17 March 2009

Week 13 & 14 - Power Cuts

I didn't blog at all last week. We had no electricity.

Tuesday evening at 6pm the power went out (much to my daughter's dismay when the television suddenly turned off). It was quite a windy day, but nothing to the scale of the storm a week and a half ago. I looked outside and noticed smoke billowing from the other side of the hill behind ours.

20090310a Fire

A little while later our neighbour informed me that a power pylon had come down, setting fire to the paddock. I kept an anxious eye on it all evening (visions of Victorian bushfires in my head) but the wind kept blowing away from us and the fire service had it quickly under control.

The power was out all evening and I ended up going to bed and reading by candlelight. It eventually came back on about 1.30 the next morning.

Wednesday morning we went to the supermarket and had hardly begun when all the lights suddenly went out, the refrigerators went quiet, and for a second there was an eerie silence as everyone looked around, then everyone started talking at once again. The supermarket had enough back-up electricity to power the tills for about 30 minutes, so I grabbed the essentials and headed for the checkout.

Power came back about two hours later. I heard on the radio something about "rolling blackouts" but didn't hear the whole story due to children talking.

On Wednesday evening, again at 6 o'clock, the power suddenly went out again. Once again to my daugher's great dismay. This time I hadn't finished cooking dinner and we had to go out to McDonald's for dinner, to my daughter's delight.

Thursday evening all was fine and I reheated Wednesday's almost ruined dinner - roast lamb together with roast potatoes and roast pumpkin, both out of our garden.

Friday evening, for the third time that week, we lost power yet again, and yet again at 6 o'clock. This time it didn't bother my daughter as we weren't at home. This time the cause of the outage was young hoons driving their cars into power poles.

The unexpected downside of not having any electricity is that we don't have any water either, as the pump which pumps the water out of the water tank is run on electricity. (Unless there's a battery switch somewhere that I don't know about).

---oooOooo---


All that happened in Week 14 (last week). In Week 13, T and I harvested the rest of the lavender. Despite there being more rows of lavender than last time, we actually got a much lower yield of oil than previously. Because of a combination of the plants being younger, and poor growth due to the amount of weeds growing at that end of the paddock (and maybe the storm blew a lot of the buds off?). We only got 2.5 litres of oil.

The weather is starting to fluctuate as we enter Autumn. The mornings have been getting quite cool but still warming up into very hot days. Except for one day last week where it was raining and very, very cool. 14 degrees Celsius inside. Not that cold by winter standards, but considering today was 22 degrees, it was a huge shock to the system. So much so that I actually lit a fire in one of the fireplaces.

Another unexpected consequence of having water tanks is that during summer the cold water never really gets all that cold. But when the weather turns cold, the cold water feels like ice! I'm not looking forward to winter very much!

This weekend we went to the Central Districts Field Days in Feilding. It was very good and very relevant, with exhibits for fencing, tractors, and all sorts of things that farmers need and use. We came away with a PILE of farming magazines to read, a water filter for our kitchen, and lots of information on fencing and sheds, and other things to read. Not much in the way of stock, unless you're interested in highland cattle or alpacas, but they had just about everything else you can think of. It was much more worthwhile than the A&P shows have been. Although once again I don't think my daughter would agree.

Today, St Patrick's Day, has been very appropriately spent harvesting potatoes. The box weighs more than our kitchen scales can handle, but I'm guessing another 16kg [EDIT: Weighed in at 18kg]. Plus the 8-odd kg [EDIT: 7kg] I harvested last week. Brings us up to about 40kg in total. Our local supermarket has them at $2.50 for white and $3 for red potatoes, so I'm estimating we've got just over $100 in potatoes. Now we've just got to eat them all !!!

I also picked a pumpkin (Butternut variety I think) out of the garden too. It weighed about 2kg which is worth around $7.75. But once again, now we have to eat it all !!!

[EDIT] I take that back - just looked at the Wikipedia article for Butternut Pumpkin and it looked entirely different to what we've got. But I'm sure that's what it was labelled in the supermarket. Oh well, here's a pic of it, maybe someone can tell me what it is.

20090303j Pumpkin

[EDIT AGAIN} I think it is a Crown Pumpkin.

-M

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