I like
electricity. I like it a lot. I think it all started when my friend got a
Nintendo. The crazy way those volts and
amps all worked together to continually stop me from getting the third warp
whistle in Super Mario Bros simultaneously fascinated and frustrated me. I like electricity so much I spent seven and
a half years studying it college. So
when a storm rolled in and wreaked havoc on the DC power system, it was a
pretty rough 48 hours. Being without
power also conveniently combined with one of the hottest spells of the
summer. The following is a chronicle of
the events that transpired during that time.
Friday, June 29th
10:32 pm
Jenn and I are
startled awake by wind blowing incredibly hard and rattling the windows such
that we're worried they might actually break.
We lose power almost immediately.
We stay awake for another hour assuming power will be back on any
minute. Little do we know (because we
can't get cell phone coverage, and because we just really had no clue) that
over four million people in four states had lost power in that last hour. I fall asleep grateful I had saved my place
in Batman: Arkham City 30 minutes earlier.
Saturday, June 30th
5:30 am
Saturday, June 30th
9:15 am
Still no cell
coverage, still no power, still ridiculously hot and humid. At this point, Jenn remembers her iPod has
radio and she listens to a station that finally tells the full scope of the
problem. Three million people still
without power. Cell phone coverage has
come back so Jenn's iPhone becomes our link to the outside world. We go buy ice to save some of the things in
the fridge. News says freezer should be
good for 36 hours, so we postpone that worry, despite the 20 lbs of fish we
have in there. That would smell awesome.
Saturday, June 30th 3:00
pm
Kids are up from a
short and sweaty naptime as the temperatures hit 102 (felt like 106). I checked and pool isn't open either. Funny thing is almost all the businesses in
our area are open and have power. The
line to McDonald’s is ridiculous. It's like
everyone is worried the power outage will affect the supply of Big Macs to the
greater mid-eastern shoreline. I have a
brief panic attack as I wonder if that could actually be true. In the end, my head prevails over my stomach
and I get back to inventorying our canned goods.
Saturday, June 30th
9:00pm
Kids are in bed
downstairs to keep cool and we're upstairs by the window reading books by
candlelight. By 9:15 my eyes are aching
and we fall asleep by 9:30...or try until Brynn realizes we're sleeping
downstairs with her and she decides to keep getting out of bed and come see
us…repeatedly. (Editor’s note: Not
really sure how Philip remembers this, since he fell asleep in about 15
minutes, and I got to lay in bed with Brynn for the next HOUR AND A HALF, until
she fell asleep.)
Sunday, July 1st 5:15 am
Still no power, and
the power company's website has not shown a lot of progress. We decide to take up my sister's offer and go
visit her in Charlottesville. This saves
our sanity as they have air conditioning, hot food and cold beer. Steph and Peter opening their home to us is
especially gracious since they had just come back from vacation the day
before. I find a place that has ice, buy
two packages and bury the fish in it before hitting the road
Sunday, July 1st 6:45
pm
We’ve had a great day
with Auntie Steph and Uncle Peter. Steph
puts a candle in my birthday pie and as I blow out the candle, there is one
obvious wish on my mind: "Please
let me be able to play Batman Arkham City tonight." Though we didn't know it at the time, power
was restored to our house one hour later.
Thank you so much S&P!
All-in-all it was an
exhausting weekend, but in the end we only lost a package of chicken nuggets,
some blueberries , two frozen pizzas, but not the fish. Now if you’ll excuse me, I’m off to buy a
4000 W generator and play some Batman (not in that order).
Ha, love the Editor's Note. And power outages are disturbingly common around here - we lost power 5 or 6 times, often for long stretches, in 14 months living in Rockville. If I was staying in this area, I would definitely buy a generator too.
ReplyDeleteHaha--it was a crazy weekend, for sure. Glad the fish is still good! Also, your editor is hilarious.
ReplyDelete