queerbychoice (
queerbychoice) wrote2004-02-26 07:51 am
Well, the Building Was Still There When I Got Home . . .
. . . but the electricity wasn't. I just spent 14 hours with no electricity. Plus, I'd just restocked my refrigerator the previous day. Argh.
At least the climate here happens to be habitable even without heating or air conditioning. Because otherwise I'd be, you know, dead.
At least the climate here happens to be habitable even without heating or air conditioning. Because otherwise I'd be, you know, dead.

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and you can survive most places without ac or heat when the power goes out. even when it's 30°F and snowing. warm clothes, fleece blankets, not-cold food...it's not so bad.
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I thought Sacramento was a good deal inland, and sheltered from the oceanside by a mountain range... It seems a bit weird that there'd be winds that'd topple huge trees. :x
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Seriously, I'm glad you're OK. I like you.
*smooches*
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The California coast is a bit higher than the valley, but it's not really a high mountain range compared to the Sierra Nevadas in Eastern California.
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I didn't eat my ice cream or open my freezer at all, because I was hoping that leaving the cold air in it, together with the ice (it's a freezer that doesn't automatically defrost, so it's always covered with layers of ice all over the inside), would preserve my ice cream intact - and I had two unopened half-gallons of it in there anyway, so I couldn't possibly have eaten it all in one evening even if I'd tried. This morning I opened it and looked at it and indeed, it's actually amazingly undamaged. My freezer makes a very functional icebox when the power's out!
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