Things then went quite leisurely on the roads. Driving on the snow-covered roads was not a problem for me - skid control courses paid off. But you are not immune to anything. At the very latest when the vehicle is no longer moving and has to be started from a standstill. Since very few parking spaces were completely clear of snow on the day in question - it was usually knee-high - there was no other option but to park the car in large piles of snow.
The real problem arose when we drove away - anyone brazil rcs data who was on the road that day will know what it was like. The wheels mostly wouldn't move forward or backward, and the car wouldn't move. Help was needed. And help was generally found very quickly. 'Could you help me push the car out quickly?' was the question I was asked most often that afternoon. I asked, they came, they pushed... Within a very short time, three or four strong forces were united, and my car was moving again... until the next time I had to park.
I was surprised when I had a bit of trouble getting going again at the village community center in Pfäffikon. I slid back and forth a bit... and suddenly I was driving. The reason: two or three people had spontaneously gathered behind my car and helped to push hard - without me having asked them. That's what I call helpfulness. The common 'problem' of snow brought people closer together. After all, everyone was in the same boat."