DizzyDigger
Gold Member
- Dec 9, 2012
- 6,354
- 12,884
- Detector(s) used
- Nokta FoRs Gold, a Gold Cube, 2 Keene Sluices and Lord only knows how many pans....not to mention a load of other gear my wife still doesn't know about!
- Primary Interest:
- Prospecting
'er...electrical power, that is..
This year was one of the most memorable Christmas's..not because
of all the hoopla surrounding Christmas itself, but it will be forever known
around here as the "Christmas Outage of '18".
About every 15-20 years, we get a big windstorm up here in the Upper
Skagit Valley, and this time it arrived last Thursday morning. No idea
how high the winds were, but I'm guessing the gusts were above 70mph.
When you live in the woods, a bad windstorm can do miserable damage.
We didn't lose any of our trees, but the rest of the region suffered bad
damage, and massive trees were down everywhere. On our property
alone, we have 23 cedars that are all over 150', plus assorted fir
and alder. The fir and alders always go first, it seems.
Power went out about 1pm on Thursday, and like always I figured it would
be back up in a few hours. Not this time..
Our home is all electric, and while all the rest of the neighbors have either
wood or gas stoves, our home is newer, and, while contemplated, we never
took the steps to install a wood stove. I have COPD and the wife has bad
asthma, so we stuck with the electric furnace even though it's expensive to
run.
It was a damn cold 4 days..power came back on early Monday am. We didn't
starve as I set a Coleman camp stove up on top of the stove in the house,
so coffee and food weren't an issue. We have enough food to last a few months,
so nobody starved...but no power in the middle of December? It got COLD....
Sent my Mrs. off to a friends house so she would be warm enough, and I hung
out here with the cats and 'coons. We have two fridge-freezers and one stand
up freezer, but only lost minimal food in one freezer. I just opened the doors on
the fridge in the garage, so it was plenty cold.
House got down to the low 40's (inside) by Sunday, and my old bones could sure
feel it. Never been so happy as when the lights came back on..and now life is
back to normal.
Never take life for granted...appreciate even the most basic of things, like
electricity.
A Merry Christmas to you all....
This year was one of the most memorable Christmas's..not because
of all the hoopla surrounding Christmas itself, but it will be forever known
around here as the "Christmas Outage of '18".
About every 15-20 years, we get a big windstorm up here in the Upper
Skagit Valley, and this time it arrived last Thursday morning. No idea
how high the winds were, but I'm guessing the gusts were above 70mph.
When you live in the woods, a bad windstorm can do miserable damage.
We didn't lose any of our trees, but the rest of the region suffered bad
damage, and massive trees were down everywhere. On our property
alone, we have 23 cedars that are all over 150', plus assorted fir
and alder. The fir and alders always go first, it seems.
Power went out about 1pm on Thursday, and like always I figured it would
be back up in a few hours. Not this time..
Our home is all electric, and while all the rest of the neighbors have either
wood or gas stoves, our home is newer, and, while contemplated, we never
took the steps to install a wood stove. I have COPD and the wife has bad
asthma, so we stuck with the electric furnace even though it's expensive to
run.
It was a damn cold 4 days..power came back on early Monday am. We didn't
starve as I set a Coleman camp stove up on top of the stove in the house,
so coffee and food weren't an issue. We have enough food to last a few months,
so nobody starved...but no power in the middle of December? It got COLD....
Sent my Mrs. off to a friends house so she would be warm enough, and I hung
out here with the cats and 'coons. We have two fridge-freezers and one stand
up freezer, but only lost minimal food in one freezer. I just opened the doors on
the fridge in the garage, so it was plenty cold.
House got down to the low 40's (inside) by Sunday, and my old bones could sure
feel it. Never been so happy as when the lights came back on..and now life is
back to normal.
Never take life for granted...appreciate even the most basic of things, like
electricity.
A Merry Christmas to you all....