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Go to a hotel. Thatās always my back up plan. But I have 4 cats and I would never leave them. In 25 years of living in the woods the power has only stayed off for about 12 hours. Chill out Janis, you can always have a wine and cheese party.
Give Janis a break. Ice storms that far south arenāt too common.
First, enjoy yourself while you have power. Make some soup. Make some popcorn. If you rely on electricity to pump your water, maybe fill up a bathtub with hot water. Check the batteries in your flashlights. Gather up some quilts and blankets and make yourself a nest. Then IF the power goes out, you can worry about it staying out.
Also, remember that sharing body heat works best skin-to-skin.
We live in ice-storm country. In the 50+ years weāve been in this house, the power has only been out longer than 12 hours once. And, that was in mid-summer when it was 104Ā° f. The 12 hour outages? Twice, during hurricanes.
Been there and done that, back in ā73 Atlanta had an ice storm, we were without power for about a week, fortunately we had a gas stove so we huddle around the stove with the oven door open, also had a gas heater in the basement. The worst part was that the neighbors behind had power most of the week.
Whenever a bad storm is predicted I prepare. Filling the tubs with water to flush the toilets ā Fill containers with drinking water ā Flashlights and batteries ā Propane for the grill ā Charge cell phones etc. ā Gas in cars ā One day my wife asked me: Why do you do all his stuff when weāve never lost power for more than an hour? I shrugged and said: I was a boy scout. Then we had a really bad norāeaster and the power was out for almost 12 hours. During the outage she came up to me and gave me a big hug and said thank you. I asked what for and she said: because there was water to flush the toilet.
If itās yellow, let it mellow. If itās brown, flush it down.
One winter we lost power for 5 days straight and it got very cold in the house. It was miserable. We could see our breath inside! It was so good when they finally fixed that outage and the heat and lights came on.
Twice we had to go without power for 5 or more days. Itās not fun when all of your appliances and heat are electric. Luckily, we have a gas grille to cook with,
Janis, the time to ādoā stuff in case thereās a bad storm coming through should be done before the skies open up and the rain/snow/sleet fallsā¦.but at least get some drinking water poured and set aside, even if youāre filling up various pots/pans and spare glasses.
My gas furnace still requires electricity, so one fall I bought a ventless gas space heater called Mr Heater from Tractor Supply as an emergency reserve for an extended power failure. Less than a month later my furnace died, so I turned it on. It is thermostat controlled, doesāt require electricity, (It does have a small fan, but it works just as well without it.) has no fumes or odor and kept my 2500 square foot house at a comfortable 70 degrees, and even kept the basement at 65. It did such a good job that I didnāt bother to replace the furnace until spring. Just to be safe I had also bought a carbon monoxide detector that also detects other harmful gases and mounted that in the same room, and it never indicated a problem.
In the event you lose power, donāt have a generator, but do have a gas stove, you can always heat the house by boiling water on top of the stove. I have done that several times and it can heat the abode up very nicely.
Ah, yes, the Great Easter Ice Storm of ā78! Power lines down all over the place. Our power was out for about 8 days, I think it was. Luckily, it wasnāt bitterly cold, but we still had hot water, so we would bundle up in the kitchen and fill tubs and buckets with hot water. We even were able to have a memorable Easter Dinner at my sisterās house, as she had a gas stove. One of the odd local stories was a poor dog, who was just taking a leak against a metal fence, got electrocuted because a downed power line was touching it. A neighbor down our street fought like a tiger to keep as many of his treesā large branches as possible from cracking off. That was a sound that we would hear every so often, and it was loud. At one point, a friend and I drove around town, surveying the surreal āApocalypseāā¦
Last summer after a tornado ran through our neighborhood, a tree across the street from our next door neighbor fell on our power line. Kohler ran for 63 hours. My neighbor said his generator was cheaper than the power company.
We have an oil-fired hot water furnace which uses little power and a portable generator that I can use to power it, the lights, and refrigerator. I donāt know how long 15 gallons of gas will last, though.
I hate when we lose power in the winter. Our fireplace is basically like a picture of a fire and heats nothing, like the fireplaces in most modern homes. Last time we had an outage, we lost ten degrees in the house every hour. We ended up sleeping in the kitchen because itās the only room without floor to ceiling windows so it held onto the heat a little longer.
I have never understood my wifeās obsession with worrying about what might happen. Fretting about āworst possible scenariosā has always seemed counterproductive to me.
Hope for the best, prepare for the worst. Or something like that. :-)
A couple of years ago my wife and I moved into a new neighborhood. I commented to a neighbor that it was nice to have all the electrical lines running into the houses in the neighborhood under ground so that an ice storm could not take them out. āOther than appearances, it does not make any differenceā he said, āAll the lines leading up to this neighborhood are above ground. If they are down then we are not going to get any juice anyway.ā
We have a generator (mostly go keep the refrigerators and heaters going), grill and gas ready, enough stored gas to run the generator for a month, and of course we also have our motorhome stocked and ready to roll, which also has heat, refrigerator and generator.
Pull the covers over your heads. The most body heat you lose is what you breathe out. This way that body heat keeps the area under the covers warm. Thatās why space suits need cooling in the cold of space.
i remember one dec here in arkansas we lost power for 10 days. wasnāt too bad as i had a fire place and was able to heat coffee, and cook dogs. so we survived.
Yeas ago an ice storm in early March took out power in my area. It was 8 days before anyone came to my place to make a necessary repair in the fuse box so that service could be restored. The repair guy told me that nobody in his company remembered damage as widespread and severe as that storm, that of course some customer had to be the last one reconnected, and that I was the one.
My husband finally got tired of going out to deal with the gas generator so we got a propane one. Then that became an issue with hauling the tanks to be filled. I finally got the standby generator I wanted, as Iām disabled and heād have to stay home if there was a whiff of a storm. I admit I envy Arlo and Janisā fireplace. No room for one here. Somehow sitting by the mini-splits doesnāt have the same romanceā¦
Rhetorical_Question 2 months ago
Arlo is wise man.
C 2 months ago
Could be weeks Janis
rob.home 2 months ago
Go to bed to keep warm. Soup beforehand, followed by electric blankets help.
AnneFackler 2 months ago
Go to a hotel. Thatās always my back up plan. But I have 4 cats and I would never leave them. In 25 years of living in the woods the power has only stayed off for about 12 hours. Chill out Janis, you can always have a wine and cheese party.
cracker65 2 months ago
Not a darn thing Janis
ellisaana Premium Member 2 months ago
Give Janis a break. Ice storms that far south arenāt too common.
First, enjoy yourself while you have power. Make some soup. Make some popcorn. If you rely on electricity to pump your water, maybe fill up a bathtub with hot water. Check the batteries in your flashlights. Gather up some quilts and blankets and make yourself a nest. Then IF the power goes out, you can worry about it staying out.
Also, remember that sharing body heat works best skin-to-skin.
ellisaana Premium Member 2 months ago
We live in ice-storm country. In the 50+ years weāve been in this house, the power has only been out longer than 12 hours once. And, that was in mid-summer when it was 104Ā° f. The 12 hour outages? Twice, during hurricanes.
Calliope 2 months ago
Donner Party: Day One
B4ItNs 2 months ago
Been there and done that, back in ā73 Atlanta had an ice storm, we were without power for about a week, fortunately we had a gas stove so we huddle around the stove with the oven door open, also had a gas heater in the basement. The worst part was that the neighbors behind had power most of the week.
nosirrom 2 months ago
Whenever a bad storm is predicted I prepare. Filling the tubs with water to flush the toilets ā Fill containers with drinking water ā Flashlights and batteries ā Propane for the grill ā Charge cell phones etc. ā Gas in cars ā One day my wife asked me: Why do you do all his stuff when weāve never lost power for more than an hour? I shrugged and said: I was a boy scout. Then we had a really bad norāeaster and the power was out for almost 12 hours. During the outage she came up to me and gave me a big hug and said thank you. I asked what for and she said: because there was water to flush the toilet.
If itās yellow, let it mellow. If itās brown, flush it down.
morningglory73 Premium Member 2 months ago
One winter we lost power for 5 days straight and it got very cold in the house. It was miserable. We could see our breath inside! It was so good when they finally fixed that outage and the heat and lights came on.
VictoryRider 2 months ago
You can buy a generator.
John Smith 2 months ago
You would think that a woman in her 60ās, with a life time of experience behind her, would not be rattled by a winter storm.
Hidden-in-the-Trees Premium Member 2 months ago
fire up the generator, but make sure itās sitting in the garage near an open bay door!
LONNYMARQUEZ 2 months ago
one emergency at a time, one foot in front of the other, one day at a time, live in the moment
MRBLUESKY529 2 months ago
Twice we had to go without power for 5 or more days. Itās not fun when all of your appliances and heat are electric. Luckily, we have a gas grille to cook with,
JessieRandySmithJr. 2 months ago
Apparently they have gas or propane for the stovetop.
colddonkey 2 months ago
Slip under the covers and use body friction to stay warm.
BJDucer 2 months ago
Janis, the time to ādoā stuff in case thereās a bad storm coming through should be done before the skies open up and the rain/snow/sleet fallsā¦.but at least get some drinking water poured and set aside, even if youāre filling up various pots/pans and spare glasses.
Yermo Adam 2 months ago
Electric blanket when power out?
fuzzbucket Premium Member 2 months ago
My gas furnace still requires electricity, so one fall I bought a ventless gas space heater called Mr Heater from Tractor Supply as an emergency reserve for an extended power failure. Less than a month later my furnace died, so I turned it on. It is thermostat controlled, doesāt require electricity, (It does have a small fan, but it works just as well without it.) has no fumes or odor and kept my 2500 square foot house at a comfortable 70 degrees, and even kept the basement at 65. It did such a good job that I didnāt bother to replace the furnace until spring. Just to be safe I had also bought a carbon monoxide detector that also detects other harmful gases and mounted that in the same room, and it never indicated a problem.
Gameguy49 Premium Member 2 months ago
Hint, hint, wink, wink, nudge, nudge Arlo. Youāre usually quicker on the ball.
assrdood 2 months ago
I cooked a pizza on the charcoal grill ā also made toast on a stick in the fireplace. Both were very āTastyā.
NeedaChuckle Premium Member 2 months ago
I have a coal stove and 2 solar generators. I hate winter.
brmjlm_5 2 months ago
Best thing I ever did was to buy a generator, power goes out, I fire up the generator, no more power outage
metagalaxy1970 2 months ago
And this is why having a gas stove is important. No electricity, you can still eat.
Heelboy 12 2 months ago
In the event you lose power, donāt have a generator, but do have a gas stove, you can always heat the house by boiling water on top of the stove. I have done that several times and it can heat the abode up very nicely.
Jeannine Brown 2 months ago
We finally bought a whole house generator.
ChessPirate 2 months ago
Ah, yes, the Great Easter Ice Storm of ā78! Power lines down all over the place. Our power was out for about 8 days, I think it was. Luckily, it wasnāt bitterly cold, but we still had hot water, so we would bundle up in the kitchen and fill tubs and buckets with hot water. We even were able to have a memorable Easter Dinner at my sisterās house, as she had a gas stove. One of the odd local stories was a poor dog, who was just taking a leak against a metal fence, got electrocuted because a downed power line was touching it. A neighbor down our street fought like a tiger to keep as many of his treesā large branches as possible from cracking off. That was a sound that we would hear every so often, and it was loud. At one point, a friend and I drove around town, surveying the surreal āApocalypseāā¦
drivingfuriously Premium Member 2 months ago
Last summer after a tornado ran through our neighborhood, a tree across the street from our next door neighbor fell on our power line. Kohler ran for 63 hours. My neighbor said his generator was cheaper than the power company.
Bill The Nuke 2 months ago
We have an oil-fired hot water furnace which uses little power and a portable generator that I can use to power it, the lights, and refrigerator. I donāt know how long 15 gallons of gas will last, though.
timbob2313 Premium Member 2 months ago
I am not worried if the power goes out, we have a whole house natural gas powered standby generator which works quite well summer or winter
rheddmobile 2 months ago
Did I not say this yesterday?
I hate when we lose power in the winter. Our fireplace is basically like a picture of a fire and heats nothing, like the fireplaces in most modern homes. Last time we had an outage, we lost ten degrees in the house every hour. We ended up sleeping in the kitchen because itās the only room without floor to ceiling windows so it held onto the heat a little longer.
Wlly Blly 2 months ago
I have never understood my wifeās obsession with worrying about what might happen. Fretting about āworst possible scenariosā has always seemed counterproductive to me.
Hope for the best, prepare for the worst. Or something like that. :-)
T Smith 2 months ago
If you were wise, you gassed up the car before the storm hit.
If the power is out for days, you drain all the pipes in the house to prevent freezing, then head for the coast to see the kids.
mbhiggins5555 2 months ago
A couple of years ago my wife and I moved into a new neighborhood. I commented to a neighbor that it was nice to have all the electrical lines running into the houses in the neighborhood under ground so that an ice storm could not take them out. āOther than appearances, it does not make any differenceā he said, āAll the lines leading up to this neighborhood are above ground. If they are down then we are not going to get any juice anyway.ā
tsk5565 2 months ago
Iāve never had a gas stove, so my first thought was āmake coffee on the stove? But the power is outā ā¦ pause ā¦ āOhā
DaBump Premium Member 2 months ago
This is when people stop laughing at Preppers!
hk Premium Member 2 months ago
We have a generator (mostly go keep the refrigerators and heaters going), grill and gas ready, enough stored gas to run the generator for a month, and of course we also have our motorhome stocked and ready to roll, which also has heat, refrigerator and generator.
Brent Rosenthal Premium Member 2 months ago
Tell you what Janis. Spend all your time worrying. But donāt share it with Arlo.
crazeekatlady 2 months ago
turn the heat up to max to preheat the house. Larger delta to freezing.
bobpeters61 2 months ago
Pull the covers over your heads. The most body heat you lose is what you breathe out. This way that body heat keeps the area under the covers warm. Thatās why space suits need cooling in the cold of space.
martinman8 2 months ago
i remember one dec here in arkansas we lost power for 10 days. wasnāt too bad as i had a fire place and was able to heat coffee, and cook dogs. so we survived.
lsnrchrd.1 Premium Member 2 months ago
Yeas ago an ice storm in early March took out power in my area. It was 8 days before anyone came to my place to make a necessary repair in the fuse box so that service could be restored. The repair guy told me that nobody in his company remembered damage as widespread and severe as that storm, that of course some customer had to be the last one reconnected, and that I was the one.
Grace Premium Member 2 months ago
My husband finally got tired of going out to deal with the gas generator so we got a propane one. Then that became an issue with hauling the tanks to be filled. I finally got the standby generator I wanted, as Iām disabled and heād have to stay home if there was a whiff of a storm. I admit I envy Arlo and Janisā fireplace. No room for one here. Somehow sitting by the mini-splits doesnāt have the same romanceā¦
Bill Hand 2 months ago
Electric blankets arenāt much good without power. Unless youāve got a tank of electric eels to hook up.
eromlig 2 months ago
Lather, rinse, repeat, and wait for the baby boom nine months later.
pharang 2 months ago
If you live in Texas, you can get on your knees and pray that ERCOT isnāt as incompetent as they were in 2021.