Jun. 11th, 2007

Saturday

Jun. 11th, 2007 12:44 am
laura_seabrook: (Default)

Barnsley

Woke up at 7am, after 4 hours sleep. Still no power.

Made my bed, and then fed Peggy and the cats. Xena turned up none the worse for wear. Then I took Pegasus for a walk to the other side of Barnsley to survey the damage. Considering what things could have been like here, things were not that bad.

The awning above the beautician's had collapsed (she picked a good weekend to go on holiday). There was a fridge on its side on the wrong side of the road, opposite where it could have come from. The landscaper's fence and gates had been caved in. There were two cars abandoned diagonally in the main street, and debris went up to about a metre above the footpath on the bridge.

Over the bridge, the power line was down in two places, surrounded by "traffic hazard / fire hazard" signs and quite a few trees were down. One person told me that they had a metre of water in their living room!

Spent most of the morning reading, as there was no TV or radio (other than the little earplug one I had for dog walking), or power on in general. Kevin woke up late morning, and I pointed out that we had to go shopping as there was only half a gas bottle left, no matches, no firewood, and no D cells for the lights. OK, if the power came on later in the day that wouldn't be a problem, but the best indication we had was that there'd be no power back on until maybe Thursday!

Despite not being keen to, we went to Stocklands in Jesmond. I knew after phoning Jenn that she had the power on there, and had heard that the shopping centre there had power, so it was the logical place to go.

Glendale

we caught the bus out just after noon. There was a bit of damage along the way (like the roof missing from a sports club house) and when we got to Glendale we heard that (only) Woollies and K-Mart were open (as they had their own generators). Taking a chance, we got off and checked out K-Mart for gas bottles and D cells. There weren't either there, and in the half light there were heaps of folk mulling around staring at where the D cells weren't.

However we did pick up a number of LED lights that either ran off two AA cells, or were wind-up dynamo types (Kevin's looked like it was a prop from Star Trek). Very effective at night While Kevin waited for the next bus, I went to a usable toilet and then into Woollies. It was rather eerie watching people shop in the gloom. No gas bottles or D cells there either.

Jesmond

Caught the bus to Jesmond. Wallsend looked very wet, and half of Nelson street was a disaster area with shop fronts blown out and debris lying in the middle of the road. There were reports of looting at the Plaza but I don't know how accurate that was.

Got to Jesmond, finally. Kevin went to the lay-by in Big-W and picked up the dozen D cells that he'd booked over the phone. There were no others left in any shop there. there were no gas bottles either, or so we thought. We went upstairs and checked the "Asian Supermarket" but they'd sold out. I went to Go-Lo and found eight butane bottles and bought the lot. We also bought two packs of a dozen " smokeless logs" for fuel for my wood/coal stove in the lounge.

Going back down stairs we bought take-away Chinese meals and waited at the bus stop for a bus that'd take us back to Glendale where we could catch the last bus home. Kevin bought some bags of ice while we waited and had to rush off because he'd left his mobile to charge at a phone shop.

The bus never came.

Or rather, it came way too late, so that we'd never make that connection at Glendale. Once we realised this, we went back inside the shopping centre and sat down  out of the wind and rain on nice expensive leather couches, and ate the take-aways.

I went into the Woollies there for some things and it seemed rather odd - not like there was a disaster on at all. And yet there clearly was because there was a run on quite a lot of groceries and supplies. The bread shop was posting times up to 80 minutes away for fresh bread. I was glad I'd bought two loafs on Friday night (and the pet food too), even though they'd sat in the trolley six hours before getting them home.

After that, with 10 minutes to spare before they closed, we went back into Big-W and I bought a 10 litre pot for soups. The pot could be used on the gas stove just in case the power didn't come back on. Then, well it was waiting for a taxi and paying $30 or more to get home.

Only we didn't have to. I bumped into a couple of friends and they gave us a lift home in their 4-wheel drive - hurray!

Home

It was a relief to get home. I was glad that we'd had dinner at Jesmond. We packed the bottom of the fridge with the ice bags and Kevin lit up the wood/coal stove in the lounge with the fuel we'd bought that day. He started making pea soup to a Dutch recipe.

Sometime in the night - utterly exhausted - I fell asleep on the sofa, surrounded by dogs. I woke up at 4am to Xena's meows to be let out side. She'd been in since 7pm that night so I let her out, found my specs, and went to bed again.

Sunday

Jun. 11th, 2007 01:34 am
laura_seabrook: (cheerful)

No power Sunday morning either.

Didn't do much yesterday. Spent the morning (after feeding the pets) in my bedroom under a blanket cuddled up to Pegasus and reading a book. Kevin finally woke up and pointed out that we needed more firewood.

We went down the street and I took my work trolley with me. There was a possibility that someone had free firewood down the street but it was just a rumour. We popped into the chips shop at the roundabout. Yesterday they'd had a big CLOSED DUE TO FLOOD (apparently the roundabout had a metre of water above it) but today they were open, running the fries off gas. We had chips and coffee, and I bough both the w/e papers.

Dreadful news. A family of five had died when the road collapsed under them and they were swept out of their car. Some 40 year old man had been suck down a drain in New Lambton and never seen again. Various and sundry dead or injured, and Maitland was about to be evacuated before the Hunter River burst its banks in the worst flood since 1955!

One of the papers had the whole front page showing police divers trying to recover bodies in a river. Just at the bottom was a strip stating that Paris Hilton was returning to jail (and screaming "It's not right!"). ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha -- really, I mean, under these circumstance just who gives a fuck?!

I mentioned this to another patron and he mentioned that people in Raymond Terrace (not far downstream from Maitland) were phoned the radio stations worried that they were going to miss the Newcastle Knights in a home match at Marathon Stadium (and they lost the premier league and the first grade!), yeah, right - half the towns wrecked, and they still played

The whole town gets flooded, no one has power, and everyone goes to see the beached ship - that's Newcastle for you!

Photo from Newscom - click for original page.

The people who owned the chips shop were just about to go to Glendale, and they offered to buy some firewood from a service station for us, which we accepted. Went back home and waited. After they got back with the bag of wood, it proved to be not enough if the power was out for another couple days, so Kevin suggested we go hunting for downed trees and branches.

I wasn't keen, so he went off to ask some neighbours for wood while I settled down to doing the washing up with the last dregs of the hot water (not bad after a day of no power). He came back without wood, but with news that the power might be on at 6pm. It wasn't, abut came on at 7:43pm, just as we were discussing how long it was going to be off. Until then, the neighbours next door, who'd been running a generator off and on all day - lent us power to keep the fridge cold.

Normality was restored. The adventure was over, for now.

laura_seabrook: (Default)

Here's some photos from recent times. Click ON THE THUMBNAILS FOR The LARGER IMAGES.


The morning after - drains in my street.


Pegasus, Hallie and Kevin inspect the drench. 

 
My side pathway.
 
The lounge room at night by storm lantern.
 
Shops at the roundabout. Part of the awning had fallen down, and there's chaos further up the street.
 
One of the abandoned cars next to a fallen branch.
 
Some food thrown out because of no power to the fridge? Peggy wants to know why he can't eat it.
 
Mysterious fridge that was on the opposite side of the street. How did it get there? Did it float?
 
Gate and Fence of Landscape Business.
 
Two more abandoned cars near the bridge.
 
The bridge the day after. The previous night the creek was a metre above it.
 
Downed power lines on the other side of the bridge.
 
Another shot of the creek.
 
Road damage after the rains.
 
Notice the line of debris on the side of the road - that's how high the water got.
 
The Greater Union Cinema at Glendale where I'd stayed the night before. Closed due to no power but advertising their other cinema in town.
 
Woolworths - bloodied but not unbeaten.
 
Inside Woolworths - shopping as usual on generated power. Everything was very casual.
 
The Notice at ALDIs after being flooded the night before.

 

Nelson St in Wallsend. Roof tiles on the road, and the front of HomeBase blown away.

Well - that's it me for tonight/this morning. I'm off to bed.

laura_seabrook: (cheerful)

Still awake. Just thinking how lucky I am when...

Forty-five-year-old Wayne Bull was attempting to get out of his car when it was swamped by flood waters at Lambton, a suburb of Newcastle, on Friday night and he was swept into storm water drain. His body was found this afternoon in Styx Creek at Hamilton North, several kilometres from where he disappeared. His body is being taken to the Newcastle morgue.

Today police also located the body of a woman and a man on the NSW Central Coast. They were in a car with three children that fell into a crevasse that opened up on the Old Pacific Highway at Somersby. All five have now been found.

Last night, a 29-year-old Heddon Greta man was killed when a tree crushed his utility, near Brunkerville, in the Lower Hunter.

Two people died on Friday when their car was swept off a bridge at Clarence Town in the Hunter Valley.
Source: ABC News Online

Things could have been a lot worse for me on Friday night, but they weren't.

Thank you Goddess!

laura_seabrook: (cheerful)

I read a post by Jenn Dolari that mentioned a version of DUNE that took place in the SILLY HAT UNIVERSE - that is, everyone in the film/series wears some over the top headgear.

 

 

 

Apart from DUNE, can you name a film or TV series (no superhero stuff, because a lot of folk wear "silly hats" and masks in those) where characters of a race, creed or position, wear deliberately made up silly hats (no janissaries either!).

Feel free to post images in replies!

laura_seabrook: (cheerful)

Click to go to Geek Culture

Accident

Jun. 11th, 2007 09:16 pm
laura_seabrook: (Default)

Just had a minor accident.

Kevin finished dinner, which was pea soup that had been on the boil for a couple of days (and really tasty it is too) and handed a bowl of it to me. The bowl slipped and spilt hot hot soup over me. I was wearing PJs at the time but it soaked all the way through. I have mild burns over my stomach. I had to take everything off and then cool off using a wet t-towel.

Um, it hurt. I couldn't stop crying and shaking for a while.  OUCH

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