Zeedman
Garden Master
That surprised me. Down here 1" of snow would shut everything down. We just can't handle it, physically or mentally. Where you are I would have expected you to not even notice a 2" snow as far as traffic accidents in the news.
I learned to drive only after I moved away from Wisconsin, and spent most of my first 20 years of driving in southern California, where snow is a "once in a blue moon" event. When I moved back to Wisconsin (having never driven there) I just assumed that drivers here would be used to the snow, and drive more safely. Nope. The first snow here = accidents everywhere. A Sherriff deputy that I knew told me that is not only due to reckless driving, but that the first snow releases oil from the road surface, making it extra slippery.IT seems around here that people forget how to drive in snow. Ice etc. between winters. Accidents like crazy r=the 1st winter weather event!
But poor judgement & recklessness are the cause of most Winter accidents. A couple years ago a huge pile-up on the highway just outside my job made national news. There had been a heavy snow, and strong winds were blowing snow continuously across the road from an adjacent farm field. It was white-out conditions, but nobody slowed down. They were never able to determine what started it - whether someone stopped within the snow band or spun out - but it caused a chain reaction. People just kept driving blindly into the snow cloud, at full speed. Over 100 cars crashed into the pile up; one person died, there were a lot of serious injuries, and most vehicles were totalled. Between the accident investigation & the extent of the damage (which covered 1/2 mile of the road) it took over a day just to clear the highway.
2019 chain-reaction pileup
I've had a few near misses (due to reckless drivers) but drive very defensively in the snow. One of those was following a snow plow on the highway after a heavy snow, which was throwing up a white-out cloud across all lanes. I followed a safe distance behind at reduced speed; but a car went speeding past me into the cloud, evidently thinking it could pass the plow. A few moments later it re-emerged from the cloud - stopped directly in front of me. I was able to avoid it, and observed the driver falling in behind me at my speed... hopefully a little wiser.