Insurance rates probably go up through the roof. You're dealing with more zero temperatures where you've got black ice and things like that. Yeah, I get it.
Yeah, we've kicked our butt all over the damn place. I wouldn't want to be on the roads down south when that happens. No, because everybody's driving like crazy because nobody knows how to control the car because we don't have those salt sprinkler thingies at all.
So everybody's flipping, sliding, and it's like, oh, my God. I think about a year ago, we had some snow where it stayed. Literally, it wasn't there for an hour and disappeared and melted.
It was there.
There was a whole day and lots of places that were icy. Oh, it was scary. We just had that earlier this month where it snowed.
We probably had about six inches, you know, been on the roof or on the ground. And then it got up above freezing during the day, so it would start, you know, not enough to melt it for sure, just enough to somewhat liquefy the top of it. And then it would refreeze at night.
And it went on like that for a week and a half until, you know, everyone had to have their roof replaced. It's just an annoyance. And people people just stayed home because if you lived on a hill, you couldn't get out.
It's like you say, Bill, no one has the right snow tires or anything for it. And it's like driving on ice anyway. It's not hard to grip, you know, with snow tires.
So, yeah, you just get used to hanging around the house. It's almost like being in COVID again. A lot of people don't realize, a lot of people don't realize that once you hit minus 10 Celsius, rubber actually becomes stickier than concrete.
So, you know, when it's in that zero temperature, you know, like just hovering, that's when, you know, even winter tires are not going to be suitable. You know, like you just stay off the road kind of thing. Right.