Hillman314

Hillman314 t1_j6fs591 wrote

No. Strollers are usually plastic or rubber tires. It won’t hurt ice. People use chairs, milk crates and metal stands for support when learning.

Hint: The only way to go forward is to step side to side, pushing sideways with the blade. Otherwise there’s no traction. Forward is just the average of going side to side. Good luck.

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Hillman314 t1_j3m5x02 wrote

Chains on your corvette will be enough. After you put them on your corvette you will definitely say: “This is more than enough!” In rural areas, your loose dogs will be taken care of by the neighbors so well it will be like they’re not even there anymore. Good luck in your search for that isolated acreage next to the night life and Mexican/Asian fusion restraints! That should narrow your search area down quit a bit.

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Hillman314 t1_iwvh1pb wrote

It’s for people who don’t know about homonyms. Notice they don’t claim it’s maple syrup or that it is MADE in VT.

It’s literally labeled as syrup for Vermont maids. It’s for the Massholes who buy up Vermont housing as 2nd and 3rd homes to pour on their housekeepers.

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Hillman314 t1_irszm9b wrote

If your going to own the car longer than the lifespan of two sets of tires, then why not 1/2 that mileage be on summer tires and the other half on winter tires? It’s buying the same amount of tires in the end and you get way better traction and safety in snow on snow tires. The trade-off is either having to buy another set of rims for the snow tires (and tire pressure sensors if driving with the warning light on for 6 months bothers you), or having them mounted/dismounted twice a year…and storage in the off season.

I’d even say a front wheel drive car with good studded snow tires is better handling in snow than an all-wheel drive with “all seasons”….in most situations, especially stopping.

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