The Conservative Cave
Current Events => The DUmpster => Topic started by: franksolich on February 09, 2014, 11:56:21 AM
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http://www.democraticunderground.com/1018569135
Oh my.
malthaussen (3,216 posts) Sun Feb 9, 2014, 09:22 AM
No power for four days.
No heat, no lights, no cooking. In sub-freezing temperatures. What a character builder!
<<<bets the primitive lives in a blue area controlled by a corrupt Democrat party machine.
Tuesday Afternoon (49,814 posts) Sun Feb 9, 2014, 09:27 AM
1. btdt.
you have my complete and utter sympathy. not fun. not fun at all.
did you have water?
malthaussen (3,216 posts) Sun Feb 9, 2014, 09:34 AM
2. Yeah, the pipes didn't freeze.
And there was plenty to drink in the "refrigerator." We were stuck in for the first three days, though, as the sidewalks outside the apartment were a solid ice sheet and my mother, who is 89 with a couple of bad hips, couldn't walk it without killing herself. The car was stuck in pretty deep too. By Saturday, enough of the ice had melted that we could get out and go someplace warm for a couple of hours. Power was out all over the place (we live in the Philly suburbs), and though they predicted snow all week we at least had sunny skies and the temp occasionally rose above freezing.
sarge43 (18,181 posts) Sun Feb 9, 2014, 09:57 AM
3. That's major suckage
We went five days without, a shop vac--sucks and blows.
Warm, power filled vibes headed your way.
femmocrat (15,959 posts) Sun Feb 9, 2014, 11:41 AM
5. Been there, what a terrible experience.
I know exactly what you went through. We managed to cook on the fireplace though, so at least we had some hot meals. I was sick at how much food we had to throw away.
malthaussen (3,216 posts) Sun Feb 9, 2014, 11:43 AM
6. Yeah, just tossed $13.00 of stew meat.
Which is rotten.
KatyaR (2,721 posts) Sun Feb 9, 2014, 11:50 AM
7. I've been through that, I'm so sorry for you.
We had a major snow/ice storm several years ago, major tree damage everywhere. It really wasn't snow or ice--what fell and stayed on the ground was almost like cement--hard and grainy. You couldn't shovel it, it was hard as a rock and at least four or five inches thick. On top of that, it was really cold.
I was without power for four days. The apartment felt like a tomb. Thank god that was back before TV was converted to digital, and I had a little portable TV that used batteries, otherwise I would have been totally cut off. I had the dog in three or four t-shirts and sweaters just to try to stay warm.
There was no power for miles around, businesses had to shut their doors for days. When I came home from work on Day 4 and drove down my street and saw lights in my building, I almost cried. The dog danced when I walked in the door. I was lucky--some people didn't get power back for up to three weeks after the storm.
What I will remember most is walking into the grocery store a day or so afterwards. They were still restocking, and there was no food anywhere except for the nonperishables. They had to throw out hundreds of thousands of dollars of fresh food because they had no way to keep it cold. I will never forget how creepy it was to be in a store with almost totally empty shelves.*
Stay warm--hopefully the power will be back soon.
*obviously the primitive's never been in the socialist paradises of the workers and peasants; coming here soon.
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malthaussen (3,216 posts) Sun Feb 9, 2014, 09:22 AM
No power for four days.
No heat, no lights, no cooking. In sub-freezing temperatures. What a character builder!
Notice no shower was mentioned. :whistling:
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Yet these urban and helpless cretins think they are going to rise up and win a leftist revolution. :rotf:
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malthaussen (3,216 posts) Sun Feb 9, 2014, 11:43 AM
6. Yeah, just tossed $13.00 of stew meat.
Which is rotten.
If it's that cold, how does the meat go rotten so fast?
He couldn't put it out on the balcony if it's sub-freezing weather?
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If it's that cold, how does the meat go rotten so fast?
He couldn't put it out on the balcony if it's sub-freezing weather?
Well, that's what I'm curious about myself.
When a new floor was laid in the kitchen here, necessitating removal of most things in that room, I stashed the contents of the freezer into 48-quart thermos chests and put them on the front porch. It was November, and a very cold November at that (some years ago).
I didn't lose a damned thing, even though they had to be thusly for more than a week.
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All I could think of, was Texacon's, sig line.
Build a man a fire and he'll be warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he will be warm for the rest of his life.
:lmao:
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If it's that cold, how does the meat go rotten so fast?
He couldn't put it out on the balcony if it's sub-freezing weather?
It's more than likely they live in a blue DUmpster somewhere, and so anything placed outside and left unattended is going to be stolen by their fellow democrats.
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If it's that cold, how does the meat go rotten so fast?
He couldn't put it out on the balcony if it's sub-freezing weather?
Well, that's what I'm curious about myself.
When a new floor was laid in the kitchen here, necessitating removal of most things in that room, I stashed the contents of the freezer into 48-quart thermos chests and put them on the front porch. It was November, and a very cold November at that (some years ago).
I didn't lose a damned thing, even though they had to be thusly for more than a week.
It's more than likely they live in a blue DUmpster somewhere, and so anything placed outside and left unattended is going to be stolen by their fellow democrats.
He/she/it could put it in the trunk of it's car. Of course we all know dummies cannot survive on their own.
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Strange, I also live in the Philly burbs, and haven't encountered any such hardships. The weather isn't actually too bad this week and it was much colder a couple weeks back. The Dummy is only stuck because he's too lazy to shovel his sidewalk or dig out his car.
My ex-gf was also stuck without power for a couple days too, and she didn't whine nearly as much as this Dummy.
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Why is this DUmmy complaining?
Fat Che's little brother, Pab the Queer, has been without water, electricity, or heat since last summer.
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Yet these urban and helpless cretins think they are going to rise up and win a leftist revolution. :rotf:
:lol: :hi5:
Notice no shower was mentioned. :whistling:
:-)
Can't completely blame the (D)Ummie though. I'll bet the water heater is electric. That's why I keep 4 1lb Propane Bottles for the double burner campstove. Kitchen sink sponge baths.
If it's that cold, how does the meat go rotten so fast?
He couldn't put it out on the balcony if it's sub-freezing weather?
I know, right? Meat thaws for one day and the (D)Ummies :panic: :panic: My main problem is making sure the beer doesn't freeze. :naughty:
He/she/it could put it in the trunk of it's car.
:cheersmate: Makes a very good temporary fridge/freezer. But then, I don't have to worry about thieves and (D)emocrats BIRM.
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Can't completely blame the (D)Ummie though. I'll bet the water heater is electric. That's why I keep 4 1lb Propane Bottles for the double burner campstove. Kitchen sink sponge baths.
I can't imagine living in an area that gets seasonal storms, snow and ice and not being prepared for it. Seems like a no brainer.
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I can't imagine living in an area that gets seasonal storms, snow and ice and not being prepared for it. Seems like a no brainer.
Simple, you just wait for it to happen and then you muddle through it.
I was without power for 3 weeks back in 1989(hurricane Hugo). I had a generator/welder that would supply my whole house....but I loaned it to friends that were worse off than myself.
Was without power for about a week or 10 days back in the early 70's during a snow and ice storm. Without power 3 to 5 days several times but didn't worry to much about it.
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I can't imagine living in an area that gets seasonal storms, snow and ice and not being prepared for it. Seems like a no brainer.
(http://www.proprofs.com/flashcards/upload/q4454332.jpg)
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malthaussen (3,216 posts) Sun Feb 9, 2014, 09:22 AM
No power for four days.
No heat, no lights, no cooking.
yet the DUmmy still has access to the interwebz so he/she can whine and snivel and try to gin up sympathy from fellow DUmmies....
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Simple, you just wait for it to happen and then you muddle through it.
I was without power for 3 weeks back in 1989(hurricane Hugo). I had a generator/welder that would supply my whole house....but I loaned it to friends that were worse off than myself.
Was without power for about a week or 10 days back in the early 70's during a snow and ice storm. Without power 3 to 5 days several times but didn't worry to much about it.
In the last 5 years I've been without power twice for nearly 10 days each time. Some people were without for up to two WEEKS (zeit--2010 windstorm, anyone?)
You live in a house here, and you don't have a generator with a transfer switch before your first winter, with your furnace, fridge, well pump, microwave, and maybe a couple of other critical loads on the transfer panel, you deserve whatever misery befalls you. The morning AFTER the ice storm is NOT the time to be figuring this shit out. Flashlights, radio, etc,. all come in handy as well.
The hot water in the heater lasted about 2-3 days--after that, it was microwave a pitcher of water and sponge bath for the duration. Laundry was a matter of finding someplace that was open.
Oh, and crybaby Philly DUmmies? There was a story in the local fishwrap (Foster's) about a family who is separated because the wife is waiting a lung transplant, and had to move DOWN THERE to find someplace warmer. And this place is freaking balmy compared to where my step-brother is living (MN.)
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Yet these urban and helpless cretins think they are going to rise up and win a leftist revolution. :rotf:
HAHAHAHAHA! H5.
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In the last 5 years I've been without power twice for nearly 10 days each time. Some people were without for up to two WEEKS (zeit--2010 windstorm, anyone?)
You live in a house here, and you don't have a generator with a transfer switch before your first winter, with your furnace, fridge, well pump, microwave, and maybe a couple of other critical loads on the transfer panel, you deserve whatever misery befalls you. The morning AFTER the ice storm is NOT the time to be figuring this shit out. Flashlights, radio, etc,. all come in handy as well.
The hot water in the heater lasted about 2-3 days--after that, it was microwave a pitcher of water and sponge bath for the duration. Laundry was a matter of finding someplace that was open.
Oh, and crybaby Philly DUmmies? There was a story in the local fishwrap (Foster's) about a family who is separated because the wife is waiting a lung transplant, and had to move DOWN THERE to find someplace warmer. And this place is freaking balmy compared to where my step-brother is living (MN.)
We were 10 days in the ice storm, and even with a generator it sucked. My BIL is an electrical engineer so he hooked our boiler up to the generator so thankfully we had heat and hot water.
We have lost power since, but not more than a day or so. You really do have to purchase a generator when you own a home in the Northeast.
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I feel for you guys; this is one of those experiences I should have, but never have had.
I live on the very fringe of the county public power district, and it's miles and miles to the next customer.
As such, virtiually no maintenance has been done on the power lines here since.....1948 or something.
Everything's very old, and I assume considerably less than state-of-the-art; I suppose with one single customer at the end of this line, I'm not considered "high priority" (which makes sense).
We've had some hellacious blizzards, cold snaps, floods, tornadoes, and windstorms the years I've been here, some of them record-breaking.
Other parts of the county have had downed power at one time or another, usually more than once.
<<<has yet to have that happen; has never gone without power.
And being a single adult male, no one dependent upon me other than the cats, if such an outage were to occur, I imagine I could handle it better and more easily than those who have such responsibilities. But it's never happened.
I'm either very lucky, or God must like me.
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I'll tell you one of the big reasons you won't lose power nearly as often as we will/do: TREES.
In the two worst instances, and in pretty much every storm I've seen around here with widespread and long-lasting outages, it's been TREES, not wind, not snow, that has caused the major loss of power. Ice will take down a power line, sure--but not nearly as quickly or thoroughly as a tree limb coated in an inch or so of ice.
And when the towns/power companies don't want to clear the right-of-ways, the inevitable results. Fortunately, at least around here, they're learning their lesson. Slowly, but they're learning.
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I'll tell you one of the big reasons you won't lose power nearly as often as we will/do: TREES.
In the two worst instances, and in pretty much every storm I've seen around here with widespread and long-lasting outages, it's been TREES, not wind, not snow, that has caused the major loss of power. Ice will take down a power line, sure--but not nearly as quickly or thoroughly as a tree limb coated in an inch or so of ice.
And when the towns/power companies don't want to clear the right-of-ways, the inevitable results. Fortunately, at least around here, they're learning their lesson. Slowly, but they're learning.
Trees are what cause most of the outages. The power company does try to keep limbs trimmed back, but they are limited by what the city allows them to do. They can only do so much without the property owner's permission.
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I'll tell you one of the big reasons you won't lose power nearly as often as we will/do: TREES.
Hmmmm.
That could be; I never thought about it.
The power lines from the main transformer go for about seven miles over what's essentially treeless terrain until they approach this place, and even then the trees are set back, set away.
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I'll tell you one of the big reasons you won't lose power nearly as often as we will/do: TREES.
In the two worst instances, and in pretty much every storm I've seen around here with widespread and long-lasting outages, it's been TREES, not wind, not snow, that has caused the major loss of power. Ice will take down a power line, sure--but not nearly as quickly or thoroughly as a tree limb coated in an inch or so of ice.
And when the towns/power companies don't want to clear the right-of-ways, the inevitable results. Fortunately, at least around here, they're learning their lesson. Slowly, but they're learning.
After the 2010 ice storm, the National Grid crews went around and cut a lot of tree branches out of the ROWs. Yeah, there's still trees that could fall across the lines, but there's a heluva lot fewer trees close to those lines now. A lot of electrical lines around my neck of the woods are buried.
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After the 2010 ice storm, the National Grid crews went around and cut a lot of tree branches out of the ROWs. Yeah, there's still trees that could fall across the lines, but there's a heluva lot fewer trees close to those lines now. A lot of electrical lines around my neck of the woods are buried.
On the main lines around here they use a helicopter to trim back the trees along the right of ways. A long bar of saw blades dangling under the helicopter. I bet that is one well paid pilot.
ETA: Video......There are more if you do a search.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sp0DqARvjwY
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I'll tell you one of the big reasons you won't lose power nearly as often as we will/do: TREES.
In the two worst instances, and in pretty much every storm I've seen around here with widespread and long-lasting outages, it's been TREES, not wind, not snow, that has caused the major loss of power. Ice will take down a power line, sure--but not nearly as quickly or thoroughly as a tree limb coated in an inch or so of ice.
And when the towns/power companies don't want to clear the right-of-ways, the inevitable results. Fortunately, at least around here, they're learning their lesson. Slowly, but they're learning.
Sparky: Do you get your electricity from the NH co-op?
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If it's that cold, how does the meat go rotten so fast?
He couldn't put it out on the balcony if it's sub-freezing weather?
My thoughts, too. I live in north Idaho. We have power outages all the time. Most of us have generators for such emergencies. I usually load mine up and run around to all the old folks I know and fire up their forced air heaters. If ya do that once a day, it keeps the chill outa the house. Hell, in the winter time, we don't even plug in the freezer. Been below 10 degrees for over a week. DUmmies don't live here, wonder why?
I feel for you guys; this is one of those experiences I should have, but never have had.
I live on the very fringe of the county public power district, and it's miles and miles to the next customer.
As such, virtiually no maintenance has been done on the power lines here since.....1948 or something.
Everything's very old, and I assume considerably less than state-of-the-art; I suppose with one single customer at the end of this line, I'm not considered "high priority" (which makes sense).
We've had some hellacious blizzards, cold snaps, floods, tornadoes, and windstorms the years I've been here, some of them record-breaking.
Other parts of the county have had downed power at one time or another, usually more than once.
<<<has yet to have that happen; has never gone without power.
And being a single adult male, no one dependent upon me other than the cats, if such an outage were to occur, I imagine I could handle it better and more easily than those who have such responsibilities. But it's never happened.
I'm either very lucky, or God must like me.
I don't believe in luck, Coach. I'll go with the second, heh, heh!
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My thoughts, too. I live in north Idaho. We have power outages all the time. Most of us have generators for such emergencies. I usually load mine up and run around to all the old folks I know and fire up their forced air heaters. If ya do that once a day, it keeps the chill outa the house. Hell, in the winter time, we don't even plug in the freezer. Been below 10 degrees for over a week. DUmmies don't live here, wonder why?
I don't believe in luck, Coach. I'll go with the second, heh, heh!
So, will I, AR . . . wait a sec! How the Hell are ya? :yahoo:
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On the main lines around here they use a helicopter to trim back the trees along the right of ways. A long bar of saw blades dangling under the helicopter. I bet that is one well paid pilot.
ETA: Video......There are more if you do a search.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sp0DqARvjwY
That is the coolest thing I will see all week. H5.
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That is the coolest thing I will see all week. H5.
I just found out that Aerial Solutions(video) is the company that does the tree trimming here. They are based in North Carolina. Neighbor(2 miles away) has run a helicopter repair shop for 40 years and he did repair work for them.
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So, will I, AR . . . wait a sec! How the Hell are ya? :yahoo:
Still kickin', although sometimes just barely. It sucks gettin' old!
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Still kickin', although sometimes just barely. It sucks gettin' old!
As I'm learning . . . ::)
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As I'm learning . . . ::)
Nowadays, when I get a cold I run the risk of pneumonia. When I get the flu, I run the risk of pneumonia, of course smokin' a pack and a half of Camels everyday doesn't help, lol!
But what the hell, ya gotta die of sumpin' and I might as well be happy when I do! Johnny Walker and Camels...... oooh yeah! Nectar of the Gods as far as I'm concerned!
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But what the hell, ya gotta die of sumpin' and I might as well be happy when I do! Johnny Walker and Camels...... oooh yeah! Nectar of the Gods as far as I'm concerned!
I don't smoke, but if I did, I'd smoke Camels.
What kind do you smoke?
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I don't smoke, but if I did, I'd smoke Camels.
What kind do you smoke?
Duh!!! Camel 99 lights! Gotta think of my health, doncha know! heheheheheheheheheh!
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That is the coolest thing I will see all week. H5.
Helicopters and helicopter pilots, making your life better !
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Duh!!! Camel 99 lights! Gotta think of my health, doncha know! heheheheheheheheheh!
:rofl:
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The primitive is living in Future 0merica.
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Sparky: Do you get your electricity from the NH co-op?
I'm a PSNH customer.
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That is the coolest thing I will see all week. H5.
Second coolest.
[youtube=425,350]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LIjC7DjoVe8[/youtube]
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Second coolest.
Yeah! That would be true if I had not seen that clip previously. :-) Hats off to those guys.
This is one is my favorite because of what the special cameras they use show us what we can't see:
[youtube=425,350]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V1QpLS05XCU[/youtube]
I think the BBC pulled this from an Invisible Worlds episode, because I seem to remember Richard Hammond was the narrator.
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It's like taking the karate kid up a notch. Instead of wax on wax off, it's wand in, wand out.
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It's like taking the karate kid up a notch. Instead of wax on wax off, it's wand in, wand out.
If you had a choice between hovering near high tension lines with a guy hanging off the end of a plank, or dangling a giant chainsaw from a cord/line/whatever, and sawing up some trees, which would you choose?
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If you had a choice between hovering near high tension lines with a guy hanging off the end of a plank, or dangling a giant chainsaw from a cord/line/whatever, and sawing up some trees, which would you choose?
I caught my dad on his garage roof one day, doing both of those, minus the guy on the plank.
Scared the (r@% out of me. :o
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I caught my dad on his garage roof one day, doing both of those, minus the guy on the plank.
Scared the (r@% out of me. :o
Does he give lessons ?
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If you had a choice between hovering near high tension lines with a guy hanging off the end of a plank, or dangling a giant chainsaw from a cord/line/whatever, and sawing up some trees, which would you choose?
I'll take what's behind door number one, Monty.