We’re dealing with some stormy weather here (Vancouver for me, but it covers a wider area) and so a patchwork of homes across the region are having power outages. Crews are working to restore it
So on that note, what do you like to do?
- ways to prepare, what to buy, a favourite flashlight from !flashlight@lemmy.world?
- how you pass the time
- any stories that come to mind?
Contemplate how close to total collapse we are every day
Stare.
The same things I do when there is power:
chat with my spouse, read, write, sketch, paint, play chess. I will also try to do some chores I have been avoiding for awhile ;)
Edit: we have a few portable reading lamps that will hold for many hours between charges, so we can read during the evening too. We also have flashlights and… candles, just in case we need them (so far, we never were cut off power long enough)
Obsessively refresh the “There is a power outage in your area!” page.
Read books. Go to bed early as soon as it’s dark. Empty the fridge if it’s going to be a while longer.
The longest I was without power was as a kid. A winter storm knocked out power lines all over. It was a week before we got power back on, the longest it took for some was 12 days. We had a wood burning fireplace so my parents invited all the elderly neighbors to stay with us. I wasn’t happy about sleeping on the floor while some weird-smelling old person slept in my bed, but looking back now I’m glad my parents modeled civic-minded behavior.
Us kids played a lot of cards and picked fights with each other. Dad had us scooping driveways in the neighborhood and eventually the streets by hand just to keep us active and out of the house. It was not a fun week.
Blizzard of '93?
Nope, no special name that I am aware of. Other than “that bad storm in October that one year”
The storm itself wasn’t abnormally bad, it was the timing and sequence. It was very early so some deciduous trees still had leaves. The storm started with rain, then slush, then it all froze. So tree branches were overloaded with weight and tore down. Oak trees that had survived for a century were downed. Older neighborhoods and towns with power lines on poles instead of buried lines like newer communities would have now had pretty much all lines and poles torn down. Lineworkers from all over the country were brought in to help. I was too young to really follow at the time, but I’m told some of the delay was simply supply chain; getting enough new wires and poles there quickly enough to keep the crews supplied.
Hilbernate. The other half uses the e-reader. Anything e-ink should have incredible battery life.
Playing the piano to pass the time. There’s a certain eeriness that I find quite enjoyable of having the music flow while in nearly total darkness.
I don’t remember when the last one happened. We have like 5 minutes of downtime per year in Germany on average
I remember we used to get power outages all the time in my countries. But that was the 1970s, modern infrastructure has moved on
Well, everywhere except AHEM 🤔
Also German here, that seems a high estimate. The only downtime I had this year was when the workers building our sidewalk grazed a cable bug I can’t remember any over the last few years…
Longest I’ve had was 2 days. But that’s because I had work done on my electrical panel. 😁
Mostly nothing special in preparation. I have a grill in the back, a propane and a sterno camping stove, so I can still cook food. I have a one-gallon water-filtering thing that I can use if we need to go to boil-water status (our water treatment plant is probably a bit lower than it should be), and I have a camping solar panel (and several power banks) that I can use to recharge the electronics. We also have lanterns, flashlights, headlamps and a lot of candles.
If it’s going to be a major storm, I’ll fill up the gas tank and stop by the ATM - get small bills where possible, sometimes people can’t make change. Oh, and if you’re running low on a prescription, see if they can refill it early. If it floods: a long time ago, in a 3am fit of doomscrolling, I figured out what the nearest highest point I can get to without crossing any streams or storm drains. And after Katrina, when all those people survived the flood but died when they got trapped in their attics - well, I had nightmares about that for a long time, and I eventually mounted a hatchet to the attic wall.
How do we pass the time? We’ll talk with each other or our neighbors - gotta check in on everyone, make sure everyone’s doing as okay as we can be. Maybe go for a walk to check out the neighborhood as well. We all have books and magazines and been meaning to catch up on, so it’s a good time for that; family jigsaw puzzles in the early evening before the light gets too bad. It’s also really nice to just sit and listen to the world without the constant background noise of civilization.
Last outage we had, one of the first things I did was take a hot shower. Our water heater is electric and if it became extended I might not get another chance.
Last time this happened to me we hastely turned our dinner in a romantic candle lighted dinner.
Lots of babies are born 9 months after major power outages. I hope you enjoyed your company.
Butch that the power’s out.
Connect phone to laptop to drain for juice.
Sleep.I basically start collecting everything that has power and can provide power. Basically I just check on my laptops, power banks, phones, the bag of random batteries, estimate how long I can keep going, and try to reasonably save power regardless: Shutdown instead of sleep for laptops, mobile data off on phone if not needed, prefer dedicated flashlight over to phones, fetch other options like candles.
Kills enough time that the power gets restored during that time. Then I think of how unprepared I was, how I am going to improve it, and then never do it. There’s a bag of old 18650s from power banks and laptop batteries under my bed for like 2 years. I don’t know what state they are in now. I know I measured their capacities, disposed of dead ones, put good ones into the bag, planned to use it for a giant power bank, but did absolutely nothing with it in the end.
I should probably dispose of them at this point. They all had like 60% of capacity anyway and years of use.And then I also think about the bag of batteries from dad’s disposable vapes. They’re rechargeable, but it’s possible they were overdischarged and shouldn’t be used anymore. On some the wires running along those batteries were partly melted too.
I should dispose of that too. So much damn waste.In the end after each power outage I turn to the web, obsessively looking through power banks, get amazed by those with built-in mains inverter, but in the end don’t get anything as it isn’t necessary.
I only seem to get power outages at night, after the sun has set. So besides burning some candles or using flashlights until I’m sure I have everything I need, I usually just call it a night early and go to sleep. The power is usually back on by the time I wake up in the morning.
Before that, I’ll make sure to shut down my computers. I have several of them running on an UPS, so they don’t lose power when it goes dark; however, they burn through my UPS battery within 30 minutes or less, so I need to make sure they’re safely shut down first.
My power used to very unreliable and I’d get rolling brownouts (flicker of power) every now and then. Which would kill my PCs. So I got the UPS so they maintain power, regardless of a blackout or brownout. Ever since, my computers stay on 24/7 without problems.
Watch TV via the agm batteries and eBay inverter that I got a couple years ago.