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2021.02.18Snow In Dallas, Day Four

Snow in Texas

It's now Thursday morning, and ONCOR, the largest power company in the state, tweeted that it is discontinuing power blackouts related to this week's winter storm.

We were again blessed yesterday to have an entire day without a power outage, but I (at least) continued to take as many opportunities as I could recognize to charge batteries and wash dishes and basically get stuff done hopefully in advance of an outage.

At the same time, I was also trying to be careful to conserve — turning off extra lights and so on — partly motivated by my guilt in running the dishwasher.

It seems to me that power demand would typically increase in the evenings, because the temparatures fall, and heating one's home (with an electric furnace) seems a major power draw (I once read that any appliance used for changing temperature — think furnaces, refrigerators — is always a huge energy consumer); in a normal world, homes are mostly dormant during the day, with a relatively stable and standard power draw: refrigerators, furnace at a lower setting because people are gone. But in the evenings, people are returning home, turning on lights, making dinner, adjusting the thermostat to a more comfortable temparature; TVs are coming on, et cetera. Our current reality is probably somewhat different, because many people are stuck at home during the day either as a function of COVID-19, the winter weather, or (likely) both.

Temparatures have been gradually getting warmer — we reached the mid-20s yesterday and we're there again today. Not warm enough to melt snow, but also not -2°F. We're supposed to start really warming up tomorrow, and the news broadcasts have been warning us all to watch for pipes to burst.




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