I read another power outage post this week that prompted this one. We had a power outage last week, not too long, a couple of hours. Before I go any further, I want you to guess what caused the power outage and tell me your guess in the comments. No cheating as I will reveal the real culprit later in this post. Some in our area were affected a lot longer. Over 100,000 customers in four states were affected; western South Dakota, Eastern Wyoming and even parts of Montana and Idaho.
The surge was so great that it popped the majority of the breakers in each and every one of those homes. Entire towns (including Custer) were without power; traffic lights, businesses, restaurants, all dead. Fires broke out throughout the outage area as a result of the surge. Many businesses were down for up to two days as IT experts rebooted and made repairs. We had over 9 breakers pop, including the hot tub, which we did not discover until we stepped in it later that night.
The outage made me think of things we take for granted. You hit a light switch you really take it for granted that a light will turn on. You turn a faucet on; you expect water to come out.
So, what caused the outage? Many of you that live in the area already know the answer. It started with the wind which was blowing upwards of 70mph. This wind started blowing tumble weeds, of which we have a lot of. One small tumble week rolls across the landscape and hits another tumbleweed. They become entangled and become a bigger tumbleweed..... until...you have mass of tumbleweeds bigger than a house that blows into a power substation and "Boom!", it shorts everything out for miles around.
The resulting clog caused the system to trip offline, triggering a cascading failure across multiple connected grids. Crews spent hours attempting to reach the station, with one lineman reporting that visibility was “zero, like driving through a hay bale hurricane.” The pile was estimated to be “somewhere between 14 and 20 tons”
It really makes you realize how vulnerable we are. A coordinated attack on substations could bring the nation to a standstill for days.
Two big milestones this week! One for Barb and one for me. Barb's was getting the flooring done in the camper! She finally laid the last piece of flooring on Friday of this week when she put the bullnose on the edging of the slideout.
For my part, on Thursday, I finally put up the last full piece of steel siding on the garage! Going from this.....
To this....
We are both elated to have these portions of the projects behind us. There is still a lot to do on both. (Namely trim on both)
I helped Kevin one day this week with another concrete pour at Sam's house in Rapid City. If you recall, Sam's house looked like this in late October.
Now it looks like this.....
We were pouring the porch in the back of the house on this day. 10x50, a pretty easy pour and all went well.
Did I mention that Sam is just 22 years old and building his first house?
Deer hunting is going well, continuing to see lots of deer, but not the one I have my sights (literally) set on. I am seeing him on camera, but our cat and mouse came continues. In the meantime, here are a few of the beautiful animals I am seeing.
This guy was carrying a branch attached to his antlers!
Next week is Thanksgiving! We have some very special guests arriving and staying for a few days!
No, i wouldn’t have guessed and aI don’t imagine that any would. It’s quite remarkable really.
ReplyDeleteThings one never things about, but guess that it could happen.
DeleteI would not have guessed tumble weeds, that they can become such a large mass. That is weird. Barb did a great on the floor and the garage is looking good too.
ReplyDeleteLove the deer photos! Happy Thanksgiving to you and your family.
Me neither, I never considered how they could develop like that. Crazy!
DeleteI was going to guess animals.
ReplyDeleteThat is what it usually is, some squirrel sticking his nose where it shouldn't be!
DeleteWow…I never would have guessed tumbleweeds! Do you have surge protection on your panel? That is quite the accomplishment for 22 year old Sam. How many times does your heart almost jump out of your chest when you see those beautiful bucks?!
ReplyDeleteCheers!
I will tell you one thing, it will jump out of my chest when I see the one I want to see!
DeleteI was going to guess wind. We also have that problem. Matter of fact we just spend a few days in Paradise which burned down in 2018 due to crazy high winds. A town much like Placerville. Hard to imagine. Watch the show about it called The Lost Bus. Very good. I wouldn’t have guessed the tumbleweed part but certainly could imagine it. Barb and you did some great work. Bet it feels good to have done. Hope you get your buck. If not come down here there was a HUGE one on the side of the road. Nicely aged and tender! Happy Thanksgiving 🍁
ReplyDeleteWe watched that movie with other day. Crazy. In fact, we got our current truck in Paradise. I had not heard about the fire prior to that and it seems unreal that an entire town could burn like that.
DeleteOMG! I never would have guessed tumbleweeds!!! That is unreal! I never knew they could bunch up and grow like that. We used to see them all the time when I was growing up and I've seen them occasionally up here in Fargo go rolling by--but never more than one at a time. That's like something out of a horror movie!
ReplyDeleteCongrats to you both for basically finishing except for the finishing--lol! ;)
Wow! 22 and building his own house. That's amazing.
Sorry...you know I would be rooting for the deer--lol! I can't help it.
No worries rooting for the deer, I hope that you are wrong though!
DeleteWay to go, Sam! Gotta love that. A lot of folks here are getting backup generators, after last winter’s ice storm took out most of northern Michigan’s power grid. We lost 2800 power poles, not to mention the miles of wire lost.
ReplyDeleteNorth Dakota had an ice storm like that last year. Thousands of power poles snapping like twigs. The farm was without power for almost a week, luckily they have generators to back everything up.
DeleteThe one legged Turkey was up on the power line (they do fly, all be it, maybe not that high), and the Turkey lost its footing (pun) when a 20 mph wind blew by, and the turkey fell on the other line, shorting out the power, and putting the poor Turkey out of its misery. Now, back to reading the rest of your post... (Gotta admit, this was the most creative 'guess')
ReplyDeleteThat, kind sir, was definitely the most creative answer to the question posed!
DeleteI wouldn't have guessed tumbleweeds either. I suspect that deer you have your eye on has been around long enough to be smart enough to elude hunters.
ReplyDeleteHe is at least eluding this hunter! You are right though, I am seeing lots of younger bucks, but the old big wise ones are eluding me!
DeleteTumbleweeds who knew! We see a few here outside of town not many like that! Nice to finish your projects! Barb did amazing on the camper redo!
ReplyDeleteStay tuned, there is still more to come on the camper remodel!
DeleteEverything is looking great around your place...even those big ol' bucks!! We do take so much for granted. Makes me worry more about the Gen Z's. I remember going to my grandparents when things were hard. No instant light switches...no indoor plumbing.
ReplyDeleteCould you imagine putting some of these Z'ers in your grandparent's era? Now, that would make a great reality show!
DeleteIt really was tumbleweeds? This isn't AI "news"? Yikes.
ReplyDeleteA happy thanksgiving to you and yours.
If it is AI news, it has a lot of people fooled! Maybe someone just hit the wrong button and turned everything off.
DeleteYou may need to reread that book you lent me. the one all about prepping and being ready for such emergencies. Isn't that why you took us to the prepper show? After seeing your stockpile, you may need more than just Bourbon. I'm thinking ,food and guns and ammo.
ReplyDeleteIf you think about it, bourbon is the perfect prepper staple. You can use it for fuel if need be, barter with it, use it as a disinfectant, and if all else fails, drink your misery away.
DeleteTumbleweeds would not have been on my guess list, but the. There are none in NH unless yours will travel here. Sending early Happy 🦃 wishes to you and Barb as we are off on a road trip visiting family & friends in NJ and PA for the holiday.
ReplyDeleteThe way the winds sometimes blow I would not be surprised if some of these tumbleweeds don't make it a state or two east of us!
DeleteWe don’t have tumbleweeds here. I only know them from song. The tumble outage is more proof that nature always wins in the end.
ReplyDeleteThis is true, if mankind became extinct, it would not take long for nature to take over.
DeleteTerrorists taking down the grid has been my concern for quite some time. But tumbleweeds? Camper continues to look awesome.
ReplyDeleteIt is a distinct possibility that that could happen, for sure!
DeleteIt is amazing how vulnerable our infrastructure really is. Good luck with the quest for the deer. Happy Thanksgiving! Enjoy!
ReplyDeletePretty scary isn't it?!?!?
DeleteI would not have guessed tumbleweeds either.
ReplyDeleteNor would have I had I not read it and seen the picture!
DeleteYou two remind me when husband and I were very much younger-and healthier. Your camper will be like brand new. I would never had guessed tumbleweeds at our woods home we had an animal nest that fried our electric and the animal.
ReplyDeleteHappy new week and Thanksgiving
kathy
I will take that as a compliment, soon, we too will be reading blogs that remind us of our younger and healthier days.
DeleteTumbleweeds we don't see down here, but it's always a nuisance when the power goes out. When first married we lived on a farm for 8 years before moving to the city, and every evening in the spring and summer swans (black ones) would fly into the wires from the lake and the power would go out, sometimes for days...hence no water either as we got it from the river via pump.
ReplyDeleteInside the camper is looking great, love it.
We sometimes have geese fly into powerlines, but not with that frequency! I wonder if they were younger birds who had yet to learn to avoid the power lines.
DeleteWind is the very frequent initiator to power outages in N America & many have gone solar/battery + backup generator as that set up supports extended time -perhaps worthy of consideration in your location .Cudos to you guys on your projects all looking great, impressive progress & what a big step for Sam.All the best.
ReplyDeleteMany of our neighbors have generator set ups. I recently wired up a generator port, but need to finish the rest of the set up.
DeleteI would never have guessed tumbleweeds could cause such an outage. We get tree limbs here, and sometimes whole trees coming down that cut the power. But not tumbleweeds. You both had a productive week. Everything is looking great. Wishing you and your special guests a great Thanksgiving holiday too. Do you hunt your own turkey?
ReplyDeleteWe have hunted our own turkey, but we prefer the domestic birds over the wild ones.
DeleteUntil pretty recently, I didn´t know that tumbleweeds were real! Like, I thought it was a metaphorical term. Wow- did I feel uninformed when I found out exactly what they are. That is terrible about the loss of power for so long in your area! When we lose power, I think exactly what you articulated- that if someone wanted to wreck havoc on society, the power grid would be a good place to start. And I´m never more thankful for my gas powered vehicle when we lose power.... So many Teslas around us... Granted, in the event of a coordinated attack, gas would become a limited commodity as well. Ok, well, I´m rambling and depressing myself- Happy Thanksgiving week!
ReplyDeleteWe are getting a fuel tank installed for just that reason. Should something happen, I would like my own supply of fuel and not rely on the gas stations.
DeleteWAIT ..... you have a slide out????? No fair!!! I would have guessed just the wind killed your power. Surprisingly, we have lots of tumble weeds here too. They are always causing accidents on the freeways.
ReplyDeleteAre people swerving to try and avoid them and causing accidents? Sometimes you just cannot fix stupid!
DeleteI didn't guess tumbleweeds. In my neck of the woods, the most common cause of power outages this time of year are squirrels. They like to short themselves near transformers. I have had to carry off more than a few crispy squirrels while waiting for the power guys to arrive and get things going again.
ReplyDeleteIn another month or so, the most common outage is falling tree limbs due to ice. They are fairly predictable with modern weather forecasting so they rarely catch me by surprise unlike squirrels the other 9 months of the year.
Tis' getting to be that time of the year. Let's hope this year is ice storm free and the power companies have it pretty easy.
DeleteReally like the look of the new flooring Barb put down in your camper. It is amazing what we all take for granted. Even inside the motorhome out in the desert when I flip that switch I expect light and when I turn on the faucet water...lol Surprisingly interesting about the tumbleweeds. Who would have thought something that looks so light tumbling along in the wind could cause such an issue.
ReplyDeleteOne thing we never took for granted when we were fulltiming was water and solar energy. Both were top of mind. Now, several years removed we are starting to take them for granted again.
DeleteMy guess would have been lightning - happened to my parents many years ago, they had an old valve radio that had it's mains transformer fried when lightning struck the overhead power lines to their house. Fortunately no other damage, and power restored within a couple of hours.
ReplyDeleteWe had something similar happen when we lived in Wisconsin except we lost our well pump, TV and microwave. Lightening shot from one outlet to another, I am surprised there was no damage to the wiring in the house.
DeleteNot n a million years would tumbleweed be my guess..
ReplyDeleteThe wind is really blowing today, hopefully we do not have a repeat!
DeleteThe wind was my second choice (and tumbleweeds never crossed my mind!). My first was a raccoon! I've noticed winds this past year to be especially brutal. It was obvious in the summer -- the amount of whitecaps on the lake and such -- but even this fall and winter it has been bad. Looks like lots of progress with the floor and I hope those big bucks are safe from you two!
ReplyDeleteRacoons and squirrels seem to be the top choices. They would have been mine as well as those rascals are always getting into something!
DeleteWow, a tumbleweed apocalypse, nature really has a sense of humor. Love how you tie that chaos to everyday things we take for granted, and congrats on hitting those project milestones. That young guy building his first house, impressive!
ReplyDeleteCould you imagine how the tumbleweed would take over if there was an actual apocalypse? We left for one summer and they had totally taken over our driveway!
Deletetumbleweeds would not have been my guess...that picture of the tumbleweed is quite impressive. i am not going to disclose what i thought, i think i read it too fast. i have to try to read fast so i don't forget things, you share a lot. barb is a saint, her work is beautiful. gorgeous bucks...i read that you have your eye on a deer. it must be especially beautiful because i know you are not going to shoot or kill it!! and a little ps...we did not have power for 10 days after superstorm sandy!!
ReplyDelete10 days is quite a stint without power. Did you have a generator or were you totally out for that entire time?
DeleteWow, a tumbleweed caused all that!
ReplyDeleteMakes you really appreciate the little things we take for granted.
Congrats to you and Barb on finishing your projects.
Sam building his first house at 22 is amazing.
Love the wildlife pics.
If you like those wildlife pictures, wait until next week, I have lots more!
DeleteI thought for sure you were pulling our leg! What a crazy thing to happen. I would NEVER have guessed something like that.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful deer, Jim. Any one would be a worthy harvest. Here, season is not going well, as there are so few deer due to EHD
(Epizootic hemorrhagic disease) that has decimated the deer herd in a wide area.
Good news on your projects! And kudos to the young man building a home at age 22. We were 23 when my first hubby and I bought this land and started our house. Amazing that t is still standing, little as we knew about what we were doing. Several additions later, and a few (!) repairs, and here is still am.
I think we were 24/26 when we built our first house. I forget what each of us were making, but it was something like $40,000 each.
DeleteKeeping busy. Love the deer pictures. A tumbleweed? Wow. Our power went out for about 2 hours over the weekend. My grandson was not happy that he couldn't play Roblox on his tablet. LOL
ReplyDeleteExactly my point about taking things for granted! It would be interesting to put today's kids in an environment like we, or our parents grew up in.
DeleteIt's good to be reminded of how fragile the things we take for granted really are.....
ReplyDeleteVery true!
Delete