Wow -- 30 hours of no power here in Oly at my house. We lost power Thursday night around midnight, and didn't get it back until yesterday at 6AM. My parents lost it around the same time and still don't have it back!!! (Bill Gates lives a mile down the road, which tells you that in the Northwest, who gets power back first isn't related to economics.)
The wind was nasty -- cat-one hurricane-level peak winds at some points. Trees were coming down all over Western WA. It was so loud it was hard to sleep, and I totally expected to wake up in the morning to see my Costco portable garage missing and my Miata lying upside-down in the back yard. (The garage was totally bent and moved -- with many of the holddowns for the vinyl broken, but the car was fine.)
Then there were the sheets of rain. My parent's house had three feet of water pooling up at the door, which sent mud and water through the main floor and down the furnace ducts.
And the weather -- it was 30 degrees outside. When our power came back on, the house was 54 degrees. My parents had 48 degrees, so the second we got power, I told them to come down -- they slept here last night.
The whole city looks like the floor after you take the Christmas tree down in late January -- needles and branches everywhere. It's amazing that only four people were killed (one drowned in a basement in the same rains that hit my parents' place, the others in car accidents with trees.)
No damage here...but I never knew how addicted I was to Internet and cable tv until they went out. (Didn't get connectivity back until noon today.)
The wind was nasty -- cat-one hurricane-level peak winds at some points. Trees were coming down all over Western WA. It was so loud it was hard to sleep, and I totally expected to wake up in the morning to see my Costco portable garage missing and my Miata lying upside-down in the back yard. (The garage was totally bent and moved -- with many of the holddowns for the vinyl broken, but the car was fine.)
Then there were the sheets of rain. My parent's house had three feet of water pooling up at the door, which sent mud and water through the main floor and down the furnace ducts.
And the weather -- it was 30 degrees outside. When our power came back on, the house was 54 degrees. My parents had 48 degrees, so the second we got power, I told them to come down -- they slept here last night.
The whole city looks like the floor after you take the Christmas tree down in late January -- needles and branches everywhere. It's amazing that only four people were killed (one drowned in a basement in the same rains that hit my parents' place, the others in car accidents with trees.)
No damage here...but I never knew how addicted I was to Internet and cable tv until they went out. (Didn't get connectivity back until noon today.)