We not only have milk, eggs, and bread, we have good maple syrup.
I think the local governments are overreacting. Being prepared to shut down transit because of a hurricane is one thing. Announcing a day in advance that all trains will be shutting down at noon tomorrow seems excessive, and not just because I'm used to them keeping at least some service running through blizzard, hurricane, and northeaster.
We were going to go up to Schenectady this weekend, but we canceled that plan this morning. While we didn't know the MTA would be shutting the subway down, it seemed that Amtrak might get us up to Schenectady tomorrow, but the return trip Sunday was iffy.
I suspect I'm going to finish all my library books (I have another one waiting for me), and play a lot of Scrabble. We will go for a walk tomorrow morning, even though the Greenmarket, our usual Saturday destination, is closed. (So are all the zoos, live theater, beaches, etc. Beaches are obvious, and some of it I think is a consequence of not having transit.)
ETA: Just as well we'd already decided to stay home: Amtrak is running fewer trains Saturday, and none in the Northeast on Sunday, according to their Facebook page, which I was pointed to by the Washington Post; amtrak.com is still displaying yesterday afternoon's bit about trains canceled from DC south with further cancellations to come.
I think the local governments are overreacting. Being prepared to shut down transit because of a hurricane is one thing. Announcing a day in advance that all trains will be shutting down at noon tomorrow seems excessive, and not just because I'm used to them keeping at least some service running through blizzard, hurricane, and northeaster.
We were going to go up to Schenectady this weekend, but we canceled that plan this morning. While we didn't know the MTA would be shutting the subway down, it seemed that Amtrak might get us up to Schenectady tomorrow, but the return trip Sunday was iffy.
I suspect I'm going to finish all my library books (I have another one waiting for me), and play a lot of Scrabble. We will go for a walk tomorrow morning, even though the Greenmarket, our usual Saturday destination, is closed. (So are all the zoos, live theater, beaches, etc. Beaches are obvious, and some of it I think is a consequence of not having transit.)
ETA: Just as well we'd already decided to stay home: Amtrak is running fewer trains Saturday, and none in the Northeast on Sunday, according to their Facebook page, which I was pointed to by the Washington Post; amtrak.com is still displaying yesterday afternoon's bit about trains canceled from DC south with further cancellations to come.
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*sigh*
And I a quasi-Canadian.
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I suppose they must be worried about flooding in the tunnels.
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However, the subway closing meant the academy officially decided today that no one will come in to work tomorrow, so I am spared last-minute phone calls, dithering, and waking early when it turns out I don't have to.
When told the plan, I said that I'd spend the time making sure nothing is on the floor in the basement in case it floods. Also, I'll put the gazing ball and lawn chairs in the enclosed porch.
The storm rations I requested that Supergee get tomorrow morning are extra soda from CVS, an extra bag of broccoli florets, and extra tofu and blueberries for my standard brekkie.
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Over on Facebook I keep reading "I have bought [insert grocery list] in preparation for the hurricane." For my part, I've made sure there's beer and water--but what else do I really need, you know?
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The difficulty of the shutdown was compounded by not wanting to store trains in flooding-prone low-lying railyards, so they needed unused tunnels that they could stash about 2000 train-cars in.