Our electricity is still off due to the ice storm a couple of nights ago. Fortunately we have a portable generator, and fortunately I recently got it serviced so it actually works. I had it running most of the day yesterday, and expect to keep it going all day today (I turned it off overnight). It is providing power to our kitchen fridge/freezer, and currently slowly recharging the UPS for our internet router and Wi-Fi, and can be used to recharge other devices as needed:
Since we’re on a well, when the power is off, we don’t have any water, so we are using water jugs:
Though weirdly when we flush a toilet it does refill; I know there’s some water in the pipes and pressure tank, but I would have expected that to be exhausted quickly, but hasn’t been yet. Upstairs, what’s more. Could water be coming up from the well without the pump?! We don’t want to push our luck, but are glad we don’t have to refill the cisterns the hard way yet.
Ice on a tree by the chicken runs:
Ice on the chicken run roof netting; it’s survived much better than the old netting I had previously:
Chicken coop icicles:
The chickens are quite happy to stay inside, thank you very much:
I took a look at the beehives this morning:
They each have a sheet of ice on their roof, which could be concerning, as the heat of the hive should have melted it, though the feeders on top of each hive may have insulated the roof from them:
Levitating ice:
There are a bunch of dead bees on some of the hive entrances, which is actually a good sign — it proves there are some bees active to clean out the dead ones. There are thousands of bees in each hive, so a few dead ones is normal and not concerning. I did see a live one walking around, too, probably on the cleanup crew:
More on the ground:
The chickens reluctantly came out for their treats:
I refilled the food for the ducks, and tossed some over to them to enjoy:
The pond isn’t frozen; after starting to get slushy yesterday morning, it hasn’t been quite cold enough to maintain that: