Will see how long it takes me to get home just left Loveland in the GPS is saying between four and five hours pretty sweet
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Will see how long it takes me to get home just left Loveland in the GPS is saying between four and five hours pretty sweet
Full closure being implemented. No tows up there, wrecks, off the roads, injuries, jacknifes. Can't get ambi's up the pass. Nuking, and no CDOT support. Fun times.
The can't even find staff to get the closures up.
http://www.broadcastify.com/listen/feed/1008/web/?rl=rr
Worth it to go 285 or is that asking for trouble
How the fuck does CDOT get caught with their pants down again?! Is it snowing that hard?
2-3 in per hour at my place. Wondering how big the shitshow will grow once they do release traffic.
I pulled the plug. I'll just crash down here and go home early in the morning. Thanks to Makers for the report.
Thanks but I'm all set for tonigjt. I do love tap beer though!
Oh ok, so it is heavy up there. I guess the cold air pushed west after all?
wow, Dowd Junction was gnarly from about 2-4pm. Several people had gotten out of their cars and were walking on the open interstate right at the overpass. W.T.F. Doesn't help they've been doing construction on that 1.5 mile section. That damn fiber line they are laying better be available to the public in the future.
The rapid switch from 60s and sunny to 20s and snowing is basically worst case scenario. Liquid mag chloride would get washed away before it froze, and it started to freeze up hard just before rush hour. Ice slicer might've worked but I don't know how that lasts in the conditions we had today.
I'm planning to get in to work absurdly early tomorrow, as I'm not expecting much improvement overnight. The cost of dumping ice slicer everywhere pales in comparison to the economic damage that we're seeing tonight. Let's hope CDOT maintenance gets after it tonight, but I'm not optimistic.
She's all yours this winter.
I'll be singing the highway 50 and 160 blues this season!
Ya ya, I70 blows, but are there any domestic or international major highways that operate in similar conditions? Only outside state experience is I80 to Park City and that's a breeze.
Let's face it. You've got a 50 mile section of highway between Georgetown and Vail with very steep grades, lows of twists and turns and two summits to cross that get ~400"+ of snow. It's pretty fucking legit. Even if CDOT crushed it, how efficient can it be really be?
Came back from Grand Junction this afternoon. Total chaos starting at Avon. Got stopped by a plow guy on hwy 6 so I ask him if 24 is open. He gives me the "gee never thought of that" look. Gets on his radio, all's well. Went through Leadville, took an extra hour but I was home before dark. Second time I've had to do that in three trips west. It isn't the weather it's the morons.
^^^ that's a good point. I've never been on the highways to Tahoe or in Utah or WA during big snows...how is that handled other than chains for all vehicles? Are there drivers who know what they're doing?
^ Oi! You're on to something. That or a tunnel from Morrison to Keystone.
I80 Utah has chain laws during storms, but Parleys Canyon is pretty easy.
I80 CA has had chains laws through the Sierra, not sure about I90 in WA.
FINES.....HEAVY Fines if you get stuck or are in accident with bad tires....like 1k dollars
I have no idea what was going on at Dowd, or at the Tunnel, which also had a 3 hour closure, but it wasn't like this was a +12" storm. Shouldn't they be able to handle this with plowing and de-icing? Why has travel gotten so bad in the past couple of years? I don't remember so many closures so often like this 3+ years ago. I have a feeling I'll be a Loveland A LOT this season during powder days, which isn't such a bad thing ;)
^^^ is it CDOT that enforces chain laws and could create one for all vehicles, or is it CO state patrol?
I agree, let's do something (even if it goes for naught).
Me thinks CDOT would do the signs and decide how, when, and where for the chains 4wd.
Patrol would have to do the enforcement. Suppose they would work together somehow, and already are.
Anyways, just sent an E-MAIL TO CDOT !
You guys are barking up the wrong trees 87% of the time...
It is pretty comical.
I'll just write to Obama. Keep 70 open and fund my cat days too.
A bus line would be pretty cheap. Run 'em from the Dino lots to Loveland and WP to see if they take. I like the lifted party bus idea ;).
http://i.ytimg.com/vi/xf0eGmEMtSg/maxresdefault.jpg
It's drivers and their cars
I'm the first one to shit all over cdot for being a worthless poorly run and funded organization but its drivers who are unprepared for the conditions
whats the first thing some clown does when he moves to colorado they go buy an suv because they need that for all the "mountain driving" they are going to do from highlands ranch to lafayette yet they have no real practical knowledge of driving in ice and snow, how many days a year does the front range have shitty roads on average? not many
last night the roads were empty so I rallied big time at forty miles an hr I slamed on the brakes got the car sideways, spun out in rwd, pretty much had a good time getting as squirlly as I could, each time I got out of control I worked to get it back in control, how many drivers go out and do that, you got thousands of drivers who don't know what to do other than slam on the brakes when they start loosing control, no one has any skills
two vail fire trucks got assholed by drivers last winter a state patrol car got assholed yesterday, who the fuck doesn't see flashing lights and slow down and yeild? it's become a major safety issue for the people trying to respond to accidents and clear the highway so the easiest thing is to shut it down and protect those people from bad drivers
Question from someone new to the area: when Vail Pass gets closed, how long does it typically remain closed for, how long can it remain closed for, and will it stay closed all night if it is absolutely chucking down snow?
Living in Silverthorne and just starting to think about logistics of what i'll do if I get stuck in Vail...
It isn't CDOT's fault, the road was closed because of accidents, not because of conditions. Drivers could not handle conditions because of their shitty tires and/ or driving skills.
It doesn't take a rocket surgeon to figure out that when it drops 40ºF in an hour and starts dumping snow, you are going to have an ice rink no matter how much mag chloride you dump out there.
https://fbcdn-sphotos-d-a.akamaihd.n...adbcde145336a1
I wouldn't call it an "accident" when truckers ignore chain restrictions and then smash in to a bunch of shit.
Dumbassident?
I agree that it's the road and the drivers. 70 is a really tough stretch of road. People certainly don't give it the respect it deserves. People think "I drove in snow everyday on Chicago or Indy or wherever ". But it's just such a different animal. Good tires and slow down would stop a lot of accidents. Also strongly agree the fine for the rigs that don't chain up should be ALOT higher. Make em feel the pain!
The fine for disobeying the chain law and blocking the highway is currently $1000, FYI.
http://www.cotrip.org/truckers.htm
As bad as cdot is, drivers really are the problem. So few actually try and learn anything about driving in the snow. If even half of the idiots driving their SVU's up I70 went and "practiced" like you (and I imagine most here on TGR have) did, mountain roads would be infinitely safer.
Better chain laws and fine for bad tires would help, but until the culture about winter weather driving changes I70 will always be a shit show.
EDIT: Also, nothing is going to stop dumbass truckers from ignoring chain laws. Dipshits gunna dipshit and that will never change.