Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because I am not a wimp and my kids can go without electricity for a few days.
Oh please. You'd actually be ok living in house for 3 days without heat, with inside temps hovering around 45-50, with children? What kind of mother are you? We have 2 wood burning fireplaces, and once temps hit 50 in our house, it was unbearable unless you were sitting directly in front of the fireplace. Good luck with the snow!!! Stay warm!
No problem... been there done that. It was fun. 50 degrees made me laugh.
I'm laughing at you, mother of the year. Feel free to freeze your ass off, as we'll be toasty warm with our heat.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow, OP. You live in a fairytale. Not everyone can afford to spend $500.
Oh, please. This is ridiculous. Anyway, consider the question directed at those who say that you should have a hotel room booked in advance of any snow storm.
NP. You are adorably naive.
We get it. You're poor. Move on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because I am not a wimp and my kids can go without electricity for a few days.
Oh please. You'd actually be ok living in house for 3 days without heat, with inside temps hovering around 45-50, with children? What kind of mother are you? We have 2 wood burning fireplaces, and once temps hit 50 in our house, it was unbearable unless you were sitting directly in front of the fireplace. Good luck with the snow!!! Stay warm!
No problem... been there done that. It was fun. 50 degrees made me laugh.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm wondering this, reading all of your responses in the snowstorm prepping topic. You can get a portable, gasoline generator for about $500 at Costco that, at the very least, can power the refrigerator, some lights, electronics, and a space heater or two.
If you spend around $1500 (for everything) you can have a large portable generator and an electrician install an outlet and switch to plug it directly into your breaker panel. This becomes (almost) a whole-house generator.
For $5,000, you can have a natural gas or diesel one that activates and switches over automatically.
What I don't understand is, why do people live in areas where you can lose power for days?
Makes NO sense in the USA in 2016
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow, OP. You live in a fairytale. Not everyone can afford to spend $500.
Oh, please. This is ridiculous. Anyway, consider the question directed at those who say that you should have a hotel room booked in advance of any snow storm.
NP. You are adorably naive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow, OP. You live in a fairytale. Not everyone can afford to spend $500.
Oh, please. This is ridiculous. Anyway, consider the question directed at those who say that you should have a hotel room booked in advance of any snow storm.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because I am not a wimp and my kids can go without electricity for a few days.
Oh please. You'd actually be ok living in house for 3 days without heat, with inside temps hovering around 45-50, with children? What kind of mother are you? We have 2 wood burning fireplaces, and once temps hit 50 in our house, it was unbearable unless you were sitting directly in front of the fireplace. Good luck with the snow!!! Stay warm!
Anonymous wrote:Because I am not a wimp and my kids can go without electricity for a few days.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow, OP. You live in a fairytale. Not everyone can afford to spend $500.
Let them eat cake.
Seriously... we have a portable generator. It was $500 at Costco and in the 6 years we have owned it we have used it once. That was during the derecho. I totally understand why folks don't buy them. In addition to the money, they may not have a place to store it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1) Portable generators can't be run outside in the rain or in severe weather. Yet they produce so much carbon monoxide that if you even run it in a garage with the exterior doors open you could DIE. I don't think they're worth the risk.
2) Installed ones are expensive and my power doesn't go out enough for me to think it's worth it.
Portable generators can run in the rain or during severe weather.
Anonymous wrote:No space.
We did just fine without power for 5 days during the derecho. We used a cooler and flashlights. We are out a lot (walkable).
If we had a larger yard and money to burn maybe we'd get a built-in one, but it's just not a huge priority for us.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because our row house is NOT in the suburbs. It is a short walk from an urban metro station. We RARELY lose power.
+1! Also, gasoline is dangerous and emits VOCs, so it's not the best choice in an interior row house, which can get ambient heat from neighbors anyway.
I could be wrong, but I suspect that the timing of you having a power outage is closely correlated with the timing of your neighbors having a power outage.
OMG this made me laugh!