Hi everyone!
Our area was very badly hit with the ice storm. We were without power for almost 2 1/2 days, and two of those nights dipped down to 15F degrees.
We are lucky that we got our power back during the night last night- others in neighboring villages and back roads may still go until Tuesday without heat or power.
Our house inside only dropped down to 50F, so our single living room fireplace insert stove (which is not designed to heat the whole house) did manage to keep us from freezing. We always figured it would be enough to keep us from freezing, and it passed the test.
We had running water all throughout the event too, because we are hooked up to the village water system which is gravity-fed from the little reservoir up on the hill. Thus, we don't have to depend on electric to run a pump from a well. So we had freezing cold water, -but water nonetheless!....we could flush toilets and had drinking/washing water. This is one big advantage of living on the edge of our little village as opposed to further out in the countryside surrounding us. This was one of the reasons we bought this house- that we would have access to town walking in emergencies and if gas was unobtainable, and would always have village water if electricity failed. The houses only about two houses further out from us are not on village water system, and thus had no running water.
I was also very glad that on Thursday (before the power went out Thurs evening) I was able to both fix a flat tire on my car AND get my kitty Pearl to the vet and get her started on some antibiotics for an infection- she had been getting sick for a few days prior. That would have been bad if she was cold AND getting sicker during all this.
Our other blessing was that there was miraculously power down on Main street during the whole time, so we bundled up several times and hiked the mile to town for big hot breakfasts Fri and Sat morning. That was nice, and we could get the latest 'emergency news' from everyone while in town. There was a state of emergency declared and people were not supposed to be driving unless it was an emergency.
We had lots of food, and we had plenty of lanterns and candles and flashlights. (I am sort of anal when it comes to being prepared, and we had tons of candle lanterns, 30 spare candles for them, several oil lamps, and lots of flashlights and a battery radio, a propane camp stove that could be used out in the yard if needed, and canned and dried food in the basement. We put the fridge contents into coolers and didn't lose any significant food. Since it was below freezing outside, we just put our freezer stuff in a cooler out on the porch and left it there.
Our basement has a pool of water everywhere because the sump pump was without power, but luckily we have a little emergency drain in the floor that was still functioning, so the water never got higher than 1 inch. Other people were not so lucky and had badly flooded basements.
Some of our elderly neighbors got moved out of their homes into relatives' houses or to shelters. We have elderly neighbors on 3 sides of us, but they were all fine and we kept in touch.
We closed off the upstairs so as not to waste precious heat from the woodstove, wore lots of wool, gloves and hats in the house, and piled blankets and kitties on the bed at night. During the day the cats liked hanging out in front of the stove. I read a book by lantern light both nights.
It wasn't much fun feeling cold all the time and knowing how we were slowly getting further and further behind in work, but it could have been way worse like it has been for many other people. (trees falling on their houses and cars, and one older friend of ours fell on the ice in town on thursday and broke his hip AND his wrist.)
The worst for us personally is that our beautiful 45 year old HUGE white pine in the back yard was devastated. It was about 50-60 feet tall and gorgeous, and at least 2/3 of all its large horizontal branches are broken off and it now looks like a sad tall splintered toothpick with some remaining smaller branches decorating it. We feel heartsick about it, but we'll have to wait til all this ice has melted before we even access what to do about it. It was so beautiful.
We are very grateful for a warm house now, hot showers, etc. This kind of thing teaches you not to take electricity for granted. This was a TERRIBLE ice storm, and will take WEEKS of cleanup and repair for many people. I read that power crews came in from as far away as Michigan (!!) to help get the power lines up again, working all throughout the 3 nights in 15F degree temps.
They are all still working like mad as many are still without heat or power.
So, we are back up and running, a grateful.![]()





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