Right now, you can't turn on the TV or open a newspaper without hearing about the disasterous ice storm that hammered Miniscule County, and is now wreaking havok in the Dragonlair Mtns. My question is, why weren't we prepared? Even two days before the storm first struck the mainland, there was no warning! The meteorologists, and even the ANOAA reported that it was a light winter storm that might dump a few feet of snow at the most. What do they do all day, anyway? I'd think that they'd be able to tell a snow flurry from an ice storm. They went to college and got a degree in weather forecasting, and they STILL can't get thier reports right? Sounds like they need to go back to grade school. If they had done thier jobs and warned us in time, we could've been prepared. Even as the ice storm was pelting Miniscule County, the ANOAA said that it would blow over before it hit the Dragonlair Mnts. Well, apparently it didn't. Just watch the news. At least Badgerville County has had ample warning...I hope.

 

Not Enough Warning?

 

*Sunset Gazette takes no responsibility for the content of these sections, because they reflect only the opinions of our reporters, Loofa McArthur and Bruno McFuzz.

    So maybe the weather forecasters got it wrong again. But they can't be entirely blamed for the disaster in the Drgaonlair Mtns. You'd think that these dragons would at least know that the ANOAA and all them get the forecast wrong half the time. I've learned to prepare for the worst and hope for the best when it comes to weather, especially during winter. By the time it had downed trees in the Worm Mountains, that should have been warning enough.

    As it is, dragons shouldn't even be FLYING during rain storms or windy days. Why did they think that they could do it during a severe winter storm? If I were a dragon, I would have headed home long before the storm reached Dragonlair, not continue with my winter camping trip or whatever.

     The insect and rodent sectors of Miniscule County likewise had warning when that storm hit the coast. They had three days to get everything they needed and batton down the hatches.

     So, all in all, the dragon, rodent, and insect citizens, as well as the ANOAA, are all at fault partially for the disaster that ensued. Maybe next time we'll be better prepared.

Who's Fault Is It, Anyway?