These are the emails I put together over the last few days, to go out when possible (yay, today), so everybody would know how we're handling this mess. Six inches of snow, on top of sleet/ice, really did a number on our area of the Ozarks.
*****
Day 1 - December 5
By now, you will all either be dealing with some of the same weather I
am or will have heard about it on the news. It's Thursday night as I
compose this, the 5th. Not sure when things will clear up enough for me
to get to McQuack's and get it out. (My keyboard is acting up, too, due
to old age - must replace this poor laptop soon, lol.) We got the van
back from the shop today, $300 for parts and labor for a new fuel pump,
as the old one was shot. No gas getting to the motor no matter what.
Good thing we got it back today. Weather is bad enough that we ran a
full shift for first shift at the plant, second and third got cancelled,
and tomorrow, the 6th, is cancelled for all shifts. Quentin and I both
had to take a sick day this week, so unless things clear up and we work
Saturday (not likely right now), we will get a 2-day check and a 3-day
check, respectively, next week. But it's better than no check, and just
means tightening our belts a bit yet till we get through this. Better to
have it tough and tight budget than not to have it at all.
Things were pretty bad when I was finally done with work. Wish I could
have gotten off at noon, even though the money will be a blessing next
week. The roads home were horrible. We made a few quick, necessary (all
but one) stops on the way home. Grocery store in town for a few extra
staples. Got what we wanted, other than an extra loaf of bread, they
were all out. So was the dollar store which we tried on the way out of
town, and the gas station halfway home, where we stopped to fill the
tanks on the car and van with gas. The roads were awful. Normally, I'm
doing 55 in the dark on the blacktop all the way home, tonight, I was
barely crawling at 25 with the brights on. Quentin stayed behind me all
the way with all his lights on the truck on to help light up the road,
close enough for emergency but far enough back not to hit me if the car
went flying off the road for some reason. It was pretty hairy, and I
felt lucky to be able to crawl at the speed I was, considering the sleet
and snow and that I could barely see 10 feet in front of me, even with
all the lights on. It was that bad and coming down so thick, I was sure
I'd end up in a ditch somewhere. There's a Subway connected to the gas
station in Alpena, so we spared five minutes to get sandwiches to bring
home for dinner. We knew that with the weather and roads in this kind of
shape, neither of us was very likely to want to cook something when we
got home. The folks who were on duty tonight at the gas station and
Subway all live within a few blocks walking distance of the place, so we
knew that both places would be open. Unlike the dollar store in town,
which was closing when we pulled up, and I was the next-to-last person
through the door to get anything. You know it's bad out when even the
dollar stores are closing early.
Thankfully, we made it to the bottom of the mountain road with no
problems other than sheer terror a couple times when I slipped and
nearly went off the road. Thank goodness for the rumble strips in the
road shoulders, as they gave me the traction I needed to stay on the
road and get back on the main pavement. Despite plowing after it had
started, and brine being sprayed as soon as it started, it wasn't all
much help. The mountain road is impassible right now with a motorized
vehicle. It's walk, ski, dogsled (ha!!! none of those here!), or
something similar. We got to the cow pasture after the low water bridge,
and saw Bobbi's car there. Her little car isn't much bigger than mine,
but if she can't get up the road or doesn't feel safe trying it, I know
my Victor (2006 Chevy Aveo) ain't gonna make it, and I have a walk ahead
of me. Since we had the van, we tried to get up in it, but hit ice about
halfway up and Quentin had to back downhill around curves to get back to
the car to park the van there behind me and Bobbi. We grabbed the few
extra groceries and our Subway sandwiches, and headed our butts up the
mountain road. There's a few level-ish spots in the road, and even on
the inclines, we kept stopping to catch our breath before tackling
another 50 or 60 feet of nasty road. Took nearly an hour to climb the
road but we did it, when I was almost certain that I couldn't do it.
So we are cozy in the house, but debone was so cold again today (they
really need to fix that darned blast door) that I was pretty chilled by
the time we got to the mountain road. Got colder walking up the road, so
I hauled le laptop, le knitting and le food into the bedroom, where I am
currently enshrined in the bed under a mound of thick afghans to help
the circulation get going better in my legs and feet and thaw me out. I
have Reynaud's Syndrome (the capillaries in my bloodstream are smaller
than they are supposed to be, so my hands and feet get cold very
easily), so while my hands didn't get too bad at work and during the
walk up the road to get home, my feet got really chilled and, for me,
that generally means I feel cold all over even when I'm not. So as soon
as things were moved to help me stay busy tonight and tomorrow, I threw
on clean, dry clothing, and snuggled in bed under all the blankets. It's
been about an hour since I climbed under blankets, and between food and
body heat warming the bed so my feet will thaw out, I'm starting to feel
rather human again. I think in a bit, I'll hie myself out to the kitchen
for about five minutes and make me some hot tea. A really big thermos
full of strong, hot, herbal, fruity tea. And then bring the thing to the
bedroom to drink the next few hours.
I dunno ... for me, it doesn't seem to matter what the reason, but I
like hot tea. I've never really liked coffee, but tea is always good.
And especially when you're sick (I can dose up most anything with hot
tea, from chammomille to help you sleep to peppermint to soothe an upset
tummy), or when the weather is horribly crappy like this is, a cuppa
just seems to hit the spot. So if y'all don't mind, I'm going to close
this missive, eat my strawberry jello for dessert, and then go make some
tea. Shoot, just thinking about hot tea makes me feel all warm and fuzzy
inside, lol. Plus I have yarn here for two afghans that I need to get
put together, though I'm not sure if I'll make them into granny squares
(boring but easy to do without too much thinking) or log cabin patchwork
style (still easy but you have to do more thinking).
Okay ...
For those wondering how the heck to do a log cabin square for an afghan,
you can knit or crochet them, and there are instructions online to do
this. Since I'm without internet yet for a few weeks, I can't look up
the blasted URL for you, but if you google it, you can find it fairly
easily. Both are quick to do, and if you prefer knitting over
crocheting, or vice versa, either can be used to use up lots of larger
scraps of yarn fairly quickly. The squares come out pretty big in
regular worsted weight yarn, so be prepared to not have to do quite as
many afghan squares with the log cabin as you would with granny or
another "normal" square. Have fun - I'm off for tea, a book, my dessert
and some quality yarn time.
*****
Day 2 - December 6
And I do mean blizzard. Yesterday's ice and sleet were bad enough with
that cold. Today, Quentin decided we just HAD to get out and go to
Wal-Mart and get some extra groceries that we would have gotten
yesterday afternoon if they'd let me out of work earlier than they did
by several hours. It was a fairly easy walk down the mountain road,
despite the fact that we got hit with around six inches of snow
overnight. Not too wet, so it's not good packing snow, but nasty
nevertheless. The trip down took about 25 minutes, breaking trail all
the way. We got the vehicles started, though as quiet as the car idles,
it's hard to tell when it's half-buried whether or not it's running. The
truck started right up, now that it's got the new fuel pump. With quite
a bit of backing and filling, we got it turned around and headed out to
the main drag. While vehicles had warmed up, Quentin hiked the 3/10ths
of a mile to the main road to see how they were doing. The plows had
made a couple of passes, and someone had already gotten off the
neighboring mountain road that connects with ours at the bottom by the
mailboxes, so we knew we'd get out if we were careful.
Unfortunately, one of our less-than-stellar-intelligence neighbors, who
likes to treat the mountain road as a personal dirt track for his
trucks, didn't fare so well getting into the road sometime between last
night when we got home and lunchtime today when Quentin finally rousted
out of bed. The neighbor's lovely pickup (I think it's a Dodge 1500) was
overturned into the ditch next to the bottom of the road. Woops. (We
later saw it on a flatbed, with another vehicle being towed behind,
heading to the junkyard, courtesy of the state police calling in the
wrecker.) We were very careful and kept speed down quite a bit, and got
to the store and back safely. We got enough extras to last us and the
boys a couple of weeks if need be, because I know the car ain't going
anywhere for several days with this much snow, and the truck ain't gonna
be much better. I told Quentin if they don't call off work for Monday
and Tuesday, since he can get the truck out and about, I'll call in and
take points if need be, I have a bunch to spare. With him being in
probation, he doesn't have many, so if he can get out, he has to go in,
even if the drive takes a lot longer to be safe. (Never mind the darn
walk up the road, 15% grade in two spots and it's hard to get up unloaded!)
We got smart to get all the stuff back up the road, since we'd broken
trail going down. We stopped at the hardware store in Harrison while we
were there, and got a small toboggan-type sled to pile stuff on to get
it up the road. Killer on the legs, but it got stuff up in one go,
because otherwise, stuff would have been left in the truck and the heck
with it. Quentin did all the pulling, I came behind in the even more
broken trail with the flashlight, because it was dark by the time we got
back here. I'd spot up the road enough for about 75 feet at a stretch,
he'd haul up the trail, I'd stay put and spot, then catch up and we'd
give our legs and lungs a bit of a rest. Repeat as needed for a mile or
so up the road. But we got here. Temps were frigid - only in the low to
mid 20s Farenheit in Harrison when we came through there heading home
about five or so, so it was colder coming up the road.
Unfortunately, I'm having to talk genius out of going out tomorrow to
haul the laundry downhill on the sled to go into town to do that. He
thinks we should stick to normal schedule as much as possible. I say I
got frozen enough getting up with the laundry and I'm not going anywhere
till Monday sometime or this thaws out, whichever comes first. We've
been home an hour and despite a hot meal, and being under the covers in
bed where it's warmer, I'm still chilled. The house is cozy enough to be
comfortable, if we're wearing layers to help stay warm. I haven't a
problem with that, and I think most of my shivering isn't cold right now
because I'm not cold, but sheer reaction to the whole situation the last
couple of days. I'm still thawing out a bit but I know it's not
hypothermia, because my teeth aren't chattering, and it's just my upper
body that feels like it's shaking. Looking at my hands, they're steady
as can be, and I'm not really cold or shivering, just aftermath of the
whole thing the last twenty-four hours or so. (Besides, if it were THAT
cold in here, the boys would be curled up so tight they'd have their
tails over their noses, and while they're balled up a bit, they're also
sleeping comfortably, so it's not too bad.)
It's been bad enough that I've had a couple of mild panic attacks, where
basically I get through the situation and then have a meltdown and bawl
my eyes out for a bit once it's over with. Yep, I just checked - the
shivering is panic leftovers from all this, because I stuck my hands
under the blankets and my legs are warm enough. I'm just having a bad
reaction to this. I haven't gone through a winter storm like this since
I moved here from Michigan, and that was 4 1/2 years ago. So it's react
like a typical Michigander in this crap. Hunker in, hunker down, stay
warm and fed, and wait it out. It'll pass eventually.
Least the food will stretch good. I did forget butter, but we've got not
quite half a pound in the fridge and we don't use that much at a time.
The boys have plenty of food (several cans of their wet food plus two
small bags of dry because the store was out of bigger bags). Plenty of
bread, a 3-lb bag of rice (best I could get), a bag of sugar to sweeten
my cream of wheat in the morning, some meat and dinners, some other
things that can be fixed fairly quickly, and several cans of soup to
supplement what's in the cupboard. Heat up soup, make up some rice, pour
the soup over the rice, and while it might be a bit boring after a
while, at least a can of soup will stretch that way to fill us both
fairly well with a hot meal. Also some sandwich stuff so we can have
lunch without having to cook, including some chicken and mayo for
chicken salad (have plenty of relish but gotta have extra on the other
stuff in case).
It was possible to have to work tomorrow, but with this weather
continuing, and the cold as well, it's not likely that there will be
work for several days until it warms up. Hurts the paychecks, but better
that than dealing with freezing to get to work and home again, freezing
at work, and potentially having a wreck. Not good no matter what in that
case. We have to do what must be done to get through this. Though
honestly, there've been moments in the last couple of evenings when I've
pretty well said screw this, let's get a place in town, I can't deal
with this kind of thing, it's too hard. Then I remember that, while we
could get up and down the road, it was tougher last winter when we had
to hunker down in the living room, including sleeping there, just to
stay warm at all. This isn't worse, it's better, and it'll pass. Besides
that, a place in town would cost double what this place is costing us
and we'd have neighbors right on top of us, too, plus not likely we'd be
able to have the boys, let alone any of the other things we want to do
... forget that idea. I'll deal with it. It's not permanent, and it will
thaw and I'll forget all about how miserable some of this is.
Plus I have plenty to keep me busy while I wait this out. I have my
needlework, I have my books (mostly on the computer, but still), and I
have two new seed catalogs to browse - Totally Tomato and Vermont Bean
Seed Co. Yay, me. Now, if y'all don't mind, and even if you do, I want
to do some reading and snacking and maybe head to be early to sleep
through part of this stupid mess. Hugs all, I'll send this when I can,
because until this clears up, I ain't going to McQuack's. (One time I
really, really, REALLY wish we had internet here so I could let y'all
know we're ok right now, but oh well ... that's country life for ya!)
*****
Day 3 - December 7
This weather is getting ridiculous. Couldn't even get out today to go to
the vehicles to run them, so thank goodness they've got good batteries
so they'll start when this is cleared enough to get to them again,
probably tomorrow (Sunday) so we can go do laundry at the laundromat in
Harrison, rather than the one in Green Forest we usually go to, because
the one in Harrison has free wifi plus shower facilites. Expensive
shower facilites, at $5 for a 10-minute shower, but then we'd both be
ready for the week (assuming that things clear up enough for the plant
to reopen), and I can get some of my internet time caught up. This means
hauling the laundry down to the van on the sled, then back up again
afterwards, but it's a way to get things done even if it does mean long,
cold walks up steep hills that I'm seriously beginning to hate with a
passion.
I'm not going to write alot of what I'd like to write, because it's
pretty frustrated and not positive thinking, unless you count "This had
better get done today OR ELSE," being positive. I don't think it counts.
Today wasn't a total waste though. I got my Totally Tomato catalog gone
through (and that's not all they have, but they do have a ton of them),
got nine squares sewn together on a granny afghan (found a huge box of
finished squares in the front bedroom when I went looking for something
else, so I'm putting them together instead of fussing around with making
all new bits and pieces, it'll be faster), did some reading, did some
gaming on the laptop, did a few chores, and generally just vegged out.
Though that's getting awful tiring. I want to get back to work on
things, which means it's got to get warmer. Have to check online Sunday
to see if the local radio station has anything on the plant closing or
reopening for Monday, because the guard shack doesn't answer, which
means even THEY aren't there right now.
The house is comfy, not great but at least quite warm compared to the
outdoors, but still cold in the unused rooms. Going into the front
bedroom to find anything that we generally don't need is an adventure in
bundling up like an Eskimo. And even though we are not about to haul
water jugs up that hill a mile from the vehicles, no worries about
running out of water, because there's a whole freaking mountain buried
six inches deep in snow that can be brought in and melted. Eric and
Bobbi won't see each other for a few days because of the weather. She's
got her mom and aunt up there in their house next door to E & B to have
company for her and the baby. Eric couldn't get back to the mountain
road in time Thursday before it got really bad, so he stayed in town
with a friend, and then of course with all the snow and such, he can't
get home. So he's stuck in town for a few days till this clears up.
One thing about Tyson folks - we band together in tough times. There's a
bunch of us trying our best to keep on top of whether or not the plant
is closed or when we're opening back up, because we just don't know. Me,
if we work days Monday or Tuesday, unless second shift isn't running,
I'll have to call and take points, because the car is buried in the snow
and the county doesn't plow the dirt roads. Wish they did, we'd get out
a lot easier! Heck, at least that way, I could get the car to the main
road and get back and forth. If second shift isn't running, Quentin can
run me to work and pick me up, but if they ARE, he makes more than I do,
and he can work while I take points. Boring as all heck with no internet
up here, but better than not getting around safely. I'm trying so hard
to be positive with all this, but it's so hard. We know that the checks
we get this upcoming Thursday are not going to be more than about $250
all together, and there's not a heck of a lot in the bank as it is left
from these checks. Uck. So this year, it's going to end tight,
financially. Christmas is going to be a few weeks late for us, it looks
like. Oh well, crap happens, right? This too, shall pass. I just hope it
passes quickly, because me and cabin fever do not get along well, and I
can only take so much of being cooped up with no way to get anything
really done. I have this itch to get out and do, and there's really
nothing to DO in the dead of cold spells like this. I need things to do
in cold weather, and this time, there really isn't much to do outside
because it's so cold, that even if we had livestock, they'd be in the
barn to avoid the frigid temperatures!
Anyhow, things are getting done, just they're not things that I really
WANT to be doing, and life's taken a bit of a fuzzy turn with this
weather. Anybody want some snow and cold? Come get it, it's free for the
taking.
*****
No books this week, because I just don't have time to deal with it. Have to finish up what I can and get our butts back to the mountain road hopefully not too long before dark. Of course, it will be dark, because we have to stop at O'Reilly's on the way home, drain the radiator and put in new antifreeze because genius put a whole jug of windshield wiper fluid in the radiator overflow tank. If he blows up the van after I just put $300 into fixing the fuel pump, I'm going to strangle him.
Hi Heather, I found you from the Self-Sufficient Farmers and Living Yahoo group (which I just joined). Your experience with this terrible weather is "edge of my seat" kind of reading.
ReplyDeleteMy first homesteading experience was in Newton County, Arkansas. Actually, it was before "homesteading" was coined. We were just going back-to-the-land then. I've always loved Arkansas and the Ozarks. I often wished we ended up there instead of Southern Appalachia.
Hi Leigh!
DeleteThanks for the comment, and welcome to the blog! It's getting a bit better here, read this week's blog post - thankfully able to get out and about a bit better nwo, though still a lot of walking up and down the mountain road to get to the car to go to work (and get home after). Better that than no work, though!