Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Inflation and the European energy crisis courtesy of Russia.
We saw it coming and have decided this winter to set the thermostat a few degrees cooler, especially at night, and wear warm clothing.
Op here - our heat is at 65 at night and 67 during the day. Can’t really go much colder (IMO) since the kids start getting cold. I mean I am freezing as well at that temp but I just drink hot tea and wear fleece all winter.
65 is not heat-- that's AC. There is no point in trying to extract heat from a temperature setting that low.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Inflation and the European energy crisis courtesy of Russia.
We saw it coming and have decided this winter to set the thermostat a few degrees cooler, especially at night, and wear warm clothing.
Op here - our heat is at 65 at night and 67 during the day. Can’t really go much colder (IMO) since the kids start getting cold. I mean I am freezing as well at that temp but I just drink hot tea and wear fleece all winter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have to look at your bill for the amount of energy consumed, not the price. I used less than last year, and my bill is higher. Read a newspaper if you don’t understand why the price of energy is higher. Europe is getting killed on energy prices, and many Ukrainians don’t have any.
At this point we should just let Russia take Ukraine. I mean either send out military in to defeat Russia and protect Ukraine or we just let Russia have it. Not worth the gas prices.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Inflation and the European energy crisis courtesy of Russia.
We saw it coming and have decided this winter to set the thermostat a few degrees cooler, especially at night, and wear warm clothing.
Op here - our heat is at 65 at night and 67 during the day. Can’t really go much colder (IMO) since the kids start getting cold. I mean I am freezing as well at that temp but I just drink hot tea and wear fleece all winter.
Anonymous wrote:Inflation and the European energy crisis courtesy of Russia.
We saw it coming and have decided this winter to set the thermostat a few degrees cooler, especially at night, and wear warm clothing.
Anonymous wrote:This year for the month of November our gas bill was $140 and our electric bill was $230. Last year at this time our gas bill was $75 and our electric bill was $170.
The only thing we have done differently is add a new gas stove and a heated floor in the bathroom. I realize that will increase the price of gas marginally but we don’t run the stove all the time (usually only on the weekends for a few hours a day) and the heated floor is on a timer so is only on in the early mornings. Any thoughts? Are prices just that much higher this year?
Anonymous wrote:You have to look at your bill for the amount of energy consumed, not the price. I used less than last year, and my bill is higher. Read a newspaper if you don’t understand why the price of energy is higher. Europe is getting killed on energy prices, and many Ukrainians don’t have any.