SciFiFisher wrote:SciFi Chick wrote:So Hurricane Florence... will she or won't she?
It depends on how tipsy she is.
Apparently, she's blind drunk.
SciFiFisher wrote:SciFi Chick wrote:So Hurricane Florence... will she or won't she?
It depends on how tipsy she is.
Thumper wrote:While we're waiting to see what Florence is going to do, we're getting the aftermath of Gordon here. It was blisteringly hot and humid last week. As late as Thursday, I was in nothing but shorts and boots sweating my $#@@& off 90F outside at 8:00pm. Saturday I was shivering after walking in a56F rain. As of yesterday at 11:00am, we've gotten 3.5in of rain in the last couple of days, and it was still coming down most of the afternoon. Went from A/C, to windows, to windows shut in 24 hours.
geonuc wrote:It's interesting watching the Bend weather change from summer (aka smoke haze season) to winter (aka winter tires season).
I walked down to my fave brewpub yesterday in short sleeves. They have a nice outdoor area by the river. By the time I got there (four blocks away), the sun had dropped sufficiently that I wished I had brought a jacket.
Thumper wrote:It will never be dry at my property ever again.
Thumper wrote:And I came back from 8 days in Florida where it basically didn't rain once the whole time I was there...
geonuc wrote:What have I missed?
Thumper wrote:And I came back from 8 days in Florida where it basically didn't rain once the whole time I was there...
My uncle hates that they allow studded tires in Oregon. I would think unless you plan to do some serious, serious off road driving, you don't need studs. Besides, you have chains.geonuc wrote:So, winter is coming and I'm thinking of all the things I need to do to prepare.
- Swap tires. Not sure when Bendites typically do this but I've scheduled the mobile tire guy for tomorrow. The Pathfinder and Corolla will get winter shoes. The BRZ will not. I have noticed some people have already put studded tires on (you can hear them half a block away). It hasn't so much as threatened to snow yet. My winter tires are not studded. I have chains for both the Pathfinder and Corolla.
You can buy a fairly inexpensive gauge to see if the coolant is still good. If it's been serveral years since you've replaced coolant, you might consider just flushing and replacing, but again you're probably okay.geonuc wrote:- Make sure the car radiators have good anti-freeze in them. They did ok earlier this year when it got really cold so I don't anticipate having to do anything special.
Interesting. I would have assumed that roofs would have been designed to handle snow loads, but what do I know.geonuc wrote:- Look into roof snow removal companies. This may not be a problem for our house. Our neighbor doesn't do it, and we have no gutters, which tend to build up the ice dams. Might buy a snow rake.
My insulated winter boots don't have soles that do much for snow or ice traction. I bought a set of add on grippers at REI. They were inexpensive and I tried them out several times last year and was satisfied. Kind of a very mild crampon.geonuc wrote:- Winter boots. Ones that have ice grippy soles. The best ones are expensive so I bought a cheap (~$35) pair and I'll see how that goes. I'm well situated with hiking boots so this may be superfluous.
I used some regular rock salt (like the we use at the DOT) and it did cause concrete damage. I've gotten some of the concrete safe variety to use. I try to just shovel or plow thorougly and not use the stuff unless it's extremely icy and we're expecting my folks or in laws over.geonuc wrote:- Bags of snow melt stuff, magnesium or calcium chloride. For the sidewalk. Not sure about this. We made do with the snow shovel last season (despite getting here late, we managed to be here for the entire snow season because the winter was mild). Some folks say this stuff corrodes concrete. I'll have to look into that.
I've used a 3 burner Mr. Heater propane powered heater for years and it's worked great. It just clamps on to any propane tank and doesn't have a blower. It's portable and light and I move it around as needed in the garage. It takes enough of the chill off to be comfortable. The only downside is it creates alot of moisture and then everything in the garage that's cold gets condensation all over it.geonuc wrote:- Heater for the garage. Bought an electric one which seems to help enough that I can work in there if I want to.
Yeah, sounded like you guys were there just before us (We were in the Orlando area with a day trip to KSC). It was hot the day we got there but then it just got pleasanter the longer we stayed. I forgot I was in Florida.SciFiFisher wrote:Thumper wrote:And I came back from 8 days in Florida where it basically didn't rain once the whole time I was there...
Hey, we just did the Florida thing for Cookie's wedding and it didn't rain the entire 4 days we were there. Is Florida drying up?
Thumper wrote:My uncle hates that they allow studded tires in Oregon. I would think unless you plan to do some serious, serious off road driving, you don't need studs. Besides, you have chains.geonuc wrote:So, winter is coming and I'm thinking of all the things I need to do to prepare.
- Swap tires. Not sure when Bendites typically do this but I've scheduled the mobile tire guy for tomorrow. The Pathfinder and Corolla will get winter shoes. The BRZ will not. I have noticed some people have already put studded tires on (you can hear them half a block away). It hasn't so much as threatened to snow yet. My winter tires are not studded. I have chains for both the Pathfinder and Corolla.You can buy a fairly inexpensive gauge to see if the coolant is still good. If it's been serveral years since you've replaced coolant, you might consider just flushing and replacing, but again you're probably okay.geonuc wrote:- Make sure the car radiators have good anti-freeze in them. They did ok earlier this year when it got really cold so I don't anticipate having to do anything special.Interesting. I would have assumed that roofs would have been designed to handle snow loads, but what do I know.geonuc wrote:- Look into roof snow removal companies. This may not be a problem for our house. Our neighbor doesn't do it, and we have no gutters, which tend to build up the ice dams. Might buy a snow rake.My insulated winter boots don't have soles that do much for snow or ice traction. I bought a set of add on grippers at REI. They were inexpensive and I tried them out several times last year and was satisfied. Kind of a very mild crampon.geonuc wrote:- Winter boots. Ones that have ice grippy soles. The best ones are expensive so I bought a cheap (~$35) pair and I'll see how that goes. I'm well situated with hiking boots so this may be superfluous.I used some regular rock salt (like the we use at the DOT) and it did cause concrete damage. I've gotten some of the concrete safe variety to use. I try to just shovel or plow thorougly and not use the stuff unless it's extremely icy and we're expecting my folks or in laws over.geonuc wrote:- Bags of snow melt stuff, magnesium or calcium chloride. For the sidewalk. Not sure about this. We made do with the snow shovel last season (despite getting here late, we managed to be here for the entire snow season because the winter was mild). Some folks say this stuff corrodes concrete. I'll have to look into that.I've used a 3 burner Mr. Heater propane powered heater for years and it's worked great. It just clamps on to any propane tank and doesn't have a blower. It's portable and light and I move it around as needed in the garage. It takes enough of the chill off to be comfortable. The only downside is it creates alot of moisture and then everything in the garage that's cold gets condensation all over it.geonuc wrote:- Heater for the garage. Bought an electric one which seems to help enough that I can work in there if I want to.
Furnace working good with spare filters?
Maybe check insulation in attics and crawl spaces?
Have procedures to heat the house, at least minimally, during an extended outage?
(Sorry, Z's not here so I figured it would be up to me to reply with a novel...)
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