Hey, you could be in Colorado....

3113

Hello Summer!
Joined
Nov 1, 2005
Posts
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White Christmas indeed! :eek:

http://www.latimes.com/media/photo/2006-12/27002313.jpg

http://www.latimes.com/media/photo/2006-12/26983486.jpg

DENVER — A blizzard hammered the high Plains on Wednesday, dumping more than a foot of snow in Colorado, knocking a small plane out of the sky in Wyoming, and shutting airports, schools, malls and hundreds of miles of highway on the brink of one of the busiest travel weekends of the year.

About 1,000 flights were canceled, stranding travelers at Denver International Airport, which shut down for only the third time in 12 years.

"Mother Nature sometimes wins," airport spokesman Chuck Cannon said. "This is not your run-of-the-mill snowstorm."

...

Colorado Gov. Bill Owens declared a state of emergency and called out the state's National Guard, which began patrolling the highways in search of stranded motorists.

The state's main arteries were shut down — nearly all 300 miles of Interstate 25 between the Wyoming and New Mexico state lines was closed, as was 150 miles of Interstate 70 from Denver to Kansas. Elsewhere, I-80 between western Nebraska and Cheyenne, Wyo., was closed.

"There are crashes everywhere," Colorado State Trooper Gilbert Mares said. "People are getting stuck, people are getting stranded, and we're closing roads as fast as we can."

What made the storm particularly disruptive were the high winds screaming down from the Rocky Mountains, scouring the snow-covered Plains and creating whiteout conditions for hundreds of miles.

"The winds are blowing so hard it's basically cutting visibility down to zero," said Bob Wilson, a spokesman for the Colorado Department of Transportation. He said motorists were simply stopping in the middle of highways because they couldn't see out their windshields.

The blizzard shut down the U.S. Postal Service in the Denver area on one of the busiest mail days of the year. Malls, restaurants and boutiques closed by midday as potential Christmas shoppers were trapped inside their houses.

"The positive side is we still have four shopping days before Christmas," said Hugh Crawford, senior property manager at FlatIron Crossing, a mall near Boulder, Colo.

The sprawling storm began rumbling across the Southwest on Tuesday, dumping snow on the mountains of southwestern Colorado and snarling traffic in New Mexico and West Texas. The forecasts became increasingly dire through the day as the heart of the storm pinwheeled northeast toward the densely populated Plains beneath the Front Range of the Rockies.

At Murdoch's Ranch & Home Supply in Cheyenne, customers began to pour in Tuesday afternoon, scooping up horse blankets, coats and de-icers, said cashier Brittany Belford.

"It was just like getting slammed nonstop," she said as customers continued to stream in Wednesday. "And now we've got snow blowing pretty much everywhere."

It's snow that the parched Plains of Colorado desperately needed. Until this week, 2006 was on track to be the driest year since 1872, said Bob Koopmeiners, a National Weather Service forecaster in Boulder.

"It's a good storm for us," he said. "It's got a nice track, and it's perfect for giving us snow."

Anyone here affected by this? Are you okay?
 
I'm sorry Colorado, but please keep your snow on your side of the mountains. :heart:
 
My grandparents live there, but I haven't talked to them. I'm sure they are fine though. My mother would have told me otherwise.

I bet the kids are upset that it didn't happen a few days sooner, lol. I don't know about all of the schools in Colorado, but I know in Longmont the only time they shut down for snow is for 'blizzard conditions'. I would bet that I had maybe 3 'snow days' in the entirety of my school years.
 
Well.... my job dictates that I go where others will not.

I am heading into CO.... if everyone wants their holiday packages sent by different services then I have to drive.

I dislike this holiday... however I know that my trailer is full of packages that mean things to the poeple that sent them and are waiting to recieve them.... so I will go where I am supposed to go and do my job.

CO here I come... only about 10 miles away from the border.... put on your cowboy boots yall its gonna get bumpy.
 
Elizabetht said:
I dislike this holiday... however I know that my trailer is full of packages that mean things to the poeple that sent them and are waiting to recieve them.... so I will go where I am supposed to go and do my job.
Aww. You're like a real life Santa! :rose: Drive safe, Santabeth! Don't eat too many cookies, and give your reindeers some carrots from us.
 
I have lived in CO in the past...I have also lived through several blizzards in and out of CO. It always seemed surreal but fun. If you were stuck, like in an airport, you made new friends. If you were stuck at home, you were set. If you were at work, oh well there's always the floor.

I too have had to work in a white out. I was stationed in CO for four years. I was a cop. We always worked no matter what. The military mission doesn't stop for a little snow. ;)

Y'all be careful out there. :cool:
 
Elizabetht said:
Well.... my job dictates that I go where others will not.

I am heading into CO.... if everyone wants their holiday packages sent by different services then I have to drive.

I dislike this holiday... however I know that my trailer is full of packages that mean things to the poeple that sent them and are waiting to recieve them.... so I will go where I am supposed to go and do my job.

CO here I come... only about 10 miles away from the border.... put on your cowboy boots yall its gonna get bumpy.

I won't tell ya to be careful, 'cause I know you always are, but I will wish you a safe trip. Listen to the angel on your shoulder (and apply plenty of duct tape to the other one's mouth, lol). Thank you, Lizzie, and all the others that make sure the world's packages get to their destination on time and intact. :kiss: :rose:
 
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