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BS: ICE - the winter kind

katlaughing 16 Dec 08 - 11:12 AM
AllisonA(Animaterra) 16 Dec 08 - 12:00 PM
gnu 16 Dec 08 - 12:45 PM
Amos 16 Dec 08 - 01:08 PM
gnu 16 Dec 08 - 01:45 PM
Amos 16 Dec 08 - 01:56 PM
kendall 16 Dec 08 - 01:59 PM
ranger1 16 Dec 08 - 03:41 PM
wysiwyg 16 Dec 08 - 03:49 PM
kendall 16 Dec 08 - 03:56 PM
wysiwyg 16 Dec 08 - 03:59 PM
SINSULL 16 Dec 08 - 04:05 PM
gnu 16 Dec 08 - 04:47 PM
wysiwyg 16 Dec 08 - 05:30 PM
GUEST,Barry at the library 17 Dec 08 - 03:26 PM
Jeri 17 Dec 08 - 04:05 PM
gnu 17 Dec 08 - 04:51 PM
gnu 17 Dec 08 - 05:09 PM
Jeri 17 Dec 08 - 05:47 PM
gnu 17 Dec 08 - 06:02 PM
Bat Goddess 17 Dec 08 - 06:31 PM
gnu 17 Dec 08 - 06:37 PM
Sandra in Sydney 17 Dec 08 - 06:54 PM
katlaughing 17 Dec 08 - 07:47 PM
CamiSu 18 Dec 08 - 01:38 AM
CamiSu 18 Dec 08 - 01:45 AM
gnu 18 Dec 08 - 05:43 AM
SINSULL 18 Dec 08 - 08:55 AM
Amos 18 Dec 08 - 09:16 AM
gnu 18 Dec 08 - 09:18 AM
kendall 18 Dec 08 - 09:25 AM
kendall 18 Dec 08 - 09:26 AM
SINSULL 18 Dec 08 - 09:27 AM
Alice 18 Dec 08 - 09:29 AM
Jeri 18 Dec 08 - 09:54 AM
maeve 18 Dec 08 - 09:54 AM
gnu 18 Dec 08 - 02:13 PM
gnu 18 Dec 08 - 02:24 PM
Alice 18 Dec 08 - 02:38 PM
Amos 18 Dec 08 - 03:03 PM
katlaughing 18 Dec 08 - 03:34 PM
Amos 18 Dec 08 - 04:04 PM
gnu 18 Dec 08 - 05:04 PM
CamiSu 18 Dec 08 - 05:23 PM
kendall 19 Dec 08 - 07:01 AM
Bat Goddess 19 Dec 08 - 08:25 AM
SINSULL 19 Dec 08 - 09:36 AM
Amos 19 Dec 08 - 09:52 AM
LilyFestre 19 Dec 08 - 10:40 AM
maeve 19 Dec 08 - 11:13 AM

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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: katlaughing
Date: 16 Dec 08 - 11:12 AM

Amos, I am not so sure about frost heaves not causing problems for underground back East. Some of the ones I saw were quite impressive. Ditto the trees and ice...there are so many trees back there, it's difficult to NOT have lines where they are vulnerable to falling trees. FWIW

Pizza and cell phone, huh? Oh, joy!


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: AllisonA(Animaterra)
Date: 16 Dec 08 - 12:00 PM

Checking in from southwestern New Hampshire, in a small village that still has no power, so I'm at the local big town (Keene) at the best independent coffeeshop. The power co is making no promises for the return of power- it could be Christmas by candlelight! But I have a wood stove, which heats the whole house, and the water comes in a trickle from a gravity-fed spring, so really I have nothing to complain about. Concerts and rehearsals are being cancelled here and there, but it's cozy and warm inside. Snow is predicted for the next several days, so I might as well get used to it.

BUT - what I HAD been getting used to was more time for Mudcat, and I'm seriously computer deprived! And now I have to go run some errands before going to Massachusetts to get my daughter from college (She Who Is Fit To Be Tied at the prospect of returning to the 19th century for Christmas! But she's getting resigned... I think... I hope!).

Allison


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: gnu
Date: 16 Dec 08 - 12:45 PM

Well, Amos, I'll just say one more thing about u/g vs o/h. They ain't doin it round these here parts 'cept at airports and seaports.

gnu, M.Sc.Eng, P.Eng.


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: Amos
Date: 16 Dec 08 - 01:08 PM

Well, that is nice to know, I guess, but it doesn't speak to the issue. I think the short-term costs savings of O/H lines are more than lost over longer periods especially if you add in the costs to the public of disruptions. PErhaps you know enough about options in the materials science division to conceive of a solution that woukld be robust even against frost heaving. Rights of ways which townships already hold for roadways could be invoked for the simplest access solution, and underground point-to-point boring is an established art at present.


A


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: gnu
Date: 16 Dec 08 - 01:45 PM

Well, Amos... essentially, if we were starting from scratch, a cost-benefit analysis may point in your direction.

As for me being able to "design" it, no problem. I've done it. One need only recall the old engineering saying, "Given enough time and money, we can build anything."

Now, Amos, let's talk about that bridge from California to China. Surely is would be more cost efficient in the long run than transporting goods and people by such old technology as seaships?


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: Amos
Date: 16 Dec 08 - 01:56 PM

How long a run are you thinking there, Gnu? A few k-years? :D


A


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: kendall
Date: 16 Dec 08 - 01:59 PM

When you are born and raised in Maine, the first thing you learn is how to survive. A couple of days of no computer, TV or electric lights is just a trip down memory lane.You have grown soft! A little deprivation is good for you; it builds character.


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: ranger1
Date: 16 Dec 08 - 03:41 PM

Kendall, I have no issues with being without electric lights, computer, TV, video games, etc. What I have issue with is no heat source or cooking facilities. That's the problem with living in the stupid city. When I lived in the boondocks, I was always well prepared.


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: wysiwyg
Date: 16 Dec 08 - 03:49 PM

We live right on the pink line, so it's been years now since we worried about the ice. It will come, or it will be rain, or it will be snow. We're PermaReady.

For pone thinmg, about the first of September I stop throwioiung out milk jugs, and I wash them and fill them with water. Sytoowed one gallon at a time in a place where it stays cold without freezinbgfm, we always have plenty of emeregency water on hand for when the power gfoes ouit.

A binful of cinders sits by the back step.

There is always food in the freezer, much of it already cooked. There is a gas heater that heats the summer BR in the winter, w/o electricity.

There is a portable gas grill for anything too frozen to eat, in addition to the big summer grill. There is a fireplace in the DR where a portable grill can be set, safely, out of the cold wind.

Hardi has a spare room at the church if he needs to sleep in town while I tend the house, dogs, and freezing pipes.

Beyond stuff like that, we just deal with it. If all else fails, we'll just hitch up the clothing-stocked camper and LEAVE! We live on the road the ambulance always takes, so it's always salted-- and it goes as far as the salted highway OUT of here.

~S~


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: kendall
Date: 16 Dec 08 - 03:56 PM

Ranger 1 who is forcing you to live in the city?


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: wysiwyg
Date: 16 Dec 08 - 03:59 PM

I stop prufereeding on Dec. 15.

~S~


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: SINSULL
Date: 16 Dec 08 - 04:05 PM

Hmmmmm...cabin fever is setting in and the Mainers are getting testy. Kendall - CELLAR! Tami! Go climb a tree. Both of you, make nice.

As to WYSIWYG...WELL ain't you special!

All we are saying is give peace a chance...C'mon Amos, join in. All we are saying is give peace a chance...


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: gnu
Date: 16 Dec 08 - 04:47 PM

Well, Amos, if you can get the funding, we can start right away and we'll be that much closer to completion. Even before you get funding for underground utilities in New England.

Kendall... I live in the city, but I have my own house, so I can marshall the resources to be self-sufficient. Not everyone has that situation, for whatever reason or choice.


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: wysiwyg
Date: 16 Dec 08 - 05:30 PM

As to WYSIWYG...WELL ain't you special!

No but it's only ice, for goodness sakes! :~)

~S~


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: GUEST,Barry at the library
Date: 17 Dec 08 - 03:26 PM

Hello from Derry
We still are down on our knees. No nothing here. Phone, power, cable. Cell works but I have to drive an hour to charge it. Good excues to go to the Gloucester session last night & will probably go to an irish session in Wakefield, Mass. tonight. The National guard gave me a couple cases of water, I'll be pissing proper for the next month. Lin & Tom you weren't at the session Friday, are you OK?
We had a wood chipper come down our road to clear some of the debris in the street but when they came to the downed power lines & trees they headed for the tropics. Haven't seen any work being down in my neck of the woods to clear the streets, no power company to be heard from, no nobody & some are saying that it's still a guess as to when we'll be "turned on". I've been sleeping downstairs next to the propane stove, that keeps the living room & dining room warm enough, tha kitchen is cold but not freezing. Had to barb the thawing shrimp, tonight I'll get to bb'ing the thawed meat after I go to the gym for a swim & a shave. I'll be back but I don't know when. Good luck to you others that are frost frozen.

Barry


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: Jeri
Date: 17 Dec 08 - 04:05 PM

I live in the boondocks, and I think I need a big honking generator.

My phone came on yesterday and my power came on last night while I was at Mary's. I got home today and the power went out again for a while, probably because they were fixing something. Apparently, (I called the power company) they first just got power restored if they could and are now working on getting things fixed right. Bat Goddess & curmudgeon MAY get power today, but the person I spoke with said they're planning to get that town up tomorrow.

Big thanks to Mary, who let me commute and stay in her house and enjoy the company of friends and critters.


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: gnu
Date: 17 Dec 08 - 04:51 PM

Big and honkin? Nope. You need a small generator and a power pak... or two. Check out the Honda generators in the 1kw to 2kw range, and the power paks in the 800 range. Great combination. And some 13w light bulbs. These will keep your small stuff running for weeks with a minimum of gasoline.

As for heating or AC for medium size houses, PM me if you want specs for gennies and emergency panels and hookups to a big honkin gennie (6.5kw or better).


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: gnu
Date: 17 Dec 08 - 05:09 PM

Just catching the news here.... 50 auto accidents in St. John, NB so far today.... and this is NOT a real snowstorm!!!!

I was out and aboutsts when it got underway here in Moncton around noon (6PM now). People driving like it was July! And, we have had a few winter storms already. What is wrong with these idiots?

Should the privelege of having a driver's license require a minimum IQ? Apparently, these idiots have passed the test... in the summer.


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: Jeri
Date: 17 Dec 08 - 05:47 PM

Seriously, I have oil heat, so I just need something to power the switches/ignition, the refrigerator and the well pump. Maybe the microwave, but if I have fire, I can heath or cook things. I almost put some chicken in some aluminum foil and threw it in the coals, but I bought a chicken sub at Subway instead.

Not so seriously, I don't know if a small generator would run my computer and TV. (The guy across the street had his big flat screen TV in his guy hangout fired up with his gennie.)

Gnu, it's not a lack in IQ, it's the common sense that's missing plus a belief that one is immortal.


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: gnu
Date: 17 Dec 08 - 06:02 PM

No, J.... you need to have enough to run the fire AND the blower... at LEAST a 3kw. Now, if ya wanna go for the rest, I would say a 6.5kw. The real problem is when a few motors run up. A 6500W gennie (Honda makes the best one for this... unless someone knows of a better one) is perfect for a small house.


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: Bat Goddess
Date: 17 Dec 08 - 06:31 PM

Ayuh, builds character...but I thought I was enough of a character already!

Power came back on at 4:15 -- yeehah!

Six days (and nights, fer-pete's-sake) without electricity, phone, running water, Mudcat!, etcet.

We actually fared better than most people without power -- we normally heat with wood, so not having the furnace available wasn't a hardship and we were comfortably warm and Tom could cook up an incredible venison stew on Sunday utilizing the venison steaks and some nice sausage that otherwise would have been lost in the warming freezer. I used the last of the water (that I'd been carefully husbanding) in the holding tank to wash my hair on Sunday, so have been completely dependent on storebought gallons of water since. Since we have a composting toilet, we didn't have to worry about water for flushing.

Coffee was a problem for Tom, of course, and the only real crisis was when he discovered Saturday morning that in the low light of the generator-provided electricity at Market Basket on Friday, he'd inadvertently picked up DE-CAF coffee bags instead of the real thing.

We had a TracFone since the end of September, so had emergency phone contact, too, so the situation was never dire and just annoying.

Couldn't get to work on Friday thanks to downed branches and wires in the driveway, and when Tom got out later (turned out to be Comcast line disconnected from the pole in the driveway), no gas station for miles around had power so couldn't fill my car's tank. Went to Pizza Spinners early in the evening -- they were running on generator. It was like the bar scene in "Star Wars" while waiting for our pizza in the heatless but heavily populated shop.

Lee Circle got power restored by 11:30 Friday night, so I got real coffee bags for Tom on m way to work, then fed gas to the car on the other side of the circle and finally made it full circle to McDonald's for breakfast on my way to work. Fox Run Mall (I work at Sears Optical) never lost power, but Optical's direct line is the first to come up when anyone calls Directory Assistance, so spent the day telling people calling to find out if Sears had generators that they'd have to call the Sears number.

My boss never lost power, either, but most of New Hampshire did and most of those within many miles of Fox Run were at Sears looking for generators. (They sure as heck weren't looking to buy eyeglasses!)

Another good thing that came out of it is we discovered that a nearby seafood restaurant has GREAT (and reasonably priced) breakfasts.

But it's really nice to be almost back to "normal" -- it's fatiguing to read by flashlight and get ready for work with jug water and low light, etc.

Later!
Linn


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: gnu
Date: 17 Dec 08 - 06:37 PM

Great to here you and Tom made out okay!


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: Sandra in Sydney
Date: 17 Dec 08 - 06:54 PM

this is a different world to mine - yesterday I had ice in my glass of water at an outdoor Christmas lunch. Pleasant warm (not yet hot & humid) day in early summer Sydney. My winter in inner-city Sydney entails the occasional use of a small heater, an 80% down quilt at night, with medium fleece waistcoat & jacket in the day. I only discovered thermal underwear 2 years ago, & normally only wear them when I leave Sydney for cooler climates where it's close to freezing overnight!

As my brother said when he was in UK 25 years ago, with 2" snow on the top of his car when he woke, "sandra, you wouldn't like it here."

best wishes to all for resumption of normal services

sandra


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: katlaughing
Date: 17 Dec 08 - 07:47 PM

So good to hear from you, Linn and Tom!! Wasn't it you who taught me this would be just another AFGO?**BG** Seriously, really glad you are both safe and okay. You, too, Jeri!

gnu, you are a handy fellow and a very kind friend. As to idjit drivers, we have them here, too. Though we don't get that much ice or snow, a lot of folks are retirees from California, southern climes, so they either completely freak out and drive 5mph causing problems, or they think nothing of it, hit a skid and topple themselves and some other unlucky soul over...and we all hope not fatally! The others are kids who should know better. Most of them don't know the word "Caution!"


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: CamiSu
Date: 18 Dec 08 - 01:38 AM

All you lucky people who could post during the storm....

My 2 exchange students (who had never seen much, if any, snow) brought a 3rd home Thursday evening as a snow day was expected. We got it as well as a loss of power. My wireless modem requires power to work and there was none of that. My stone house has very good insulation we put in when we bought it and again after the fire...

With a wood stove in the kitchen, gas stove I can start with a match, and good humor we managed 36 or so hours of no power. Temp in the house proper got down to 57 last I looked, and Saturday was warm and sunny. They were saying 4 days, then 2 days and then here came the trucks! I told them my pole had wires dangling. They fixed the guy wires but neglected to see that the neutral was hanging loose and powered up the neighborhood.

The smell was immediate. I was looking for fire in the walls and Sinan (my Turkish kid) was trying to find the source of the smell upstairs (it was pretty much all over) and we found the attic full of smoke. While I was looking in the kneewall space the TV began to smoke. I turned on the bathroom light and it was WAY too bright, which clued me in to what was happening. By the time I was all powered down (forgot about the 200amp main just below the meter) I had lost the TV, the laser printer, the micro-convection oven, 2 refrigerators, a computer (there isn't a surge protector in the world that can handle a steady 200 volts for 5 minutes), said surge protector, the portable phone set, the modem, and more. Almost lost Fabio when he touched a switch and it bit him. Very scary. And the power company says it won't pay my deductible. I say it will.

The trees were fabulous, and the boys had a wonderful time. Actually it was all great (playing hearts by candlelight 'til 1:30 am!) until the power came back on. And I was driving through my little town on my way home Saturday night (not expecting to get my service back til Monday) and saw every truck in eastern Vermont at a restaurant (in a town of 1100). I asked them if I could get my neutral fixed and a crew came down when they were done with dinner. Had my power back at 11:15 Saturday! I did feel very blessed there as I had work to do for the Sunday service and needed my computer to make it easier. But I now must replace appliances and so on. But my new modem got here yesterday so I am back!

Whew!

Hope everyone else is doing better. Vermont was down to fewer than 2000 people without electricity this morning. And now real snow. Yes!

CamiSu

Why won't this post?!!!!


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: CamiSu
Date: 18 Dec 08 - 01:45 AM

Finally got the post to take....

But the sad part, now, my old cat was failing and I think the lower temp was too much for him, and he died this morning. I'll think of him every birthday from now on...

Gotta go hug the one that's left, and go to bed.

CamiSu


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: gnu
Date: 18 Dec 08 - 05:43 AM

Oh my, CamiSu... thoughts and prayers.


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: SINSULL
Date: 18 Dec 08 - 08:55 AM

I am sorry, CamiSu. It is hard to lose a good friend.

But I am glad you came throught he power surge safely. Holy Crap!


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: Amos
Date: 18 Dec 08 - 09:16 AM

One thing puzzles me. When the entire outdoor world is an icebox, why don't you move the stuff that is thawing from your deadened freezers into a snowbank until power is restored?

A


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: gnu
Date: 18 Dec 08 - 09:18 AM

Coyotes.


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: kendall
Date: 18 Dec 08 - 09:25 AM

Neighbors.


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: kendall
Date: 18 Dec 08 - 09:26 AM

Lions and Tigers and Bears.


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: SINSULL
Date: 18 Dec 08 - 09:27 AM

Because the temperature outside fluctuated between 12 and 40 degrees and there are no snowbanks. Just a thin sheet of ice.


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: Alice
Date: 18 Dec 08 - 09:29 AM

Dogs and cats


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: Jeri
Date: 18 Dec 08 - 09:54 AM

Coyotes, cats, dogs, birds, skunks, raccoons, bears, squirrels, and the fact that except for Saturday night, it wasn't all that cold outside and I'd have to keep moving food so it was out of the.

Oddly enough, stuff in my freezer which I did NOT open, didn't thaw completely in the nearly 5 days my power was out. I still had ice cube shaped ice cubes in the ice bin. I suppose the cold temps in the house helped with that.


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: maeve
Date: 18 Dec 08 - 09:54 AM

My husband and I do use snowbanks when we need to. Since this was the first real storm of the season around here, there wasn't enough snow to make snowbanks and the freezing rain followed by the widely fluctuating outside temperatures made it challenging. I did put the newly baked bread outside in a cooler under the roof overhang to avoid opening the refrigerator and freezer.

We also regularly use the cold spot by the back door, the unheated front hall, the cool bathtub, the farm truck (with cap), and the root cellar as is appropriate. Mostly though, we unplug all appliances to avoid a surge and keep the fridge and freezer closed as much as possible while the power is out. We didn't lose any food, and I am thankful for that.

While it is both wise and responsible to prepare for extreme weather situations and power outages, there are different challenges depending upon each person's housing, local weather conditions, physical health, and finances. That's why it is important for each household and community to prepare as well as possible for household needs and for sharing. That's why we check up on families, friends, and neighbors: we look after each other.

I'm very glad to know that Linn and Tom, CamiSu, Jeri, ranger 1, Sinsull, Kendall, gnu, and the rest have been able to cope in their own ways. I'm glad we Mudcatters can help and encourage each other, and that we have done so as we are able.

maeve


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: gnu
Date: 18 Dec 08 - 02:13 PM

Amos might be next!


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: gnu
Date: 18 Dec 08 - 02:24 PM

Maeve.... we really sidestepped the storm here. We did have a whack of ice and then wind, but the wind we got was so warm that the ice was gone in jig time. Along with a half dozen shingle tabs. However, those tabs were all along the edge of the southern eave (3 foot eaves), so I should be okay as long as the rest of the winter stays cold... or we don't get high south winds when it's warm.


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: Alice
Date: 18 Dec 08 - 02:38 PM

The temps got up over zero here yesterday and today, but the next wave of below zero weather will arrive probably tomorrow and go deep into the minus numbers for the weekend.


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: Amos
Date: 18 Dec 08 - 03:03 PM

The Las Vegas Valley lies in a relatively high-altitude portion of the Mojave Desert--the city is at around 2,000 feet, where the recent rains have turned to snow as low as 1300 feet in these parts. We did have snow in great measure up in the eastern pass that leads to Yuma. My own altitude is probably 10 feet. So I won't worry yet. The rains have passed, for now, and the day temp is in the 60's, which we find a bit cool.

A


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: katlaughing
Date: 18 Dec 08 - 03:34 PM

{{{{{{Cami-Su}}}}} Sorry about your kitty; it's so sad when we lose them.

Really glad you knew what to do in the surge, but wow, wish they'd noticed so you wouldn't have lost all of your appliances! I'd say they pay the deductible, too!

Has anyone heard any more from Barry? Wondering if he finally got power back up? Barry, ya there?

Amos, you call 2,000 feet high??!! Heck, we're more than double that here in the l-o-w point of Colorado.**bg** And, even here it sometimes surprises me. It's the Banana Belt of CO, but we've had snow off and on for a few days now and it's actually sticking around, plus they say it is supposed to get as cold as zero Fahrenheit on Sat. night, which is unheard of here!


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: Amos
Date: 18 Dec 08 - 04:04 PM

Ah, so. THis is the time of year to celebrate for all those poor mortals who turn to Southern California for hope and redemption.


A


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: gnu
Date: 18 Dec 08 - 05:04 PM

10'? So, Global warming is gonna make the size of your new water pool a lot bigger?


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: CamiSu
Date: 18 Dec 08 - 05:23 PM

Amos--

I use snowbanks all the time, as well as my porch, the woodshed, even the utility room can be a walk-in fridge. Works great for eggs except in the summer. Squirrels, mice. rats can all raid if you don't take care. I have several gallons of cider frozen on the porch right now. When the freezer on the fridge decided to work in reverse I loaded all its contents into a laundry basket and stuck it in the woodshed. The outside temp promptly went to 57. So much for THAT!

But the real reason we live here? The neighbors! (and everyone else for that matter) They're there when you need 'em and we enjoy doing for each other. And the past year I've needed that.

CamiSu


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: kendall
Date: 19 Dec 08 - 07:01 AM

Stand by New England, we have another major storm bearing down on us.


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: Bat Goddess
Date: 19 Dec 08 - 08:25 AM

Sheesh!

Just when I REALLY need a Press Room fix, it looks like the elements are conspiring to make me turn home (and hope to get into the driveway) after work rather than towards Daniel Street.

At least it should be clear for tomorrow's shanty/seasonal sing.

But...(there's always a "but", isn't there?) they're predicting a Nor'easter on Sunday. (When there's a music/holiday party scheduled.)

Sigh.

Just hope we don't lose power again.

Linn


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: SINSULL
Date: 19 Dec 08 - 09:36 AM

Advice from an electrician:
When the power goes out, turn off each circuit braker then the main switch. When it comes on again. Open the main switch and each circuit breaker in turn watching for overloads. It can save an appliance or two and possibly your life.
The power company here insists they are not responsible for damages - several people at work had similar experiences to CamiSu.
Power outages expected tonight according to the news at least in Southern Maine and NH. Massachusettes has already declared a state of emergency. Last year around this time they hesitated and school children spent eight hours trapped in school busses.


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: Amos
Date: 19 Dec 08 - 09:52 AM

Give 'em hell, Yankees!! Non nocens tempestas carborundum.

A


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: LilyFestre
Date: 19 Dec 08 - 10:40 AM

Yesterday the predictions for the large storm headed to the northeastern section of the US were all over the radios and news. For our specific area they said the storm would start around midnight. I was up at 1:30am. Nothing. I went back to bed and decided I would have to teach this morning and we would have an early dismissal. THe phone rang at 5:45am. It was the person ahead of me on the snow chain and she said, "Enjoy your 3 day weekend." I giggled, said thanks and called the next person on the list. I went downstairs and looked outside. Still, NOTHING. Hm. It's now a few hours later and I can't see much beyond our barn for the fine, yet heavy downfall of snow. It is quite beautiful.

    Like many who live in our region, as long as we can stay home, we're good. We have plenty of food, heat (wood stove as backup)and plenty of candles and flashlights should the power go out. The only thing that would be a pain is the water. We have plenty of it stored, so it's really only a pain and not a problem. DH is on the move this morning stacking extra firewood and making sure the critters have enough food and straw to stay warm. Personally, I'm about to hop in the shower and start some laundry so if the power does go, we have all clean clothes and I'm all clean! Ok, and yes, a new pot of coffee too! :) Also, the french press is ready to go, should we need it!

    I hope that any of you who are being hit by this storm are fortunate enough to be able to stay home, snuggle in with a loved one or a good book and enjoy the day (or maybe days!).

Stay warm and safe.

Michelle


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Subject: RE: BS: ICE - the winter kind
From: maeve
Date: 19 Dec 08 - 11:13 AM

Amos: Gratias ago vos pro vestri consolatio.

maeve


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