21 September 20XX
My
Dear Lucilius
Winter,
it seems, has arrived early and with a vengeance.
Those
springlike conditions I wrote of four days ago suddenly plunged in
the last two days to near freezing conditions – cold enough that
the last of my summer garden has effectively expired at this point.
I am hopeful that I gave the winter garden (sort of foolish calling
it an Autumn Garden at this point) a start that with perhaps a little
more sun and warm weather, it will take.
On-line
instant weather knowledge: something else that has disappeared in
the blink of an eye.
Our
power continues to maintain itself at about four hours a day or less.
I have taken the liberty of shutting off most of the breakers at the
circuit box (as I hardly need them anymore) and have only two engaged
at the moment: one for the power cord that still drives the computer
and wifi and the one that controls the hot water heater (four hours
is just about enough time to warm the tank before it goes off again –
so my showers are very irregular).
Two
days ago – just before the cold hit – a young man whom I cannot
remember having met before came by and introduced himself. He said
he lived at the other end of town and was checking in with everyone
that was left here to see about having a town meeting to discuss the
state of things and what could be done. You know how I am about
public meetings, but as the situation has changed into what I suppose
we shall term “The New Normal”, I said yes.
The
meeting was, of course, in the daylight hours (that electricity
issue) in the same old business building where we had our July 4th
event. I did a head count coming in – there were about 80 people
there or so, most of everyone remaining here I would suppose.
A
few words of greeting settled us down, then the young man Xerxes (you
will forgive me if I still do not use real names) introduced himself
and said a few words. He had been out both directions in the past
two days and wanted to fill everyone in on the situation.
Effectively, it is not good. Neither town on either side of us had
seen a visitor in almost two weeks as well, only locals – nor had
received any shipment of any kind from the “outside” world. It
appears we are all on our own for the foreseeable future.
He
had two suggestions. The first was to set up a sort of communication
system within the town. We could use radios or walkie talkies if
individuals had them, but suggested setting up a house to house
network based on geography as well. People seemed generally
approving of this suggestion.
The
second was to set up some kind of local “watch” - some kind of
sentinel on all of the outskirts of town to let people know if anyone
is coming in our out. It would certainly not qualify as a “militia”
or anything of that nature, but would at least be a way to keep
abreast of if something was moving in towards town. This seemed a
little less acceptable at first, with meaningful questions about who
would watch, where and when would they watch, how would work be split
(in Winter here, it is not a brilliant thing to be out for long
periods of time). This seems to have eventually worked itself out:
for the moment a passive watch with a notification network. No
formal “guard posts” at this time.
And
so, accidentally it seems, I have entered the role of “watcher”
as I live on an end of town.
We
had a social time after these two items with some cookies and coffee
(sadly, both of these will become a rarity all to soon) and I met a
number of my “neighbors”. 80 or so people is a lot of people to
meet, but not as difficult as I made it in my head. What I learned
is the following:
-
The remaining population is split largely between 3 groups: up to 18,
19-44, and 45-64 (my bracket) with a few above 65.
-
Including myself, there are 40 households represented (there are a
few more houses, but it sounds as if these are people who have left
to stay with other relatives or friends).
-
There are a few more men than women.
-
There are a few outlying households that came in for the meeting, but
it sounds as if some of the larger ranches have “hunkered down”
to wait out the storm.
That
is about as far as we got, socially.
After
the meeting, we all returned home (an advantage of living in a small
town is that you are no more than a mile away from your house).
Thankfully other than the quail and the greenhouse there is little
enough to have to do outside at this point.
My
meals are already continuing to evolve (I mention this because by the
time I got home, it was dinner time). Breakfast is reliable half a
cup of oatmeal, a few dried pieces of fruit, and vitamins. Lunch is
even lighter, involving some vegetables or fruits I have either
canned, dehydrated, fresh, or otherwise stored. Dinners are a cup of
rice, some kind of protein if I have it (fish, beef, deer jerky, even
quail eggs) and beans (rice and beans can conveniently be soaked and
cooked in small portions on a wood stove). Lots of water and tea.
So
tonight I had my beans and rice and a little jerky and my tea and ate
as the wind howled and the sun slowly dropped in the sky. The quiet
with only the fire and the rabbits eating is both intensive and
eerie. I finished with reading a bit more of Dostoevsky (my
goodness, Notes from Underground
is rather dark, is it not?) and then working penning and then typing
this missive to await the next power window.
I
had not anticipated the quiet being so intensive.
Your
Obedient Servant, Seneca
I rather envy Seneca's relative isolation. Seems safer somehow, than living in a more heavily populated area, even if it does look somewhat rural. (I'm thinking of myself here.)
ReplyDeleteso interesting!
ReplyDeleteLeigh, I can assure you that it is based on a real place in the upper North. The town population is really about what is stated in the letter. The nearest population center is 45 minutes to an hour away.
ReplyDeleteRural has its own share of challenges, but I think even in more regulated and intrusive states (like my original home state), being rural allows you a freedom of action and safety denied urban dwellers.
Thank you Deb!
ReplyDelete