View Full Version : Ice Storm Cometh
bike4ever
12-09-2007, 06:28 PM
Since we lost our power twice last winter due to ice and once last summer due to bad storms, we now have a generator waiting patiently in the garage. I am hoping that my prep this evening of organizing the flashlights and candles along with getting gas for the generator will pay off tomorrow. My way of thinking is that if I am ready for ice, it won't come. However, if I wasn't prepared we would definitely get slammed. Let's home this strange thinking pays off.:rolleyes:
With the generator, we will have enough power to keep the refrigerator, freezer and heat running. We have gas heat so just need electric to fire the furnace. We can do without lights, TV, and computer. It kept getting expensive losing all of our food.
Tuckervill
12-09-2007, 06:53 PM
We didn't lose power last year, but a neighbor's tree fell on the house (tore off the deck and grazed the roof). We're about 80 miles east of Tulsa so just on the edge of the ice storm warning area...and all the fences are coated already. :-(
Don't suppose I'm going to my exercise class at 6 a.m. If they close the schools, I know they'll close the gym...but the class is before they usually make that decision. :P
Here's to melting ice!
Karen
Tri Girl
12-10-2007, 04:44 AM
We're covered in a half inch of ice, and preparing for another half inch today. Some 100,000 homes are without power- luckily we still have ours (knocking on all the wood I can find). Sometimes I wish we lived further north where it would just snow 8 inches and we could move on. The ice is just so dang destructive: to power lines, my poor trees, and our roof (found it leaking yesterday :eek: ).
Hope you gals are making it through OK. We've contemplated a generator, but have yet to bite the bullet. I hope you don't need yours bike4ever. :)
To top it all off, I have an obgyn appt today- the one you HAVE to make a year in advance or you'll never get in. If he's not open today, it'll be months before I can see him again... which might not be a bad thing (as long as he'll call me in my bc prescription...:rolleyes: ). Sorry if that's TMI- but I know you ladies understand.
Ice, ice go away.
bike4ever
12-10-2007, 05:15 AM
We're covered in ice. Multiple schools are out but not our district (YEA). I'll have to call the house regularly today to make sure the power stays on - if the answering machine picks up we have power.
Tuckervill
12-10-2007, 05:19 AM
We dodged it, for the most part. There is ice on the power lines and trees and fences, but the temp stayed above 30 and it's going to get to 45 today. They didn't close the schools, but I didn't go to boot camp, either. I couldn't stand the thought of leaving my teenager sleeping while there's ice on the huge oaks surrounding our house.
Hope the rest of you are still all right.
Karen
Tri Girl
12-10-2007, 05:39 AM
Glad you missed it, Karen, and I'm glad you're in school bike4ever. All the school districts within 50 miles are closed. I guess that's good since I had to burn a day of sick leave to attend my doctor's appointment- now I'll get to save that day for later. The bad part? Supposed to ice more and we'll probably be out tomorrow, too. :( I hate being out so close to Christmas break. We'll be paying for it in May.
BUT, the ice sure is pretty to look at. I took a couple pictures of how pretty it all is. I'm so sad for my already struggling pine trees. The needles are 10 times their size with ice, and they're all leaning to the ground. I hope they don't break... :(
Tuckervill
12-10-2007, 05:45 AM
It is a very surreal feeling to be amongst those trees when they're covered with ice.
It's also quite surreal when you are on the edge of the devastation. Last January when the tree fell, within 4 miles of here in Oklahoma it was much much worse. Days after we were all clear, I took a drive west and it was like a time warp.
Karen
Sorry for being dense, but what IS an ice storm actually? :confused:
I can guess that it involves a lot of ice all over the place. but how does it get there? And why doesn't that happen here? I mean - it both rains and snows here in winter, but all that tends to go down and stay on the ground, and not go freezing in wads on the trees. Something about the climate has to be different.
- signed, mystified in Norway
Velobambina
12-10-2007, 06:32 AM
You don't get ice storms because you're lucky! LOL. They are terrible.
I think freezing rain is the culprit. I don't remember the science of it--starts falling as rain but as it gets near the surface, freezes. ??
Tri Girl
12-10-2007, 06:44 AM
The ice is from freezing rain and sleet. It's rained and sleeted for the last day, but the temps are below freezing so it accumulates on things and makes a pretty layer.
The news man said that 5,000 feet up, the air temp is about 60 degrees F. When the rain falls and passes through the air that's closer to the ground in the 20's, it freezes and then forms sleet or freezing rain. As it falls it freezes. I don't know why it does it in some places and not in others. In states north of us, they get pummeled with snow, but not the ice. I guess where it's warmer up higher in the atmosphere, there is more a chance for freezing rain? I suppose your air is cold all the way up, so it just snows? I wish I was a meteorologist so I could say this with any certainty. ;)
As I'm writing this I'm looking outside at our power line precariously sitting right below a rather large branch with almost an inch coating of ice. I fear it will break from the tree and take the power line with it. Say a little prayer that it doesn't, please.
singletrackmind
12-10-2007, 07:57 AM
Surreal is standing (in an open area) outside at 4 am completely blanketed in quiet but for the constant cracks and crashes of tree limbs all around.
Here's to not having another of last year's episode. We were one of the lucky few that kept power though 90% of our neighbors did not. The two limbs that landed on our lines didn't break them, none of our trees gave up anything major. Our neighbor's elm was leaning heavily over our lines and our roof....it was kind of scary being up there sawing the branches off bit by bit until we got enough weight off the tree it was no longer a danger. Beforehand, the other side of it broke off and landed on our neighbor's house, cutting his power prompting our rooftop ice skating session. :eek:
Tuckervill
12-10-2007, 11:18 AM
On Feb 9, 1994, a serious ice storm hit a large portion of the southeast when we lived in Memphis (I remember the date distinctly, because it was the day my hub got his vasectomy ;) ).
I remember the limbs cracking, as you described, but I also remember the sound of several transformers in our neighborhood exploding, one after another. That's a sound you don't often forget. With every explosion, we expected the power to go out in our house, but it didn't go until about the 6th or 7th. Fortunately, we lived in a part of Memphis that had all the power lines underground, but the rest of Memphis was not so lucky.
I have a feeling Missouri and Oklahoma, at least, are going to have that kind of devastation this time.
Karen
bike4ever
12-10-2007, 11:32 AM
This time last year we had a doozy of a storm. I was home with the boys - husband stuck in Texas unable to make it back. My eldest and I were out back getting more wood for the fire. We both saw the brilliant light from an exploding transformer then heard the sound. It definitely made us jump. I ran as fast as possible back inside knowing the the immediate darkness would scare my youngest.
Once I got the house some candles and flashlights, I promptly called our electric company. I was fast on that call. Even though I was quick to notify them of our outage, our street was one of the last to regain power for that storm. 5 days - house got down to 38 degrees inside.
BleeckerSt_Girl
12-10-2007, 01:55 PM
We had plenty of ice last night too. I spent a good part of the morning salting the driveway and chipping my car out from its ice layers.
jusdooit
12-10-2007, 02:04 PM
Sorry you guys in the middle of the country are going through this. I fear the unseasonably warm temps here now will set us up for the same destiny in a couple of months.
And yes Karen I remember that day in '94. I walked outside just in time to hear a loud crack and watch a tree fall on a neighbor's house. Power went off in the middle of the night, and we had to move to in front of the fireplacr to keep warm.
Good luck middle America...............I'll be thinking about you!!!
Tuckervill
12-10-2007, 03:37 PM
Mississippi was hit pretty hard that time!
Somebody ripped the fireplace out of this 110 yo house and turned the chimney into a skylight long ago. We have a kerosene heater in case the power goes out, and the workshop has a wood burning furnace (we've got plenty of wood split from all the treefall) but it's not insulated. I dread the idea of losing power in this house!
Karen
erk... sounds scary! :eek:
singletrackmind
12-11-2007, 03:53 AM
Whew! For us, the ice storm goeth.......north! Hope y'all are ok up there.
mimitabby
12-11-2007, 07:18 AM
wow, sounds awful and beautiful. I loved the photos. We rarely have weather like that. One day my birch tree was frozen bending over to the ground OVER my powerline. Just a little melting, and pop! the tree was upright again. Moral:
Birch trees are among the most flexible of trees.
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