Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, It’s bad. We have not lost power at my house. One toilet won’t work but the other two are. We have an ice storm tomorrow. I can take care of myself with my COVID extra 10 pounds but am worried about my greyhounds. One is almost 15, others are 10.5, 9 and our new wiggleworm at almost 4. They are so skinny. We do have dog coats and lots of food but...,
Move beds and all living things into one room. Set up a tent in there if you can, or a blanket fort under a table. The smaller the space, the more likely you are to be able to warm it with body heat. Drape the tent or fort with more blankets or rugs to hold in heat.
Heat loss to the floor underneath you is a big problem. Insulate underneath with layers of cardboard, crushed newspaper, or straw if you have it.
[/Manitoban who has had to get through -40 nights without electricity]
wow.. someone who has learned to pull themselves up by the bootstraps.. from a socialist country no less.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So sorry, OP. It sounds miserable.
Not sure how you can blame Republicans for not keeping up infrastructure. It sounds like a freak storm causing wind turbines to freeze.
Perhaps we need to move cautiously away from oil and gas until we have the technology for preventing such an event.
You keep up the infrastructure in order to weather freak storms - no pun intended - so yes, you can blame the Texas GOP where they spend more time on anti-choice measures and fighting for low to no taxes. You get what you pay for.
Anonymous wrote:So sorry, OP. It sounds miserable.
Not sure how you can blame Republicans for not keeping up infrastructure. It sounds like a freak storm causing wind turbines to freeze.
Perhaps we need to move cautiously away from oil and gas until we have the technology for preventing such an event.
Anonymous wrote:The wind turbines froze, but so did everything else. Thermal plants actually, at least as of yesterday morning, accounted for more of the missing demand than wind. It's not a renewable issue but an overall infrastructure issue.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, It’s bad. We have not lost power at my house. One toilet won’t work but the other two are. We have an ice storm tomorrow. I can take care of myself with my COVID extra 10 pounds but am worried about my greyhounds. One is almost 15, others are 10.5, 9 and our new wiggleworm at almost 4. They are so skinny. We do have dog coats and lots of food but...,
Move beds and all living things into one room. Set up a tent in there if you can, or a blanket fort under a table. The smaller the space, the more likely you are to be able to warm it with body heat. Drape the tent or fort with more blankets or rugs to hold in heat.
Heat loss to the floor underneath you is a big problem. Insulate underneath with layers of cardboard, crushed newspaper, or straw if you have it.
[/Manitoban who has had to get through -40 nights without electricity]
Anonymous wrote:Wind turbines don't freeze in Iowa. Just sayin'
Anonymous wrote:Yes, It’s bad. We have not lost power at my house. One toilet won’t work but the other two are. We have an ice storm tomorrow. I can take care of myself with my COVID extra 10 pounds but am worried about my greyhounds. One is almost 15, others are 10.5, 9 and our new wiggleworm at almost 4. They are so skinny. We do have dog coats and lots of food but...,
Anonymous wrote:Lol they have wind turbines working in Antarctica but ok it’s the wind turbines that took down Texas.
Lol.
Republicans.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Meanwhile eastern NC had an EF# tornado yesterday and three people were killed, 50 homes were damaged or destroyed, and it did not make the news until I saw pictures on a photographer's FB page. They are sitting in the cold and dark in TX while in NC they are cold, it is dark, but they have no homes.
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https://www.accuweather.com/en/severe-weather/powerful-ef3-tornado-tears-through-nc-killing-at-least-3/901246
Tornados are awful and terrible. But, they are not unusual. Does every automobile fatality make the news?
I grew up in an area that suffers from tornados. My childhood home was damaged by one (no family at home at the time). They are not rare. The Texas snowstorm is extremely rare--and far more people are dying there because of road conditions and carbon monoxide poisoning in order to stay warm.
The area I come from rarely had snow or ice, but when we did it paralyzed the city. Ice is worse. Power was out for days on more than one occasion (better now, I understand.) No heat or electricity for days can be dangerous when the temps.
This Texas storm is affecting millions, and millions of people. And, sadly, there will be people without homes from fires, fallen trees, etc. And, there have already been deaths.