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Author Topic: Sissy stuff to keep warm with during the "VORTEX"?  (Read 98923 times)

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Offline Betty

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Re: Sissy stuff to keep warm with during the "VORTEX"?
« Reply #270 on: March 05, 2017, 12:19:21 PM »
Yep. changing a lot all the time over the past year. Summers too, from 50F in the morning to almost 90F in the afternoon... but more recently, very extreme  weather swings regularly.

Today at 7am it was 8F, but we're expecting 38F by 2pm. A 30 degree jump in just 7 hours.


Offline samantha1

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Re: Sissy stuff to keep warm with during the "VORTEX"?
« Reply #271 on: March 05, 2017, 03:51:52 PM »
what is the prices of electricity over in Buffulo


Offline Betty

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Re: Sissy stuff to keep warm with during the "VORTEX"?
« Reply #272 on: March 05, 2017, 05:10:31 PM »
They say it's around 15 cents per KWH in my end of the state... it varies wildly by the area, state, & energy taxes/tarrifs or other hidden charges, & by the month.

When I do the math including all those taxes, & other charges per what I actually use, it's about 18-20 cents per KWH... varying a little month to month. Although they claim they haven't changed their rates in a long time, all those countless little charges & taxes change all the time.

It's like our $50-$70 phone bills shows half the charges are just taxes/tarrifs, state connection fees, emergency services fees... etc. But if you check with the FCC, local government, state, & federal offices you find they're not charging nowhere near that much as it shows they're charging on our bills. It's all a corporate ploy under the disguise of taxes, & government charges to steal more money out of us.

Most people around here heat with clean burning plentiful cheap natural gas. Most states are sitting on top of tons of it. If you pump enough O2 deep underground most states would explode the state off the map because there's so much natural gas underground. Gas is also a natural by-product of refining oil into other products like gasoline/petrol. But you wouldn't know it was plentiful & cheap around here by how much they actually charge for it.

Here in America they don't charge by how much it costs or how plentiful it is, they charge by how much we need it. They don't charge a lot for water though because it's everywhere. If they charged too much, people would collect it in barrels when it rains, or get some by just digging a whole in the ground. But it's a lot most work & money for your average person & resources to create & get their own (preferrably clean) energy.

It's like an injection to treat people with severe allergic reactions, & prevent them from dieing, costs the drug companies a couple bucks to make per injection. But if you or your child need it, you have to pay $250-$450 for it.

I don't use my gas fired furnace too much. In my small apartment, it's a through-the-wall mounted unit on one side of the apartment in a room I use to mostly just store my stuff. I live in the middle of the place, the kitchen is also near the middle, & the bathroom is on the other end from the furnace.

So on a cold night like last night, I would have to have the heat on high enough in the storage room for it to get real hot in there, & leave the door open with a fan at the door, to get it just warm enough where I actually live, eat, & sleep -- while the bathroom would still be freezing. So I leave the heat on the main furnace off on just on low to help out on the coldest nights while I use an electric heater in the main area to keep things bearable.

It's not normally cheaper to heat with electricity. But it's cheaper for me rather than heat one room that I don't use to uncomfortably hot temperatures, to get the middle of the place just bearable, & still not get enough heat to the bathroom.

I keep a heater in the very cold bathroom too, but as long as it's warm enough for the pipes not to freeze I don't use it just to go to the bathroom. I used to do a lot of camping & hiking year-round, so am used to going poo or pee with no heat. I just use the bathroom heater to warm it up enough to wash up, take a bath, or shower. It would be way too cold in there naked or wet.

I was fortunate the last 2 months though. It was unusually warm for winter most days. We just had the warmest Feb. on record for my town (had the coldest just a couple years ago). My heat costs are down a bit. My hot water is free with the apartment, so I save a little on that too. It's a small place, so it's cheaper to heat than any place I lived before.

On milder days when there's not too much wind & it's above 40F(4C) outside, I may need no heat on at all. Just doing a normal amount of cooking for meals, making coffee, running a computer or 2 seems to generate enough heat on those milder days to be comfy. My old 1970s refrigerator also gives of a lot of heat off the back when running.

When sleeping, I'm not cooking or running computers, & the fridge don't kick on much. But under warm blankets, I'm cozy even when I let it get down to 45F(7C) inside. The kitties can cuddle each other or me if they get cold. But most of the time, they like the cold. They don't like much heat. We're so used to a cooler climate, many of us born here may not bother putting on a coat at 40-50F(4-10C)

This small place has a bad effect in the summer though. An 80F(27C) day outside would make it over 90F(32C) inside with the few small windows I have open, & fans running in them. If it got to the upper 80s, it could get over 100F(38C) in here & be uninhabitable for most used to the colder climate around here.

I can't take the high humidity Buffalo summer heat -- I literally show signs of heat stroke if it gets too hot & humid. With COPD I can't breathe in high humidity. I also can't breathe unfiltered dirty air well anymore.

So running AC with a couple air filters also running, my energy bills are higher in the summer than in a "normal" winter. But we never have a normal winter anymore. We had a couple rough extra cold winters, with winter-sized heating bills right through cold winter-like springs.

St. Patricks day just a couple years ago was 20 degrees colder than Alaska at the same time. It was snowing in April. There was a snow mound so big at the local train station that didn't fully melt until the middle of July. That is not normal for us.

Offline samantha1

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Re: Sissy stuff to keep warm with during the "VORTEX"?
« Reply #273 on: March 05, 2017, 06:00:38 PM »
so what is an average  electric bill costing yearly or monthly.My electric and gas bill yearly cost an average of £1000 per year.My water bill costs me £400 per year

Offline Betty

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Re: Sissy stuff to keep warm with during the "VORTEX"?
« Reply #274 on: March 05, 2017, 09:23:06 PM »
Because I use more electric heat in winter, but I have to use fans or AC in summer my electric per month is usually close to the same every month, within plus or minus $10. So around $50/mo. on average, or around $600 (£488) per year. Some milder months it might be $40/mo., but other times around $60.

The heating & cooking gas is a little trickier. They charge me $18/mo. just for being connected to the gas lines even if I don't use any gas. So I'm paying $216 a year just to be connected to the gas, above & beyond the cost of what I actually use.

I use electric heat a lot, & keep the gas heat low or off except for the coldest days. My hot water is free, included with the apartment. I live alone, so rarely use the big gas stove. I use a smaller electric one, & microwave. Even coffee making is electric. So my highest gas bill, in winter is about $45. The gas stove heats up the place too much, so from around May to after Sept. I don't use the gas stove at all. Cooking during warm months is electric. About from mid-spring to mid-fall, I'm not using any gas, but still paying $18/mo. just to be connected to the gas lines.

It costs around $416 a year in gas bills. That's about $1,016 a year in energy costs, or £826.

Water & hot water is included for with my apartment, but my rent is $6,000 (£4,882) a year. That's actually quite cheap around here for anything but bug & rat invested places surrounded by addicts & trigger-happy hoodlums with loaded guns who love to rob or kill anybody they see.

So that's $7,016 (£5,709) a year just for rent & utilities, before any phone bill, internet bill, meds, or food.

I just got my phone service cut down to 30 minutes or 30 text a month (each text counts as a minute). So I guess I won't be texting anymore unless it's an emergency. But I'm working on trying to do more with a google voice account phone number & text through my internet connection, as soon as I find a cheap android phone that will handle it OK.

Just cut my internet service down to the slowest DSL speed availble too. The only thing slower or cheaper than this is a dialup connection.

Offline Betty

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Re: Sissy stuff to keep warm with during the "VORTEX"?
« Reply #275 on: March 07, 2017, 04:21:14 PM »
Currently 57F(14C). Just heard some very distant thunder. Winds already gusting to 31mph. High wind & flooding warning for tomorrow with winds up to 55mph. Snow expected Fri., low of 12F(11C) Fri. night.

Barometer is down, humidity is up. Breathing rough since last night. Won't be doing any physical projects for a while. I'm getting out of breath just walking across the room. Not comfortably breathing just sitting around either, but it's not life threatening. I'll be OK.

Offline Betty

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Re: Sissy stuff to keep warm with during the "VORTEX"?
« Reply #276 on: March 08, 2017, 06:29:05 PM »
Wind gusts up to 62mph (hurricane strength is 70mph). Dozens of roofs blown off, & trees down from Niagara Falls to Rochester to Pennsylvania. Many roads & main highways closed due to downed trees, power lines, & flipped over high-profile trucks. Driving ban for high profile trucks on many roads & in many towns. Driving ban in Niagara Falls NY. Over 100,000 currently without power.

Going through all my batteries charging them in case of power failures. Many of them are partially run down inside equipment & lights, so even though they're not dead yet, it's a good idea to top them off with a fresh charge in case I need extra battery power for an extended time. Plus the ones sitting in a box get weaker over time just sitting around, so should be charged up to full capacity again. That way they'll last longer during an outage.

More that half my batteries were rescued from the 2007 fire, & half of those were purchased around the turn of the century. Those old ones don't hold a charge as well or as long as new ones. Still, I won't throw out old rechargeable batteries just because they'll only run a light for 5 hours instead of 10 hours, or need to be topped off every couple months.

Any extra battery power is handy during extended blackouts. Plus it's nice to walk around or read with plenty of light, listen to music, catch the news, & watch a movie while everybody else in the neighborhood is feeling around lost in the dark because they just killed their phone battery using it for light.

Candles, oil lamps, & gas lanterns are dangerous, especially around children, pets, wind, or when you're occupied with other stuff during an emergency.

Nobody thinks about what to do during a power failure until after it happens. The electric thermostat & blower on your heating won't even run without electricity. Do you have a back-up heating plan? When you run down your phone by using it as a light, how will you charge it? The car has heat, light, & a charger. But if it's a region-wide outage, the gasoline pumps at the gas station don't have electricity to pump the gas. Outside the region, the gas stations may be out of gas because everybody flocked there to get more gas.

Besides, do you really want to abandon you home or business during an outage so it gets invaded by looters or arsonists? 5 killed in gang related shootings over the weekend in my town. The hoolums like to come out in the warmer weather. They'd have a looting party during a blackout. If they get through my door, they will be shot.

A region-wide outage can cause the water station pumps to stop. Did you fill enough jugs & bottles with drinkable water to survive?

Offline Angela M...

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Re: Sissy stuff to keep warm with during the "VORTEX"?
« Reply #277 on: March 08, 2017, 09:49:29 PM »
Hey Betty, how are you doing. We had 80 MPH winds today up here and many of my neighbours lost roofs and garden sheds and quite a few large trees. I remember your photo's of the large tree your neighbour lost and worry about the one next to me. I ask every year if I can trim it back but I am only aloud to trim to the property line so if it comes down it will take out my hotub and family room and kitchen. It is an older tree and lost quite a few dead branches today of course in my yard as the wind was blowing in my direction. I also lost a section of lattice topper on my fence but it was loosened over the winter so I knew I had to fix it in the spring. Like you, I keep extra water and batteries on hand and a full gas can for the snowblower or and emergency. I also have a gas fireplace as alternate source of heat as well. It is almost 10 PM now but the wind is still blowing but not as strong. Stay safe Betty.

Offline samantha1

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Re: Sissy stuff to keep warm with during the "VORTEX"?
« Reply #278 on: March 08, 2017, 10:58:54 PM »
hi Betty and Angela M,i am sometimes glad i live in uk where there is not as many gales that you suffer in the states and Canada,however our weather can also get bad ,but living just outside of the city,we don't get that much problems with power outage like you appear to get.

Offline Angela M...

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Re: Sissy stuff to keep warm with during the "VORTEX"?
« Reply #279 on: March 09, 2017, 12:13:53 AM »
Hey samantha 1, I am from Manchester myself and don't really remember much more than rain all the time but cousins have told me about their flooding and snowstorms in the past few years. I don't think I can complain much about the weather this years as we have not had very much snow but lots of cold nights. Our present mild spell is set to end this week with cold on the way and perhaps some snow flurries. I have lived in Canada since the late fifties and cannot get used to the cold but it does give me a very good excuse to wear my wooly tights all the time and last year I discovered some fleece lined tights from China that I just love and they keep me very cozy.

 

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