Two Hours Later, We Have Power

Thanks to a neighbor’s shorted-out circuit box, we were without power for a couple hours. Apparently the box shorted out and filled the house with smoke. And while I thought it was just a power outage, I looked in my backyard to see firefighters shining flash lights at the transformer box on the power poles that run through our backyard where they explained the situation. Apparently the transformer box tripped because of the problem in the neighbors power box, and it killed the power to the four homes connected to that transformer. Or something. It’s all voodoo magic to me.

It happened right at bedtime for the kids, and while my eight-year-old didn’t care, my five-year-old flipped out a bit, so we had to have several candles in her room (as she’s used to having a nightlight plus a little noisemaker).

Nothing like a little Scrabble by candlelight to kill the time.

Anyway, they had to get somebody to climb up the pole, so while Pacific Power actually showed up within about 20 minutes of the outage, nobody got up on the pole until about 30 minutes ago. They had to completely disconnect the neighbor’s house from the grid until the electrical equipment in the house was fixed as it was going to keep killing things. Needless to say, it appears they’ve moved out for the evening until things get fixed. And I get to go reset all the clocks in the house.

Comments

amanda says:

We had the power go out here last night from 6pm til after midnight. Half of the city and almost every town in a 50 kilometer radius. I was at work, and we had power, so everyone couldnt make supper and came to order from my restaurant. I am still sore from running around constantly. The power going out SUCKS, unless u can play scrabble by candlelight.

The Dren says:

Two hours? Just two hours? I can do that standing on my head!
We did 7 days in September!
Jigsaw puzzles rule!

Matthew says:

I had a power outage like that, but it lasted from morning to 8pm where I live, forgot when it happened though. I listened to radio for most of the time.