Over The Hill
Guru
- Location
- Ridden off into the sunset
Wife is expecting 8 inches tonight but that is a different story.
Its supposed to be about 16 up your way (inches of snow that isOver The Hill said:Wife is expecting 8 inches tonight but that is a different story.
gavintc said:So the part time school teachers want even more time off. Meanwhile those with children have now to find alternative arrangements to cope with the unexpected kids being at home.
jamesxyz said:Teachers aren't baby sitters - you have children, you have to be expected to look after them!
Parents would be first to complain when their little darlings slipped and broke a limb on the ice ...
wafflycat said:As a kid at school in the 60s & 70s, when lots of snow during the winter was the norm rather than the occasional "Woe! We'll all die!" over-reaction we seem to have these days, I don't recall school being shut due to bad weather. I do remember having the layers of thick clothing, the thick knitted tights, the winter boots, winter coat etc, and we walked to school (more than a mile) through thick snow and on ice-covered paths, did lessons in cold classrooms (ice on the inside of the windows) and had great fun on playgrounds covered in snow and ice making 'slides' and having competitions to see who could slide the furthest on the ice. Snowball fights too.. Teachers came into school - kids went to school and we had lessons.
Are we breeding wimps these days?
Edit: Mind you I did grow up in Northumberland. Obviously we are tougher than the average wimpy southerner![]()
Brave brave manupsidedown said:Rode from Redditch to Shirley at midday today, not surprised the schools were closed.
Young Un said:Well, it's all very well keeping primary schools open, but once you get to high school it's a bit differnet, especially with me going ot a grammar school. I live 6 1/2 miles away, and my mates live up to 20 miles away from the school, do you expect them to walk?
wafflycat said:Funnily enough, back in the 70s when many of my school friends lived that distance, and further, from school (also a grammar school), they still managed to get in when there was significant amounts of snow & ice on the ground. Some walked, some biked, some bussed in. People were *expected* to be able to get in - so they did.