Tuesday, February 06, 2007

Still snowbound


The topiary tree (just a lightning-struck white pine)

M is off school again today and is driving us a bit crazy. We're still stuck at home, though I did venture out yesterday for life's necessities (milk and printer ink: such is the modern world). It is VERY cold. Too cold to go out and play, certainly.

The sheep are even hampered. I am half tempted to shovel some trails for them: they have "taken to their beds" in their shed and venture out only a few feet to their water. And our chickens have accepted that their coop is the new paradigm. I think they're probably light-deprived. It's quite toasty in the coop, though. I have simply made sure they get LOTS more house goodies, like fresh greens and kefir and grapes.

We're also dealing with some frozen pipes. When we bought the house, I thought, hmm, pipes running up the outside wall of the house: maybe that's not a problem in Michigan, but we wouldn't do that in Minnesota. Well, it IS a problem if Michigan has Minnesota weather, it seems. It's the cold water that services both bathrooms. So we're making do with the bucket brigade to the toilets and very, very warm baths. The kitchen and the washer are not affected. It all feels very Laura Ingalls Wilder.

5 comments:

meresy_g said...

My stupid chickens stand outside and look at each other while the heat lamp and water heater labor away in the coop. Although they probably wouldn't do that if there was three feet of snow. How many more weeks til Spring?

El said...

Ah, Meredith, my poor birds would be doing (and did) the same thing before the snow got too deep (read: up to where their feathers poof out). Have you put your lights on a timer? It has been so damned cold here I turned the timer off and just "let it burn." So very anti-peak-oil of me, I know, but the poor chookies. They're so sad!

Anonymous said...

Pipes on the outside! that is odd to see. In my native south Texas, none of the pipes were insulated and they typically entered the house above grade. So on the colder nights (below freezing - egad!) people leave a faucet running at the other end of the house to keep the water moving so the pipes won't freeze & burst.

El said...

Okay, technically the pipes are not on the outside wall of the house; they're within a furred-out plumbing chase that's attached to an outside wall. And I guess it's not TOO outside because it's sheltered by an unheated porch. Whatever: it's still a poor practice. But then again, the bathrooms were an afterthought to this house. They went in in the 1920s sometime (the house was built in 1918). It ticks me off, as there's nothing I can do about it except complain!! We're about 18* below average for low temps, so I guess it's never been a problem before. Though we may need to start keeping the water running...

meresy_g said...

I didn't put it on a timer. I've just been letting it burn all day since it hasn't been getting above the low teens. I did turn it off this morning as it will be a balmy 20 something, but it will probably go back on overnight if it is in the single digits again. Plus the water heater doesn't work below 10 degrees, so gotta keep that from freezing up. They tried to take a dust bath on Sunday and the soil was frozen solid, I felt so bad for them.