Monday, April 3, 2023

When the lights go out...

A lot can happen in a few days.  And sometimes a lot of nothin' happens.  And the difference can be just a few miles (or blocks, or even feet, as the case may be).  In the storms that tore across the country on March 31st and April 1st, we were fortunate to only lose our power for 48 hours - and with the loss of power we also lost running water.  Fortunately, we had about 10 gallon-size containers filled with water for just such an occasion.

In town, a lot of trees were toppled.  Some were uprooted; some were snapped off in the winds.  And in the smaller town a few miles further north, a  tornado ripped through, completely destroying many homes and buildings that housed businesses - including some newly built warehouses near the interstate.  The interstate was brought to a standstill several times over the weekend.  At first because the building materials of those new (and maybe unfinished) warehouses were littering all six lanes, but the next day, we didn't really know what was causing the traffic jam.   Maybe they were still cleaning the mess up.  And I have no clue how the farmland on either side of the interstate that was strewn for miles with drywall and insulation gets cleaned up. 

I find it amazing that to date no deaths have been reported in that town.  According to emergency services, "all have been accounted for".  It may have helped that many people were probably gone for spring break - many who in the next day or two would make the trek home to start school and work on Monday (today).  Can you imagine coming home from a vacation to find out your home no longer existed?

In comparison, our being without power for 48 hours was merely an inconvenience.  Without power we decided to take a drive on Saturday and charge our phones in the process.  The toppled trees I took pictures of don't begin to capture the number that we passed, but all are minor compared to the devastation experienced a few miles north of here.

Stories have been coming out since Saturday.  Some make it on the evening news, some just get spread word of mouth - like...  A man at church told how his daughter was in her car (with a passenger) when two trees crashed down on the car pinning them inside.  The trees needed to be cut off the car before they could get out, and miraculously, neither the driver nor the passenger were injured.

It took many workers a number of days to get everyone back online in this area.  We are so thankful for their skill, and that day in and day out they do a dangerous job just so we all can have the luxury of turning lights on, or watching TV, or perusing the internet.

It was exciting at about 1:20 am this morning, being still awake, I got to witness the lights pop on.  I immediately set to work washing dishes (in the dishwasher and in the sink) so we could wake up to a fresher house than we'd spent the previous two days in.  It's been a pleasure to do laundry today, catching up on all that was left undone over the weekend.  And I was super happy to find that little food was lost in the power outage.  The freezer was packed full, so I supposed that helped everything to stay frozen over two days.  We enjoyed some very soft ice cream on Saturday, before throwing out the rest.  The power came on in plenty of time for me to survey the freezer's contents and decide if anything should be pitched into this week's garbage.  It turns out very little ended up in the garbage can that is now sitting at the end of our driveway ready to be hauled away in the morning.  The timing of everything couldn't have been better for us.

And yet I am not callous, nor am I gleeful over our blessings knowing there are people a few miles north who have lost their homes, and some have lost all that they own.  As a weather man noted tonight, "weather may be somewhat predictable, but it is not rational".  Two houses stand side by side.  One is flattened, one is completely untouched.  A garage is destroyed, yet tools sit on the workbench right where the owner placed them.  A child's outdoor playhouse finds its resting place in what was the living room or kitchen or some indoor room, while the walls of the house have completely disappeared.  Those kinds of pictures just silence me. 

And today we hear another set of storms is coming in this week.  I'm not overly concerned, but we might just fill the tub up with water this time.




The top of the tree above ended up in the yard across the street:







This is as close as we were allowed to get to the warehouses:


Approximately where the torn-up warehouse is, once stood a farmhouse that friends of ours used to live in.  Considering the possibilities is sobering.

And back home to lights-out.  The worst part of it all for us truly was being bored out of our gourds occasionally over the course of two days, and cooking in a kitchen lit with flashlights.   That said, I am very thankful for a gas stove.  And it was kind of nice to read for as long as I wanted without interruption.   And, I was happily surprised to find I didn't really miss the TV.  In fact, except for tonight's evening news, I haven't watched anything since the power went out after midnight Saturday morning.   We even played an old fashioned game of Twenty Questions and had some good laughs over our guesses.  

By the way, I possibly knew this before, but I was reminded...  when the lights go out inside and one needs to rely on flashlights, one gets a better view of things by pointing the flashlight up toward the ceiling.  If the ceiling is white (or light colored), it will bounce the flashlight's light back down and spread it out further than the beam does that comes out of the flashlight.  Ideally, one has two flashlights.  One to point upward creating a somewhat lightened space overall, and one to point at specific items in order to see something more brightly.  



One of the nicest things was having this gas fireplace to enjoy, and the fact that it wasn't bitterly cold. If it had been bitterly cold, this fireplace would have been a lifesaver.   I heated up some water on the gas stove and washed my hair in a sink on Sunday and I felt like a new person.  It truly made the difference in the last day being pretty decent vs something to simply tolerate.  

Drying my hair by the the heat of the fireplace was pretty nice, too.  Sometimes it truly is the little things...


~~~~~


28 comments:

  1. So glad you are all ok. Tornadoes do not care. They just destroy. One of the reasons I no longer live in Kansas. I'm surprised you don't have a generator for when you electricity goes out.

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    1. Marsha, I'd like to get at least a couple of portable solar-rechargeable generators - for the sake of convenience. Maybe a portable gas powered one (just to keep the freezer & fridge on) if we could get comfortable with the idea, but honestly... the couple I heard in the neighborhood over the two days of power being out, struck me as being insanely loud. One was across the street and over one house, and I could hear the second one from at least 5 houses down the street. I was glad it was chilly enough we didn't want to open the windows. The noise of those would have made the experience beyond irritating. The jury is still out in our minds on whether or not a whole house or stand-by generator is truly worth the expense. Ask me about it if I report our power going out again anytime soon. :)

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    2. The generators you heard were probably "portable" generators. The kind sold by the box stores, etc. After our house was hit by a tornado at the start of covidiocy, my husband decided our next home would have a whole home generator. We ended up getting a generac. It has come in handy a couple times. It is a little noisy, but nice to have.
      We lose water when we have no power because the generator only runs the new house. The well is still at the old house.
      I am glad to read you are safe.
      God bless.

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  2. Lanterns, battery powered, rechargeable batteries., they might help better than flashlights.

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    1. Good ideas, Nylon... I don't know why we (at some point) gave up rechargeable batteries (except for some that power a few battery operated tools Hub has). We keep a stash of batteries, but rechargeables really ought to be in our arsenal. While what we used in the way of flashlights were handheld ones, they are nice powerful LED ones that produce a decent and long-lasting light. And it didn't occur to me to mention other smaller, portable light sources we have for task lighting. The thought about how to get better light out of a flashlight is only why I mentioned flashlights at all - shining a bright flashlight upward on a light ceiling makes them as good as a decent lantern, in my experience. We also have a small lantern, but only one of us could use it at a time. I did make a mental note to buy at least one more powerful one! :)

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  3. I'm glad you survived the tornadoes. We had a similar but less fierce storm here and reports are still arriving about tornadoes all around us, some with 100 mph winds, while we were untouched. No human casualties here either. Thankful for all of us.

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  4. Very glad that you were okay beyond the minor inconvenience of no hydro. In the grand scheme of things you can count your blessings. A wee hint I learned when we were without power for several days is to take every quilt/blanket you have and wrap your freezer and fridge in them. Also be sure to have things like boxes of dry cereal and canned goods on hand. You, at least, had the benefit of a gas stove so could still cook...we have to rely on electricity so we were very glad that we at least could eat cereal (without milk) and open cans of beans. Please stay safe!

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    1. I will admit, Mary Anne, I don't think I would have thought about using quilts and blankets that way! I think the reason our upright freezer and garage fridge stayed as cold as they did was because with the heat off (furnace is in the garage) the garage was kept chilly. In the summer, our frozen food probably wouldn't have fared so well. Now you've gone and given me a good reason to not get rid of the extra (we call them "moving") blankets.

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  5. Super glad you are okay and (relatively) damage free.

    Building on the suggestions above, headlamps that hikers use and rechargeable batteries are great as the allow you to free your hands for work.

    I am sympathetic about the trees. Both here in New Home and at The Ranch we lost a number over this past Winter due to storms.

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    1. I am thankful to say we were completely damage free, TB. We have headlamps, and they were great for reading. Hubs would wear his around most of the time and aggravate me by shining it in my eyes every time he turned my direction to talk to me. lol I sympathize over your loss of trees. Even though it was a marvel to see so little structural damage due to toppled trees (in our town), it's sad to see so many old (and even the young) trees destroyed at one time.

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    2. Headlamps in the face is an occupational risk during hiking as well, as it turns out.

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    3. Absolutely. That's something that happens way too often here, while my husband does the evening barn chores, feeding the animals and wears his headlamp.

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  6. Dear God, thank you for your tender mercies. The pictures and word pictures are profoundly sobering. In light of them, my whining lips are sealed. Yes, fill the tub. 🙏🏼

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    1. The pictures (can be found online, I'm sure) of the town of Whiteland, IN are sobering for us to look at. Several neighborhoods were decimated, and others received significant damage. I can only imagine how traumatizing it was (and will be for a while) for the whole town to have experienced the roar of a tornado as it ripped across the countryside into town, and ripped back out on the other side - in a matter of minutes in the middle of the night. I truly cannot imagine the terror.

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  7. I am so glad you are ok, my friend. My heart hurts for all those who lost so much.

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    1. Watching the local news and seeing pictures of damage done in the recent storm reminds us to be grateful when we're tempted to slip back into little irritations.

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  8. I'm glad you were spared any lasting damage. The destructive force of nature is amazing and frightful at the same time.

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  9. I'm thankful you and your property are ok. We watch the news with sadness - such a hard awful thing for people to go through.

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    1. It really is, Debra. I just really can't imagine the fortitude it must take to start over as some have to do.

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  10. It's good to see that you got through this without physical harm and so many other factors that made this weather bearable. Your pictures are dramatic.

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    1. A big factor was that it was only chilly outside. As opposed to being downright cold. We were thankful that it was chilly as that alone made the difference not only in our comfort level, but I'm sure it played a part in our freezer and garage fridge keeping a majority of the food in them safe.

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  11. Wow Becki, that's so scary. I'm so happy you were safe. Losing power is one thing that I can't stand, mainly because I worry about freezing in the winter. But those big storms can be so dangerous. I know that feeling of seeing the lights pop back on! ♥

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    1. We were thankful it wasn't freezing cold outside, or during the hot and humid summer. Either of those scenarios would have produced a very different outcome, and strategies for coping with the loss of power.

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  12. Oh, my, I read all this with my heart filled with compassion for all of those experiencing the brunt of such a devastating storm. The emotional traumas as well as the physical losses is hard to imagine if you haven’t lived through them personally. In our area many of us have whole house generators or at the least we have the mini portable solo powered power pacts that have become popular because when hurricanes come up the east coast we can lose our power for days. We praise God that no one lost their lives in that storm.❤️

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    1. It consider it miraculous that no one lost their life in the tornado that passed through near here two weeks ago. Cleaning up downed trees seems minor when imagining having to clean up a destroyed house. And I can't even imagine starting over when everything you own is destroyed and gone. In a matter a minutes!

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  13. Sorry to have been away so long. What a time for y'all! I am glad you are all safe and sound. Tornadoes are just completely awful in that you just can't do much to get away from one. I actually am always nervous to go to Auburn during the spring, because there are many up that way in the spring. Going without power is not fun. Our longest stretch was after Hurricane Ivan. 16 days. I do think they get it back up sooner these days.

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    1. It's interesting how people adapt to the threats that are normal for their area and how we perceive the danger in places we don't live differently than the people who live with the threat of those dangers. I can't imagine dealing with hurricanes or earthquakes or forest fires on anything like an annual basis. Tornadoes, while devastating to anything in their direct path, have such a narrow path compared to hurricanes, or forest fires, they seem "safer" to me by comparison. I can't imagine not having power for that long. Sixteen days seems like forever compared to our boring 48 hours.

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