16 September 20XX
My
Dear Lucilius:
I am
receipt of your e-mail from 14 September and am grateful for it. I
comforted to hear that you are all doing as well as can be expected –
although your proximity to your major urban center continues to
remain a concern for me. Agreed that with fuel quickly dwindling,
the chances are also dwindling that any unrest will creep its way to
you – it is a rather long walk for our overweight, industrial era –
but it still concerns me. Perhaps living so far from large bodies of
people for a period of time does this.
Autumn
is advancing here more quickly every day, it seems. Our days are
more and more overcast and rain has become a regular reality. I am
thankful I managed to get the bulk of items ready when I did; the
last little bit: final preparations for the hive, continuing to
ready the greenhouse, getting the last gasp out of the summer garden,
making sure the autumn and winter garden – have taken up most of my
time since I last wrote. But that is all done, now: all there is
left to do is the daily maintenance and the preparation for the
arrival of winter.
This
drop in temperature has meant that the wood stove is coming into use.
I am still fortunate that with the insulation, the house is warm
with a minimum of wood. It also means that I ready hot water in the
house for my tea and oatmeal in the morning. It also means that I am
out, even in the drizzle and wet, looking for a little more firewood.
There
is no more local traffic. To a large extent, people seem to have
retreated into their homes and are (I assume) preparing for the
first Winter here without power in perhaps 100 years. A stunning
thought to think within the short period of 6 months we have
immediately stepped back that far.
The
power cycle has continued to dwindle even less; we are down to
perhaps 4 hours a day of power, irregularly spaced. My routine is
now to leave a single light on and when it comes on, immediately drop
what I am doing and use the computer (including typing in this
letter, of course). I am thankful that I had taken care of what I
needed to before the power went completely out; I can only imagine
what life would be like today with the cold outside and a
refrigerator of rotting food inside.
Besides
cold, the other thing the coming of Winter brings is the dark;
earlier and longer. I do have my light sources of course: candles,
LED flashlights, a head lamp – but I am trying to conserve them for
when the “real” difficult times arise. I am “giving” myself
the gift of an hour of headlamp time a night to read and sit with
rabbits in front of the fire. I am not sure they enjoy it, but at
least they have time out of their cage and I am not confronted with a
bedtime of 1930. I can recharge the headlamp for now but must always
measure the use of it against how much longer I can charge it.
You
had asked me in your letter about hope. I do not know rightly how to
answer that question. The view from the Upper Mountain States looks,
I am sure, different from an urban area in a temperate climate. I am
hopeful that I will be able to survive whatever is coming up; I have
tried to prepare as best I could and now there is simply nothing left
for me to do to prepare, just to survive.
I
remember the last time I visited, that evening we sat in your living
room surrounded by your books and CDs and you asked me what my 50’s
had taught me. My response, if you recall, was that I was learning
to become reconciled to the loss of things: dreams, passions, even
(to some extent) health. What I see in my world now is similar to
that: it is not that I have lost that hope, it is just that I am
learning to become reconciled to the loss of it.
Your
Obedient Servant, Seneca
Senica should have bought a battery charger for his headlamp, flashlights, and whatever else used AAA,AA, C, or D batteries that could run on 12VDC. I happened across one of these at a yard sale. It runs on 12VDC, and runs on house current with a wall wart. It was originally bought at a "vape" shop. It also charges the 3.7V lithium-ion batteries for my Streamlight!
ReplyDeleteA small 12V solar charger, like one of those trickle chargers that plug into the "cigarette lighter" in your car, attached to a 12VDC car battery (I use a deep-cycle battery), and you're good to go for any low-draw 12VDC item... such as that charger...
Sadly Pete, Seneca seems to be like a lot of us: some things he had figured out quite well, others not so much. Glen lectured him earlier about the idea of relying on solar. I think he has one of those smaller backpack solar panels to charge things, thinking he would not have that much to charge.
ReplyDeleteEven fictional characters do not get it right all the time.
But really good advice, and I should probably get one!
good read
ReplyDeleteThank you Deb! Seeing through Seneca's eyes has been a very broadening experience.
ReplyDeleteI seem to have gotten behind again. Very thought provoking, or at least it should be.
ReplyDeleteThank you Leigh.
ReplyDeleteI will say that in reading stories of prison camp survivors or prisoners, hope seems to be the one indispensable thing without which people cannot survive.
Hope is important, in my version of the rule of threes, it adds 3 seconds without situational awareness and at the other end 3 months without hope.
ReplyDeleteFrom Backwoods Home Magazine (my favorite subscription)
https://www.backwoodshome.com/power-up-bag/
Plenty more where that came from. Hope it helps.
Tempus Fugit friends.
Hope remains one of the most needful things (almost in any situation).
DeleteAnd thank you for the link. I have a fair amount of this in place, but not everything.