The cold spell (if you live in the north) / deep freeze (south of the M25) has certainly made work interesting and not just a little complicated. What is most of note, however, seems to be people’s attitudes to the problems that this weather brings.
On Monday, the big ‘back to work’ day, everyone set off with good intentions, except for the Council Managers that decide when to send gritters out, who were still tucked up in bed with a great smirk on their smug faces. The inevitable happened and everyone got stuck. At work we decided it was pointless trying to compete with that lot, and concentrated on the more local collections instead. This provided problems of its own, and a string of accidents and blockages meant that road after road was closed as the day progressed. One of our artics made it to Doncaster without problems, but took four hours to get back after the A1 was shut due to an accident. Another went to a car dealer who had best not be named for obvious reasons (Worksop), but after being stuck in traffic for 3 hours, turned round and headed for base. This took another four hours, as the aforementioned A1 was closed. So imagine how pleased we were to find out that the staff at the branch were so worried about their ability to drive 2 miles to their homes that they had simply come in, had a coffee and voted to go home. In their haste it didn’t occur to anyone to telephone us and say, “We can’t be bothered to do any work today; we’re going home. Don’t send a truck.”
The rest of the week was actually quite pleasant, because a great many people saw the snow as an ideal opportunity to extend their Christmas holiday. Of course, some areas are well and truly snowed in, particularly rural and remote locations. But if you watch the TV News, it is these people who tend to get stuck in and deal with it as best they can. Life tends to go on in the countryside, more inconveniently and uncomfortably, but it carries on nonetheless. These are the people who drive 4X4’s because they need them, and not because they look flash on the school run. On the rare occasion that the school is actually open, of course.
You won't catch me trudging through six feet of snow like humans.
Turn to the large urban conurbations, and a lot of people look out of their window, see an inch of snow on the roof of the Volvo and call in sick. They have absolutely no idea what to do, so do nothing instead. It tends to be the people who work in nice big shiny glass and steel offices (and schools, of course) who don’t bother going to work, because I’ve noticed that shop staff, postmen, delivery drivers, dustbin men (oops, environmentally aware recycling global saviours), bus drivers and factory workers all manage to struggle it in to work, presumably because they’re employed in a job where they actually serve a purpose. On the Jeremy Vine Show (Radio 2, Weekdays at Midday) there was a story about a girl in her mid 20’s who works as a restaurant supervisor in Consett, County Durham. She couldn’t get her car out to drive 15 miles to work, so set off at 6:30 in the morning and walked instead. You have to admire determination and a work ethic like that. Especially as it’s so rare these days.
When it comes to driving in snow, incompetence takes on a whole new meaning. Idiots who make no allowances for the weather are especially annoying. Their sole concession to an overnight snowfall is to wipe a small patch of snow off the windscreen and set off with no vision and obscured headlights. They hunch over the steering wheel, staring through the letterbox with no side or rear vision. They brake too rapidly when they finally glimpse a stationary car ahead of them, so the two-foot of snow on the roof then slides over their letterbox view of the world. Blinded, they crash. I’ve lost count of the number of shunts I’ve seen this week, caused by this stupidity.
Coming up after the break - the insurance claim
One issue that requires clarification came to light on the Jeremy Vine Show when the weather was being discussed on a phone in. Some idiot – probably a stay-at-home hedge fund manager who ‘couldn’t ‘ get his Audi A6 to the shiny glass and chrome office that employs him - wanted to know why all the lorries were setting off on journeys in such difficult circumstances, and then getting stuck. Well, my son, how do you think your ciabattas and pastrami slices end up in your local Waitrose then? Are mocha lattes and Sauvignon Blanc delivered by levitation and mind control? No, they arrive on the back of a Scania in conditions like this, so that you can stay at home, put your feet up with your Sky+ box before relaxing after your hard day in your Jacuzzi. I did text in a comment to the JV show, but Jezza didn’t read it out. I think the batteries in the bleep machine didn’t have enough charge.
We go further so you don't have to. And what thanks do we get?
The A3 fiasco, where hundreds of motorists were trapped overnight in their cars, was a simple case of a lack of forward planning and southern arrogance. Does that sound like a generalised sweeping statement? Well, consider this. Everyone had seen on TV and in the papers the feeding frenzy that the media has had about snow in t’north. Dire warnings about heavy snowfalls across the south were given out by weather-guessers (sorry, forecasters) on every news bulletin – yet how did people respond? By carrying on as normal, because it wouldn’t happen to them. Well, it did, and when TV reporters interviewed these people who’d spent the night trapped in their cars, none of them carried a winter kit in their vehicle – no flasks, no shovels, no sand or grit, no towrope, no extra clothing – nee nowt. That says it all really. They did have laptops and copies of Heat! magazine, though, which is just great –“I lost one foot and two fingers through frostbite but it doesn’t matter because I caught up on the 2009 Fiscal Strategy Report and I know who’s in the Big Brother house this season.” Oh, well as long as you've got your priorities sorted out, that's fine, then.
After this, of course, the mood of the country changed course and an unofficial national holiday was declared – a sort of general strike by the middle classes who were too afraid to venture out onto the now cleared main roads. As a result, work has been a pleasure – well, the driving around bit has. The roads from Durham in the north to Peterborough in the deep south (we don’t cross the equator located at the M25) have been clear of traffic, as around ¾ of the population are not using them. East to west has been fine, as we’ve done collections from Hull to Liverpool, and met few problems. Of course almost every school is shut in urban areas, but those in more remote and snowy places have managed to stay open. I don’t get it either. The three highest schools (as in feet above sea-level as opposed to Gordon’s all important league tables) in Yorkshire all managed to open up in around 10 feet of snow, while those in cities with a smattering on the playgrounds shut their doors. Not that school closures surprise me, I know of one school in the North-East that closes if it’s cloudy. Still, I can’t complain, because with all the yummy mummies and daddies staying at home, driving around cities is so much easier without these motorists clogging up streets with their non-essential twice-daily two-mile round trips anyway.
Generally, any issues we’ve come across have been localised and either caused by accidents or inconsiderate idiots, such as at Rochdale. Two of us went up on Friday, and took one of the lads from the yard as backup as we expected problems with the cars, and an extra pair of hands would be handy. We had a lovely clear run on the almost empty M62. On arrival at the car dealership, we found a BMW 318 dumped right in the middle of the lorry turning circle. Requests to the uninterested staff elicited no help or response, so we held what I believe is known as a Crisis Meeting to work out a plan. It was a very short meeting, as we didn’t have a PowerPoint presentation, whiteboard, coffee break, group role-play session and post-meeting appraisal before retiring to the watercooler for some pushing-the-envelope and blue sky thinking in order to arrive at no decision whatsoever following 7 hours of bollocks. Presumably this is the reason why so many companies have decided that they don’t need to open this week, because they don’t actually accomplish anything anyway. Shame that the bankers hadn’t stayed at home last year.
While we were deciding on our plan of action, another car drove in and parked right in the turning circle. When we remonstrated with the driver, his loud American wife began mouthing off that they couldn’t possibly get into the car park (15 yards beyond the turning circle) because it was too far, and in any case we were blocking the entrance to it. At which point a Kia Sedonna drove past our truck and entered the carpark without any problems at all. Mrs Gobshite wouldn’t accept that as a valid reason to move though, because she was now parked and that was that. Trying to explain the basic facts of life to an American is impossible; with their self-assured arrogance they only cotton on to things after the event, as airline passengers know only too well. “Did you pack this bomb yourself sir? Gee, that’s just fine and dandy; be sure to have a nice day and if I can be totally patronising and in any way annoying, you go right ahead and jus’ call me d’ya hear?”
We told them that they could do whatever they pleased (in a kind and politically correct manner, of course) and off they went with the woman grating non-stop whilst leading her presumably mute husband (or maybe he just gave up speaking years ago, realising that there’s just no point). I could still hear her several hours later halfway down the A1. You have to make allowances, I suppose – we’re talking about the nation who thought that Dubya Bush would make a great world leader. Twice.
The decision was made to take the artic through the carpark and turn it round at the end on a bit of snow covered waste ground. Guess what happened next? Shovelling the bugger out took an hour – it would have been quicker but some thoughtful, considerate person had stolen the bag of grit off the trailer at the previous night’s auction. I was driving the rigid Atego and didn’t fancy going down that route, so instead turned the truck round in a nearby gateway – and that’s all I’m saying on the matter.
Loading the cars had all the usual car loading problems – first scrape off the snow simply to identify them. Try and get in – through doors, tailgates, boots – anything that would actually open. Then get the 10% that would start running, followed by jump-starting the rest. The non-runner was a nightmare – the nominated tow-car was a Peugeot 206 as it was the most reliable of the bunch that had a towing hook – and that’s saying something for a Peugeot. They hardly ever start, because in order to save money Peugeot fit them with batteries out of smoke alarms. The Pug tried its best, which predictably wasn’t much, but all the snow just caused the wheels to keep spinning and the clutch to start smoking and smell like a Gauloise cigarette, which added a nice touch of French authenticity to the situation. But it didn’t budge the non-running Renault (a non-runner Renault – surely not! What a surprise!) The only option was to push-and-pull with a Citroen Saxo. We chose the Saxo because it’s named after salt, so we thought that it would have more grip than other cars. The Saxo rammed the Clio, at which point the Pug was floored to give it some forward motion to jerk the Clio forwards. Then ram it up the backside again with the Saxo; repeat until the Renault was freed or reduced to scrap. Although it could be argued that all Renaults are pretty much ready for the scrapyard as soon as they leave the production line. In this manner the Clio was transported to the back of my truck, where it was winched aboard. I felt as though I’d just been on the dodgems. With the cars on board they could be strapped down – while doing this, the snow on the cars on the top deck slides off and lands on your head before sliding down your back as you work underneath them. That’s fun.
All of this had taken several hours; there wasn’t even time to cook up a sausage-and-egg butty on the Peugeot’s smoking clutch before we decided to get going in case we hit trouble on the way back. Which for once, we didn’t – and how often can you say that about a trip on the M62 and A1 on a Friday afternoon?
Oh well, before you know it, it’ll all be over and Gordon Brown will be introducing a whole new range of taxes to combat global warming.
Great Post...classic Grumpage! I was amazed at the number of Range Rovers and BMW 4x4's abandoned off the road on my (car)run up to Aberdeen for Xmas. On the last truck run, conditions were pretty bad on Beattock and Shap- I had the mill in low the whole run up, and down until Tebay. Yet idiots were driving in the fast lane with snow on the ground, pushing seventy. One wonders...have they even passed their test?
ReplyDeleteAgree with your sentiments regarding Renaults.
I've been studying this, and the attitude seems to be that as long as you've got your fog lights on, speed isn't an issue in snow. This is the rule on the A46, where I was stuck for one hour after car after car went whizzing by in the slush covered outside lane - it was only a matter of time till they started dancing on ice. I like the term 'classic Grumpage' - excellent! Even by Tuesday I'd really had enough, but decided to save it all up for one big rant.
ReplyDeleteNow we've got a whole new week to look forward to ...