I taught my nephew gun safety and basic shooter skills 2 years ago. Wrong nephew. I doubt either would shoot someone. Are they all pacifists that age?
Got power back last night. Still no internet at the house but phone has it today. Mold has already begun where water got blown in...I know what I'll be doing...
As a stop-gap measure, spraying with a concentrated chlorine bleach solution... Not so sure about a thread on it, as epa may frown on some items Oh, home inet is on now, too.
I know that the Gulf Coast is home to some of y'all, but why do y'all keep rebuilding just to get it blowed or washed away? It's gonna take forever for the insurance companies to decide if the damage was from wind or water, then try finding a contractor, materials are gonna cost an arm and a leg when you can find them, and y'all will be lucky to get everything fixed before another storm comes through and y'all have to start again! Houses will have blue tarps on the roofs for months...maybe years! Y'all are gonna be fighting black mold forever! This is the same question that I ask when folks in California, that have had their home destroyed by wildfires, say "we are gonna rebuild right here...we just love it here"!
How destructive was water intrusion and growth of mold; loss of carpets, furnishings, sheetrock, subfloor damaged. I'm really sorry to hear this and hope you didn't lose much structure and its just superficial. I've definetly seen my share of mold infested structures.
Power is starting to creep back in my area. Traffic lights are now working. Some power is restored a block away from me. Hopefully we will be next to get power.
A wise man should already know which Distributing SubStation feeds Grid Power to his home & Neighborhood.. Then in a Natural Disaster aftermath, one only needs to know if it is his feeder or the Incoming Feeder that is broken… very likely these issues are limited to your feeder, if other neighborhoods fed from your SubStation are getting power, but if the Incoming feeder is dead then a whole section will be down.. usually Incoming Feeders are built in Big Loops from the next higher SubStation, so if an Incoming Feeder line is down , that section can be manually Isolated, and the rest of the Loop on both sides of the break can then be powered up to supply power until the break can be repaired..SOP for most Grid Architecture…
Sadly getting this basic information about an outage from our electric co would require waterboarding someone at the minimum. All we get is if the problem is known or unknown and an ETA on repairs. No details ever from their website or over the phone.
The problem is when multiple feeders are down in all directions. They have done a bang up job of restoring as much as they have in this short a time.
Clearly someone on here has never had real Boudin, Pepper jack cheese boudin balls, Cracklings,Crawfish,Shrimps, Rice sugar Yeah we grow those items here, Mr. Tornado Ally-cat ? Heck we even have crude oil coming in off the Gulf.
We upgraded MIL's home with a nat. gas gennie. She's old and frail. We don't really need all that but there's a big Honda that'll power up the ac in our little house. That's really all we "need". At our cabin in NC we don't need nuttin' honey. And we like it that way. 16' by 16'. Big as we could build without a permit. Spring. 25 mile long reservoir less than a mile. Deer, turkeys, bear, small game... Beacoup berries. yup. dig it.
I can and do eat foods like that here in NW Alabama, and frankly could live without them. I'm one of those eat-to-live type of people...I can eat almost anything, as long as it is dead, skinned, cleaned, and cooked (preferably fried)! I can eat Chinese, Italian, French and Cajun cooking in the safety of NW Alabama. I can have clam chowder without traveling to New England! Tornado Ally-cat? In 60 years we have only had ONE EF-1 tornado, granted it was in MY backyard, but it only destroyed a couple of trees and a old shed....it did JUST miss a trailer, metal equipment shed, metal barn, and three houses. Communities all around us have been leveled, but thank GOD we have been spared. Still a tornado is a once in a lift-time event, unlike hurricanes,
I watched a tornado upproach when I was young in Illinois. It was kinda surreal. In my young eyes, all I could think about was Dorothy. Plus it was just corn fields. Mom and Dad stuffed us in the storm cellar. It was LOUD! I worried about the livestock. To this day I think of the afterlife as Oz.