Thank God for fossil fuels and the hero's of yesterday and today for keeping us alive.
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Temperatures Too Cold to Report???
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Start of day one of the two known coldest days in Vegreville history. Previous record was -46.9 on January 27, 2004. Weather records do not support that winters were colder in the past, it is technology that makes them easier to deal with. (Thank God for oil, natural gas, and coal) We have in recent history had extreme conditions that has rivaled anything in past weather records that I can find going back to the 1920's. Ice age?
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140K btu furnace in a ~850sq ft house with 2x4 walls, limited roof insulation, and a dirt cellar. It's barely keeping up this morning. It's a stopgap until I can finish a proper house, but damn, all I can think is this place used to be heated with nothing more than a wood/coal stove! In past generations, I suspect everyone just slept on the kitchen/dining room floor.
-37f air temp, with an absolutely miserable 13mph wind this morning makes for a -64f windchill.
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Originally posted by helmsdale View Post140K btu furnace in a ~850sq ft house with 2x4 walls, limited roof insulation, and a dirt cellar. It's barely keeping up this morning. It's a stopgap until I can finish a proper house, but damn, all I can think is this place used to be heated with nothing more than a wood/coal stove! In past generations, I suspect everyone just slept on the kitchen/dining room floor.
-37f air temp, with an absolutely miserable 13mph wind this morning makes for a -64f windchill.
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One of the old 2 1/2 story brick houses next door had a huge wood ,coal furnace in the basement I swear it was the size of a round baler. I remember looking at the deep wore out groves on the wooden steps thinking that was a nasty place to keep warm when it hit -40.
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Originally posted by wmoebis View Post
How many people lived in that house? Our town won't even let us build a 850 sq ft house even built with today's insulation and high efficiency furnace so we can heat cheap and use less gas. We tried to develop a whole area of town but nope. Not sure What is a proper house in today's standards?
-Great grandfathers family of 4 possibly 5 by then moved into it in 1924.
-additional 450ft built on in early 30's to house a family of 7.
-grandfather's family of 4 lived in it from the 50s until they moved into town.
-we moved a family of 5 now 6 into it in the spring of 21. Hope we're out by next christmas.
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Originally posted by wmoebis View Post
How many people lived in that house? Our town won't even let us build a 850 sq ft house even built with today's insulation and high efficiency furnace so we can heat cheap and use less gas. We tried to develop a whole area of town but nope. Not sure What is a proper house in today's standards?
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Originally posted by Happytrails View PostThank God for fossil fuels and the hero's of yesterday and today for keeping us alive.
That's what I say in my head while the MC is saying something else....
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Originally posted by Happytrails View Post
Permit rules ARE the problem. The sprawl of cities is driven by development and zoning rules.
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Originally posted by helmsdale View Post140K btu furnace in a ~850sq ft house with 2x4 walls, limited roof insulation, and a dirt cellar. It's barely keeping up this morning. It's a stopgap until I can finish a proper house, but damn, all I can think is this place used to be heated with nothing more than a wood/coal stove! In past generations, I suspect everyone just slept on the kitchen/dining room floor.
-37f air temp, with an absolutely miserable 13mph wind this morning makes for a -64f windchill.
And I was young, so no responsibilities. Your kids will have good memories.
I do however have no feeling in some toes from feeding cows back then.
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Originally posted by blackpowder View Post
Grew up in a house just like that. Pieced together early in the last century. Luckily we had diesel heat.
And I was young, so no responsibilities. Your kids will have good memories.
I do however have no feeling in some toes from feeding cows back then.
Still -60°f windchill here. Had to stuff more insulation down the water well-pit and its damned near impossible to walk into the wind without a balaclava ladened face.
Perhaps with minimal snow cover this'll nuke some grasshopper eggs? Lord knows they layed a biblical infestation in waiting.
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