I have just sign the lease on a house in OR. I have lived on the coast my whole life, and i havent had to deal with snow. What im wondering is what sort of precautions i should take when driving in the snow with my prius. Do i need an engine block heater? Should i cover parts of my car when im driving? I plan on getting new tires for the snow as well. Does anyone have any tips to help maintain my superior mpg while in the cold weather? PS: i would have searched for a snow thread but i dont know where the search option is on my phone. If there is a thread for this already im sorry i couldnt find it! Thanks guys!
You should state where in Oregon. Eastern and Central Oregon is much different than Western Orgegon. In Western OR (rain) make sure you have tires that are good in wet weather and swap them out when the tread gets to 4/32nds or sooner. In Eastern OR (snow) get a separate set of wheels and snow tires, engine block heater and grille blocking.
Best of luck, I think of OR as coastal, personally. If it is western OR Here is the weather forecast: Starting the first day of High school football, it will rain. It will rain until Dec 27 (missing a white christmas) then snow one day*, then rain and wash it away. It will rain more until the fifth of July (ruining fireworks) then be sunny until the first day of High School football. * Once a decade. the wind is from the east and the snow lasts a week. South of Grants Pass, or east of the Cascades, and you have wildly different weather.
Oh man you could have bought the Prius in OR with no sales tax. Gee if you are not in the mountains I would think all seasons like GY ComforTred or newer versions give pretty good snow traction.
Wow thanks everyone, i will look into front end proctection if the snow gets bad and they use sand. To me more specific i am moving to Ashland, OR. But i will possibly be working up in White City.
Good luck with the move. I spent just one semester in college in OR and that was enough for me lol. Being from Hawaii, I found the constant rain, sometimes in two week stretches, and gloomy, dreary weather quite depressing.
A friend from California was interviewing for a job in Beaverton. After the day's interviews he asked me "When I ask about the weather, why does everyone say the summers are nice?"
I live in Oregon, and it's in my prejudice opinion a beautiful state. So congratulations. But great part of it's greatness is it's diversity, so I would say whatever concerns you have about the environment you will be driving in REALLY are dependent on where in Oregon you will be living. What I love about Oregon is you have Mountains, Forest, Desert, Farmland and a beautiful coast, and it's all within this State and all within a few hours drive from anywhere else. The Columbia River Gorge has sights and beauty that rivals any place in the world. Seeing as how we are heading into Summer, you don't have to worry too much about the potential tools of extreme driving "yet". So the good news is you can move wherever and just ask the neighbors. A lot of what you might "need" will depend on where you think you'll be going this winter. Ashland, I'm regrettably not too familiar with, outside of they have a well respected Shakespeare festival every year, that I have always wanted to see but as of yet have not been able to attend. I guess my general advice would be don't sweat it too much. Oregon can be, whatever you want it to be. In other words if you desire spending a lot of time in remote wilderness....it's possible....beautiful farmland? It's possible, Oregon can be as wild or as civilized as you want. I think Portland is a beautifully sized city, riverside and beautiful and big enough to offer all the entertainment options of a large city, but still small enough that you don't yet have the all encompassing city feel of a super large city. Anyway, I hope you enjoy your time in Oregon, However long or short it might be. I live in a suburb of Portland, in the valley, and I would say our winters for about a decade have been incredibly mild. I haven't needed snow tires or chains. Of course that could change in any given winter, and there are always area's in Oregon that become difficult or challenging every winter. But Oregon is not as "uncivilized" as I think many outsiders think. Oregon embraces almost any environment you can imagine or want. Please however....do NOT root for The Lakers.....if you are going to live in Oregon...it's The Blazers and Timbers.
I just log into the blue framed cyber sky of Prius Chat during the winter.... Yeah, it rains here. But that is what makes it so green and beautiful in the summer. And IMO (shhh...) it doesn't rain as much as most people think.....
Wow too bad im not closer to you we could BBQ together haha thank you for the warm welcome. Im not a lakers fan LOL and im glad winter wont be as harsh as i thought. Also i dont think its prejudice to say oregon is beautiful. IT IS BEAUTIFUL!! Haha hopefully i meet more people with your positive attitude! So glad im moving there. I suppose i will wait until its closer to winter before i decide on any major purchases. It seems like rain is the most likely weather anyway.
P.S.- if memory serves, NJ and OR are the only two states where you cannot pump your own gasoline. NJ I can verify as I was just there Sunday. (OR sounds good to me - and this thread has finally uncovered Electric Me's undisclosed location, which I had incorrectly assumed to be CA)
You'll be fine with good all-season tires in Ashland. The climate there is mild Mediterranean. No need for an engine block heater.
Who wants to pump their own gas ? Not having to pump gas is something we cherish in Oregon and why we hate visiting California and Washington.
I do, it gets me in and out of gas stations faster and it gets done right and the way I want it done.