Am pleased to report that I never lost power - a blessing for which I am EXTREMELY grateful. [ thanks to the powers-that-be way-back-when who directed that my area of the city have underground power lines ]
Am also very gratified to have been a camping-preparedness gearhead the past twenty years. As soon as the winds cranked up I put a
Petzl Zipka on my wrist so that I wouldn't be fumbling in the dark in case the power went out (the lights did flicker). Also made sure all the batteries I would need for lights and radio were where they are supposed to be.
http://www.amazon.com/Petzl-E98-ZIPKA-He...rds=petzl+zipkaAfter lending my
Gransfors Bruks 31" American Felling Axe to clear an adjacent street of a large downed branch, a neighbor and I walked around to survey damage, taking special note of the homes of friends we knew were out of town.
http://www.highlandwoodworking.com/gransforsbruksamericanfellingaxe35handle.aspxThis survey was made a lot easier thanks to my
Fenix TK35 flashlight http://www.amazon.com/Fenix-TK35-Perform...;keywords=fenixAnd I sat out a
3-candle "Candlelier"http://www.industrialrev.com/candlelier-lantern.htmlAfter walking around the neighborhood early this morning with my dog, I tucked her into the coooooool a/c and loaded my SUV with my big axe (and a GB Swedish Forest Axe), three
Aqua-Tainers (7 gal. water containers) and four
coolers (Coleman Xtremes and Coleman stainless) and headed out to northern Virginia where several friends were (and are) without power and one was stranded at home because of a very large tree that blocked the road to her cul de sac. Caravanning (aided by the
walkie-talkies I keep in my car) with a friend and her four large furry dogs, we drove several miles from her home to find a grocery and lucked out getting there at the same time as an ice delivery truck.
This friend is in a particular pickle because when she loses power not only does she lose a/c and refrigeration but
she loses water because she's on a well (this is inside the Beltway). That friend packed up and has relocated for possibly the next week to another friend's vacation home on the Chesapeake Bay.
In driving around northern Virginia today,
we were stunned at how many traffic signals were (and still are) out -- on very major roads. Thankfully, the Beltway and I-395 were fine (no traffic lights). We were also surprised how courteous the vast majority of drivers were being. It was tedious going but the roads were going and that was an achievement almost entirely without benefit of any police directing traffic (also a surprise).
Potentially extremely inconvenient (but for the full gas tanks we started the day with) was the
dearth of functioning gas stations. Those that were functioning (very few that we saw), there were very long lines stretching onto the streets. News reports this evening have made this phenomenon a major focus. I am now down to a quarter-tank (I ventured off the Interstate on the way home to visit my usual gas service station -- I usually top off in Virginia -- and got caught in major gridlock because of nonworking traffic lights and then got to my gas station to find it had no power and was closed. So I'll pay the ridiculous price at my neighborhood station Sunday morning to top off (50 cents a gallon more than I would pay across the river in Virginia).
Another shocker was our
non-functioning cell phones (Verizon and Sprint). We occasionally received a call but could not initiate any calls and could not even get any text messages to go through. Everyone we know was dealing with this. My cell worked fine once I got back to DC.
Another takeaway from this particular event is
how many people had no idea this storm was coming. Warnings were issued several hours before as it made its way across Ohio and was on a collision course with DC-VA-MD. But it was Friday evening before a major holiday and it seems fewer people than normal were paying any attention to the news or weather forecasts. I've heard countless stories from friends of being utterly shocked when the winds hit. One was at a pool party and said it was terrifying.
An extraordinarily hot ordinary day which started with forecasts of minimal chance of rain, ended with an historic, deadly storm. The power company left a voice mail this evening that it would take a week before all power is restored.
Gonna be a hot, memorable week for a lot of people.
But thanks to the
portable AM-FM radio I lent one of the Virginia friends, she'll be able to hear the latest news reports on what's going on. She said she'd be ordering a radio just as soon as she could get her car out of her cul de sac.
God bless everyone.