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We just got our power on from the ice storm from last week. Our water is still erratic. We live in New England, and some nights it was down to 10 above zero, and a weird things about houses is that they're just as good keeping the cold in as they are at keeping the warmth in.
For various logistical reasons, it wasn't possible to move - e.g.: my wife had to work, I had local daily obligations, and we have five dogs, and there wasn't a local hotel that wasn't fully booked anyway.
So you do what you can. There's been trees down everywhere - some roads they're literally down every two feet - you can drive a mile and see nothing but felled branches on every inch of the road, assuming the road is even open (which many weren't initially).
After the first few days or so I made a resource run - batteries, water, etc. The water is the worst part - no water means you can't flush your toilet, and since I have colon cancer it means that when I have to go, I have to go - no luxury of driving to the nearest McDonalds or anything. So that's actually a health hazard, so I ended up buying a number of 5-gallon cooler-sized jugs of water so I could pour it into the tank so we could flush. That gets kinda pricey after a while.
And that's just flushing. Forget any hot showers for days. I could cook on my outdoor gas grill, but there are only so many things you can cook, and stores weren't stocking meat because it would spoil.
My basement flooded because the sump pump doesn't work without electricity, and so it can't drain the groundwater. I ventured into the basement for batteries one evening and found myself standing in water (much to the chagrin of my socks) and we have all kinds of quasi-valuable stuff on the floor on the basement, so who knows what's trashed and what's not - I'll try to go down later today. By quasi-valuable, I mean valuable to us, but nothing I could really put an insurance claim on.
We have downed trees, including one against the house, but nothing that can't wait a few days. I did manage to score one of the few remaining packages of highly coveted D-size batteries in southern New Hampshire - not an easy task. I ended up rigging my car as a generator so I could do things like recharge my cellphone or laptop (albeit no Internet service).
We didn't physically lose the house, and that's good, but I got a taste of what it's like to live in the freezing cold for days on end with no power or water, and if I extrapolate that out to months for Katrina (or other) survivors, budgeting in the loss of home, it's easy to see how miserable it can be.
I would say the worst is the lack of water, not to drink, but to flush. Physical possessions are destroyed, but those are replaceable (theortically - some not really). No one in town who lived in my area did any better. Restaurants with generators were hugely popular, and you'd be surprised how many people line up outside Dunkin Donuts or Burger King when they have to. Stores have plenty of AAA and AA batteries, but you have to work hard to find a C or, god help you, a D. I'm good enough electrically to wire up solutions around it, but it's hard to do wiring in the dark.
And don't even ask my what I look like - after a week with no shower or shaving - well, I don't even want to go there. And things like failure to do laundry catch up with you too, after enough days.
The Red Cross had a local shelter set up, but the person I talked to directed me to the wrong place - on the phone she might have been in Omaha, for all I know - and so a lot of people were directed to shelters that didn't exist (the police confirmed this when I called the next day to see where the shelter really was, figuring they'd know).
Infants or elderly can easily die in this situation and cold. I do have a compromised immune system, due to treatments, so I have to be careful too.
Given how we were without water, I don't even want to venture a guess what it would be like for months - sewage wise.
And of course, I couldn't log onto DU. That was the worst. Okay, not really (nothing against DU).
If we had less resources than we do - any many have less (and many others have more) - it would have been worse still. Forgetting the cold, I don't want to even imagine going through Katrina. Abandoning the home altogther almost might have been easier. Sometimes it's not an easy option though.
Anyway, in the end we're still in one piece.
Best to all.
- Tab
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