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Old April 8th 05, 05:50 AM
mlbriggs
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On Thu, 07 Apr 2005 22:57:31 -0500, Karen wrote:

in article , CATherine at
wrote on 4/7/05 10:29 PM:

Tuesday in Colorado, a powerful storm blew through. Rain, snow and
extremely strong winds. They said gusts of 60mph near the mountains and
the cities. But out on the prairie, where there is not much to slow the
wind down, I do believe the wind was a lot stronger.

It was hard to drive with the wind hitting the side of the car. By the
time I got to work, I was tired from my deathgrip on the steering wheel.
I opened the door to get out and the wind slammed the door on my foot!
It was like that all day. By the time I was done seeing clients, I was
tireder from fighting the wind than I was from the work.

As i drove home across the prairie, I noticed damages from the wind.
Signs, storage sheds and even a portapotty at a construction site were
rolling in the wind. But I didn't have too much attention for seeing
things like that as I was trying to keep the car on the road.

Once i got home, I just relaxed for a moment before opening the door. I
was so glad the driver's door was on the lee side of the wind. Then Jeff
came out to escort me to the house. He often does, knowing I am tired.

He had bad news for me. No electricity. Well, that happens some times in
the country. But I said it should come back on after awhile. He said,
No. Then he turned me around and said look up the hill behind the house.
So what do I see? Nothing. What should I see? Poles with the electric
wires.

The wind had hit the poles with hurricane force and snapped them like
matchsticks. At 10:30 in the morning. Jeff had called the power company.
They said they had so many poles down that they had borrowed crews from
other power companies. And in many places the wires had snapped
connections and were on the ground shorting out.

We were luckier than many people out here. We live in a very old place
with a real well; not just a pipe in the ground. My son set up a block
and tackle and lowered a bucket in the well so we could have water. We
have a wood stove so we could stay warm and cook. And we lit a lot of
candles. It was kind of like camping. But I sure missed my computer.

I am glad we have the power back on. We were out for about 30 hours.
They got our six poles replaced late last night. But there are still a
lot of broken poles to replace. I see trailers with loads of creosoted
poles sitting at sites of downed poles, waiting their turn.

A friend of mine lost her brand new roof. Now her insurance won't pay
for another one.

Last week I was snowed in for two days with a heavy wet snow. The next
few days was 70 degrees. Then this storm hit us. Now it is 70 again.
This sure is crazy weather for April. I want ot see some flowers. The
redbuds and apple tree should be blooming. At least I am seeing
daffodils in the city where the weather is a bit warmer than the
country.

--
CATherine


Oh my goodness! I had no idea. I'm so glad it wasn't worse for you. I'm
sorry about your friend's roof. I don't understand insurance at all. I
mean, what do you pay for???


It looks like it hit you hard after it left Utah. We woke up to six
inches of very wet snow. It was gone by the next day. The flowers are
still blooming. Now we are expecting snow and rain for the next five
days. It was like summer today. MLB