
aussie399 Premium Member 8 months ago
So how did he get up and out?