While agreeing with Jason that things can change dramatically and this could all be hype for nothing, I also take the gbdoux approach...might as well be cautious.
I just "ordered" a cord of wood...gonna split it with my parents. We could use the firewood anyway, not just if we lose electricity, so it's not like it would go to waste.
After going through the ice storm in January 1997, I'd rather be a little more prepared and have it be a non-event, then be stuck without firewood, batteries, etc. just in case. That was a miserable time. I did not have a fireplace in my little rented house then, and we didn't have power for many days. A lot of branches and trees were lost during that ice storm. The snapping of branches and crashing of trees sounds were unreal, and a bit scary. You'd hear the snap and automatically kinda "duck" with your hands over your head until you heard it hit the ground. lol
I know I've mentioned that ice storm few times on the board, but if you missed it, here's a post I made about it last year:
southerngale wrote:Here's another example of an ice storm. If you want more information on it, just Google January 1997 Ice Storm Beaumont Texas or something like that. SW La. was affected as well.
I posted this in another thread a little while ago as a response to someone else about staying below freezing for days in SE Tx.
southerngale wrote:And more recently in January 1997, over here in Beaumont and even closer to the coast in Nederland and Port Arthur, we were below freezing for several days and without power for nearly a week due to the only real Ice Storm I've ever seen. I stayed bundled up like crazy. You couldn't shower. You practically froze to death just trying to go to the bathroom!
The only heat we had in my rented house was a small grill. We'd fire it up outside and try to thaw out our hands a little while cooking some of the food that lay in the opened freezer door. I remember feeling like my feet were going to just break off...man, was it miserable!!
1/4 inch of ice was on some surfaces and 1 inch on others. The effects of the storm were quite devastating, something you don't really expect way down here in the winter. Several million dollars in damage.
My parents had a fireplace at the time, but I couldn't drive to get there, or anywhere for that matter. Everyone was just stuck. Anyway, it wouldn't be quite as bad for me now, since I do have a fireplace. At least I'd have some heat! That was a miserable time...I'm glad we didn't get anything close to that.
And this was posted last month when people were talking about an Arctic outbreak reaching South and Southeast Texas.
southerngale wrote:Now
this is extreme for Southeast Texas.
January 1997 Ice Storm - below freezing for several days - almost everyone was without power...for nearly a week. I didn't have a fireplace at the time and I can remember wearing a bunch of socks and shoes and my feet were still frozen. I was with a couple of friends and we bundled up the best we could trying to stay warm. We had a grill so we were able to cook and get a little heat from that occasionally. lol
We had meat...just opened the freezer and it all stayed fresh. You would constantly hear the snapping sound of branches falling everywhere. As more branches fell, more people lost power.
Excuse the bad pics...they were scanned on my mediocre scanner.


