Foggy Train Wreck!

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What a scary couple of days here in the middle of February!  We had a very warm batch of weather right after a good snowfall.  It resulted in a very very heavy blanket of fog all over the county.  What was so terrifying was that all along our very busy route, people were driving like fools!  And the big trucks were sailing by when the visibility was so low.  Just so dangerous.

Our main office for shipping and work is right in the front of the house and really only about 15 feet from the road.  And we can see and watch out front while we work.

Well, the first day, we woke to find a massive traffic jam in front of our house!  Trucks lined up for miles to the west of us and east.  And it was all because of an accident at the train tracks!  Honestly, it’s one of our biggest worries living right at an active train crossing.  What if something got hit or a train derailed.  It was hard to know what was going on!  It was SO foggy…  IMG_3241 IMG_3247Well, it took a while, but we discovered that a truck hauling those huge rolls of steel apparently did not see the crossing and tried to slam his breaks to stop and one of the rolls broke free and crashed through the front of his CAB!!!  It was apparently not this fellow’s day to die because it leaned to the right some and took out the passenger side of the cab and then landed almost in the middle of the train tracks!  What a mess.  The fire department and a wrecker crew managed to get the roll back from the tracks with a lot of effort and got the destroyed truck and other rolls removed to allow traffic to begin to flow again.  Just crazy!  IMG_3248

Well, the next day, the fog was WORSE!  It was so thick, you could hardly see but a few 10-20 feet in front of you.   We were all up and working and just watching these trucks and cars fly down the road only to sort of freak out when they realized there was a train crossing signal there.  Many types of semis are required to stop at the tracks and that was not happening.

We could hear the trains crossing, barely, and it was almost impossible to see the lights.  We watched several trucks barely stop in time when a train was crossing.  And then it happened.  We saw a small car pull up and it stopped for the train in the crossing.  And for some reason, we just knew something bad was going to happen and it did.  A semi was barreling down the road, going much too fast and we heard the sound of a truck desperately trying to stop but we could see nothing.

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We ran outside, waiting for the crash, already on the phone to 911.  The car was still there and the driver was out, shouting at us.  We could see what happened.  The truck driver, to avoid slamming into the car and pushing it into the moving train, swerved to the left and ditched into the field parallel to the tracks!  Thing is, there is a little access road there to the switch gear for the train, and instead of ending up in a field, he had plowed down part of the road and slammed into a switching house!  He avoided several power poles and other things in his way.  Our neighbor reached the driver first and miraculously, he was unhurt, but badly shaken.  I can only imagine!!!   We were certain he had slammed into the train.  IMG_3258

It too several hours to get the area ready for trains and then more traffic.  What was so scary was that drivers were having near misses all up and down the road because they were coming up on this accident scene, going too fast and nearly missing emergency workers and stopped rigs and cars!  Talk about a dangerous situation.  We were actually feeling a little anxious about working so close to the road for fear of a pileup!  Thank goodness, they finally got state troopers down the road to slow and block the traffic and make it safer for the emergency crews. IMG_3262

It was so eery to watch the trucks and lights in the heavy fog.  They finally got the semi towed out and the switch house back online late in the night and we had train after train go by for many hours!  I’m sure this made for one backup down the tracks.  IMG_3283

The next day we went to see what was going on, and you can see this narrow little road that he flew down.  How he missed those poles, I just do not know.  He was like 10 feet from the fast moving train, going in the same direction as he was.  He missed a propane tank and other utilities.  The Lord was with this driver that day.  And with the small car driver.  IMG_3284 IMG_3285

That is one sturdy little switching house!  It looks like he slammed into the side of it and then ended up resting between it and a switching tower.  What a ride.

Be careful out there in heavy fog, folks!  Please!!!

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Winter Heating…

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Once the kitties start to seek afghans all day and night, you know it’s time to start heating the homestead.  We like to wear hoodies and sweaters and save money so we do wait as LONG as we can before we really start to heat up this old house.  We actually have three ways to do it and we alternate between them as the funds present themselves.

We have a wonderful wood stove in our big office where we spend a lot of time during the day and evening.  So, it makes sense to use that as much as possible.  And since one of our businesses is a wood working business, well, we sure do have kindling and some fuel available to us.  In fact, for the month of October, we heated both the shop stove and the house stove totally on waste wood from the shop!  Maggie collects it through the spring, summer and fall and it was a great savings.  Plus, we do have a lot of trees on the property and we gather limbs and such through the year.  You’d be surprised at how much wood you can stash those three seasons if you work at a little bit.

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However, by November, it was getting a little more nippy and our free wood was running out.  We still weren’t using the stoves all day and night, rather, we would start them up around noon as the house would start to cool and then stop when we went to bed.  The stove would burn a few hours after and then the hot metal would keep the house comfortable into the morning, around 60 degrees or so.  It sure saves on fuel and sleep!  One of the things that we don’t like about wood heat, is keeping the stove going during the night.  We can get about a four hour burn with our setup and after that, all bets are off.  Pretty much someone has to get up and add wood to keep it going.

We do have one wall propane heater and we turn that on in the late evening, stoke up the wood stove and go to bed.  In the morning, the propane heater would have kept the place a little warmer and it would save on sleep!  IMG_2601

We also block off areas of the house with curtains.  Even a simple, sheer curtain will stop air flow and looks pretty!  So, we close off areas of the house that are just not used much or areas like my little office where lives a little radiant electric heater!  My office is small, 7 foot by 12 foot, and my little oil filled, quiet electric heater on medium will keep it pretty cozy most of the year.  We also curtain off our big studio room because there are two large windows in that room and they are just very leaky and old.  It’s on our radar to replace them at some point, but even with plastic and all, they just make that room almost impossible to keep warm.  So, we curtain it off and use it as a storage and pass through room for the coldest parts of the winter.  IMG_2605

Our local wood suppliers often sell off their trim bits and stuff that didn’t pass muster.  Often it’s got nasty cracks or knotholes in a piece.  They sell HUGE bags of the waste wood for $3 to $5 a bag!  These bundles of kindling are $1 a bundle!  So, when we go to buy wood, we always buy whatever they have.  It hardly costs us over $20 and we can sometimes get a couple days burn for both stoves out of the treasure fuel haul!  Why not?

We have several local guys that we buy wood from.  A new young man in the next town over has some super nice wood…  but he just harvests part time so we usually have to wait a month or so between loads!  Darn!   There is another fellow, and his wood is okay, but often a little bigger than we really like.  We’re not that good at splitting wood and we’re so busy that it’s very nice when it’s pretty much ready for us to use.  The third place is kind of our last resort…  it’s a self pay place and the wood is a little weird sometimes…  it’s waste wood and sometimes old telephone poles or just weird cuts and sizes and chunks.  But we can get nearly a full truck load for $25 and there is no calling, appointments or delivery arrangements.  Just get your cash, and load your bin of choice.  We’ve gotten pretty good and checking out the bins for the best available.  Once we got a load of oak stumps and those were amazing!  You just need to be a little picky.

Maybe some year we will get smart and start buying loads of wood through the summer!  After all, we are going into our seventh year at this and you would think we would be a little better at planning it all out.  Maybe this next year will be our transition year from worrying over keeping the wood pile full to the year when we have a couple cord ready to go!  Maybe…

I do think we will budget for another propane heater.  We’d like one in the kitchen.  Right now, our kitchen can get a little chilly and we end up using oven heat when we are in there long term.  I’m guessing you’ve never been on the low income side if you have never used oven heat for your kitchen!  We do plan meals that need a lot of prep work for when we are baking bread or a roast  because of the extra heat that it adds to the kitchen!  And on very very cold mornings, a open oven on 250 can really make it much more tolerable for a few long minutes when you’re waiting on eggs and bacon!

We were smart and got our propane tank filled during summer when the price of fuel was only 86 cents a gallon.  Right now?  It’s $3.09.  Our tank is only at 15% right now but I think it will make it another month or so.  Just one wall heater uses it, so it’s not a huge draw.  Our tank is 400 gallons, so that can be expensive to fill in the middle of winter!

Maggie has two small 20 gallon tanks that she uses in her shop with a little workshop heater topper.  She has a small wood stove as well, but that can take awhile to really heat up her little garage shop.  She took care to really insulate the old garage, but it’s still a little drafty and we have some upgrades to do this year if possible.  So the moveable tank heaters are GREAT for bringing the temperature up to tolerable, quickly.  And she can move it to where she is working and that helps, too.  She gets those filled twice a month.

It’s a bit of a mixed up mash of heating sources for us, but the best part is that only one relies on the grid for it’s power…  our several small electrical heaters.  Of course, we do buy wood and propane, but if we were to have a bad ice storm or some other weather related outage, we would stay warm and be able to heat and cook on our wood stoves.  It would be rugged, but it would be doable.  That feels good.

Our plan this year is to experiment with some small scale solar energy! We are thinking about some solar lighting out back in the barns as well as perhaps one small panel that can charge electronics and perhaps our well pump in an emergency. We do keep some water in storage, but not a lot.  (We are hoping to add some serious rainwater collection this year, too!)  We learned the hard way a few years back that having animals and no water is no fun.  We were driving about 16 miles round trip to a fresh water spring just about daily, with every bucket and barrel that we could find for several weeks, in the winter, when our pump went out and it was just too hard and expensive to replace in the cold.  If we were to loose power, we would loose the ability to run our water pump to the well.  With a small solar set up and a couple charged batteries, we could turn the pump on for a brief time during the day and pump water for our needs.  And we could keep devices  and small tools charged.  All in the plan!

Hope you enjoyed our little “How We Do It” post on winter heating!  It’s not always easy, but it works.  Right now, first of February, we have spent just about $700 on heating for winter.  Considering that our first two years here our bill was well over $2,000, I feel that we have definitely learned and improved our heating situation!  Except for the most bitter times (under zero and negative temperatures) we enjoy a fairly comfortable heat level of about 65 degrees all winter long.  And we keep working to improve and simplify heating each year!

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Decluttering Bug…

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Read these two books over the holiday season and they were really good to give me a little jump start on my new year’s organizing!  I’m also following this online course called One Year to Clear…  and it’s really been making me think about clutter, stuff and my life!  I’ll find the link and post it below if anyone is interested.  I really am enjoying it.

I can’t really find the time to do the total Kon Mari technique of taking EVERYTHING you own and putting it in a pile and sorting it and all, but I like a lot of her ideas and techniques, so I did work on my office and I think it’s been a good thing!   I had the space kind of nice, but I find that it still collects a lot of clutter.  So I spent a weekend and really went through my boxes and bins and just really got it nice and tidy.  I feel I will probably have to do this once or twice a year because it is a working space and I’m here a lot…  it just clutters up by default!  But I do love to see it nice and organized, so hopefully, that vision will stay in my head and I will do what I can to keep it this way!

 

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I did this nice piece of counter top at our local salvage place!  $21…  can’t beat that.  It gives me a TON more working space and I really love it.  I also got a pair of old school desks for my printer and such and those are really nice because I can stash paper and such underneath the printer!  Perfect!

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I got a couple more boxes to finish out my shelf storage system…  IMG_2668

And picked up this cute mug while I was there!   Bad Sherri…  haha…  well, it was JUST a mug,  and just a buck.  I needed it for my re-do!  IMG_2670

I find the biggest thing that seems to helps is having a place for everything.  I am so bad at having things hither and yon….  so I am watching for things that seem to really do that.  Like my little washi tape collection!  I got a little tidy box just for those.  And the extras, I gave to a friend!  Yah!  Win win…  IMG_2673

Well, it looks nicer.  Still full, but it’s really been narrowed down and it’s all things I use or want to keep.  I did get rid of two trash bags of papers!   One of the things that will really help, at some point, will be scanning some of the paper memorabilia that I have from all my years as a graphic artist.  Unfortunately, I love to keep samples of the things I have done.  And they do add up.  Since I’m not totally sure that there will be a Sherri Memorial Library anytime soon, I think I want to come up with some way to keep the best, scan the rest…  But that is another day!

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