Sliding down my driveway

Sharon

New member
Saturday night I went out for a social event, and when I got back to my driveway, I drove up nearly to the top (it is a 1000' hill with a 5% grade) and my momentum stopped and my tires would only spin in 2nd gear (AWD Subaru). I tried first gear, no luck. So I put the parking brake on, but began to slide...backwards. No control whatsoever. I'm pumping the parking brake, foot brake. Trying to steer it. I'm accelerating down the hill, backwards. I knew had had to get into the snow bank. Tried to get the car sideways. No control whatsoever. I slide more than 50' before the front wheels lodged in the snow, turning the car sideways. phewww! Very scarey moments. My heart was pounding out of my chest. I called Bubba and he said he would come down with his Jeep with the winch to pull me up the driveway.

Suddenly I realized that he would probably come down the driveway the same way I slid and he would slide right into my car. So I got out of my car, only to slip and slide on my hands and knees another 10 feet, clawing at the ice and snow. It was a very wet and slippery ice. Once I got myself to the snowbank, I climbed a tree to get out of the way as he came down the drive to be out of the way in case he crashed. He was thoughtful and kept 2 wheels in the snowbank and did not slide. He was surprised to see me come out of the tree.

He said he would drive back up the driveway to put his chains on, on level ground, but even his Jeep with the big fat tires was going nowhere. He decided to put them on where the vehicle was, but he fell as soon as he got out of the Jeep and began to slide. I'm sure this might have been a funny video. There was no way he would be able to pull my car up that driveway. I told him to forget it tonight and we'll deal with it in the morning.

I made my way in the snowbank up to the top and got the 50lb bucket of salt and began to spread it all over the driveway.

It was warm and windy all night and the salt did the trick. In the morning he drove his Jeep up and down with the chains on to break up the softening ice and I was able to drive my Subaru up the hill.
 
sorry

it was night time and I didn't have my camera anyway

photos would not have done it justice, though a video would have been nice if someone had antipated it happening
 
Hey, I'm just glad you weren't injured.

Saturday we went to friends in a crowded section of town where no one bothers to clean the sidewalks (or streets, for that matter). I parked some distance from their house, and I must have looked comical trying to get down the street, gyrating and windmilling my arms. How I didn't fall is a mystery. At one point my fingers brushed the ice in my attempts stay on my feet! My back was a little sore on Sunday. Thank goodness for yoga, or I'd still be gobbling down ibuprofen!

Tom
 
Tony Crocker":2bmaqbzf said:
Exhibit A of why snow is to play in, not to live in IMHO.
:brick:
I guess that some people might prefer skiing in Snowdomes because of the control elements.

Tony you would fit perfectly with all the negative people at work. Frankontour even mentioned recently on ZS that he hoped the last system (before it totally missed us) would produce snow in the mountain, but rain in Montreal. :roll: #-o :brick:

I blamed him for offending Ullr and not being greatfull about all the snow we had received until then. Instead he was complaining about all the snow in Montreal. Since that comment, it's stopped snowing and we are experience the first real thaw of the season. :evil:
 
I guess that some people might prefer skiing in Snowdomes because of the control elements.
Dealing with difficult weather etc. is an acceptable price for the rewards of skiing. In day-to-day living it's just a nuisance.
 
Tony Crocker":3unfk5px said:
Dealing with difficult weather etc. is an acceptable price for the rewards of skiing. In day-to-day living it's just a nuisance.
I LOVE IT...I AM CANADIAN (insert beer commercial ad here). :snowball fight:
 
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