I live in rural East Texas and the high winds recently took down a huge number of trees and with it electricity. The town closest to me still doesn't have power a week later for all of its ~2K residents and the larger city I went to yesterday with ~82K residents is only partially powered!
Being an avid camper and pseudo-bushcrafter, I personally did okay. With zero time to prepare, things could have easily gone much worse. When I went to sleep, things were totally normal with enjoying a cold drink before bed signing off my email for the day. I woke up to what easily could have been tornado damage but, was simple straight winds apparently.
Living on well water was the hardest thing since I was limited to what I had on hand. I knew better but, what can I say, over ~15 years I apparently forgot the lesson so, roughed it harder than I should have.
Since this is my primary home, I really need to think about a whole house generator to save my cold food and provide some relief from nearly 100F daytime temps with extremely high humidity resulting in relative temperatures of 110F~120F (43C~49C) in most of East Texas. I did fine but, elderly folks around me found the temperatures to be life-threatening.
In terms of food, I did fine with the canned beans and similar stuff, doing most of my cooking using sunshine and a dark surface but, I could have done a fire with downed wood or fired up an alcohol or white gas stove.
I am undecided about what I will do when the "smoke and dust" settles but:
Being an avid camper and pseudo-bushcrafter, I personally did okay. With zero time to prepare, things could have easily gone much worse. When I went to sleep, things were totally normal with enjoying a cold drink before bed signing off my email for the day. I woke up to what easily could have been tornado damage but, was simple straight winds apparently.
Living on well water was the hardest thing since I was limited to what I had on hand. I knew better but, what can I say, over ~15 years I apparently forgot the lesson so, roughed it harder than I should have.
Since this is my primary home, I really need to think about a whole house generator to save my cold food and provide some relief from nearly 100F daytime temps with extremely high humidity resulting in relative temperatures of 110F~120F (43C~49C) in most of East Texas. I did fine but, elderly folks around me found the temperatures to be life-threatening.
In terms of food, I did fine with the canned beans and similar stuff, doing most of my cooking using sunshine and a dark surface but, I could have done a fire with downed wood or fired up an alcohol or white gas stove.
I am undecided about what I will do when the "smoke and dust" settles but:
- I need to rethink where I put stuff I do have so it is easier to find and access
- I got lucky and saved multiple aquariums but, I should have more than "LUCK" on my side
- I need to be more diligent about making sure enough fresh fuel is on hand
- I need to make sure solar panels, batteries, and related gear are in top condition over time
- I need to make sure I have more chainsaw gas on hand and additional chainsaw chains!
- I also need to start periodically starting and putting fresh fuel in everything, even generators, and chainsaws buried in the barn for seasonal uses!
- Finally, a safety TRANSFER SWITCH for electricity so I can ensure I don't back-charge and kill a lineman working to restore electricity so I can actually tie a generator to a house circuit.
- Running extension cords through open windows and doors to Freezers and Refrigerators is a real risk when the wind changes directions!
- I need a generator that can run my well so, I have fresh water for more than just drinking to avoid dehydration and heat injury!