YAY! Our electricity is back on!
Posted: Mon Sep 29, 2003 3:06 pm
Our power came back on Sunday afternoon at 3:36 p.m. I was in the living room when I heard my wife yell, "The refrigerator is running!" I naturally wanted to yell back, "Tell it to sit still!", but then I realized she was referring more to hearing the motor in it coming back on than the amount of mobility the appliance inherited. Whew! That was 10 straight days, almost to the minute, that we were without electrical power or hot water. I took 6 cold showers and developed a severe disdain for them during the FIRST one ! We also discovered just how much we can use the outdoor grill for cooking.
Ellen and I immediately got in our car and drove around the neighborhood and found as many of the crews as we could and thanked them for coming up and helping us. They were most grateful for our temporary interruption, even some of them were still in their "cherry pickers" connecting other lines.
On Saturday, we bought a styrofoam cooler and loaded it down with soft drinks and ice and went looking for some of the crews that were working in our neighborhood, even though our power was not on yet and we had no idea how much longer our ordeal was going to be. We found them headquartering at a local church and drove up to a bunch that were taking a break, eating a sandwich on the backs of their pick-up trucks. Boy! These guys were EXHAUSTED! They were slumped over in the middle of a very warm and sunny day and their faces were lined with the exhaustion they must have felt. I walked over to a few of them and asked if they could do me a favor. They just looked at me and asked what it was. I brought out the cooler, laid it on the truck beside them and said to grab a cold soda when they feel thirsty and enjoy it. Oh, Man! Their faces lit right up and their backs straightened just a little. Christmas came just a little early for them. I told the other crews where the soda was and they were just so happy to have it. We spent some time talking with them and found out that they were from Houston, Texas and it took 2 1/2 days to get up here, they start work at 7 a.m. and try to be done by 5:30 p.m., though we saw them working past 7:00 last night. Those crews are working hard and are here away from their homes and families until the job is done, so it felt good to reach out to them and let them know that we are a grateful community for all their work and time away from home. By the way, we apparently not the only ones who reached out to them. A supervisor told me that all the communities they have been in have taken care of them, bringing food and drinks for them every day. Way cool !
Now, it's back to resuming a normal lifestyle. Who is still up for paddling the Ocoee and other rivers the weekend of Oct. 10-11? That will be on a Friday and Saturday?
KNeal
Ellen and I immediately got in our car and drove around the neighborhood and found as many of the crews as we could and thanked them for coming up and helping us. They were most grateful for our temporary interruption, even some of them were still in their "cherry pickers" connecting other lines.
On Saturday, we bought a styrofoam cooler and loaded it down with soft drinks and ice and went looking for some of the crews that were working in our neighborhood, even though our power was not on yet and we had no idea how much longer our ordeal was going to be. We found them headquartering at a local church and drove up to a bunch that were taking a break, eating a sandwich on the backs of their pick-up trucks. Boy! These guys were EXHAUSTED! They were slumped over in the middle of a very warm and sunny day and their faces were lined with the exhaustion they must have felt. I walked over to a few of them and asked if they could do me a favor. They just looked at me and asked what it was. I brought out the cooler, laid it on the truck beside them and said to grab a cold soda when they feel thirsty and enjoy it. Oh, Man! Their faces lit right up and their backs straightened just a little. Christmas came just a little early for them. I told the other crews where the soda was and they were just so happy to have it. We spent some time talking with them and found out that they were from Houston, Texas and it took 2 1/2 days to get up here, they start work at 7 a.m. and try to be done by 5:30 p.m., though we saw them working past 7:00 last night. Those crews are working hard and are here away from their homes and families until the job is done, so it felt good to reach out to them and let them know that we are a grateful community for all their work and time away from home. By the way, we apparently not the only ones who reached out to them. A supervisor told me that all the communities they have been in have taken care of them, bringing food and drinks for them every day. Way cool !
Now, it's back to resuming a normal lifestyle. Who is still up for paddling the Ocoee and other rivers the weekend of Oct. 10-11? That will be on a Friday and Saturday?
KNeal