indigo_rose99: (Default)
I got and paid my electricity bill today.  Ick, ick, ick.

The bill seemed... high.  Really high.  What is typical for this time of year?  What is an unreasonable cost?

I mean $254 may not seem like a lot for a month of electricity, but it seemed atypical to my gut.  But, according to the graph, this bill was reasonable to everything but *gulp* my checkbook. Yes, I know it is "only" the second highest electricity bill EVER.  Ugh. And the most expensive (+$3) was on the old electricity plan.

Yes, I am on an "electricity plan."  Like a cell phone plan, but with my electric company.  I stay with them for 5 years, they give me cheaper rates.  Mostly it seems to work.  The SureValue in the graph is the rate plan, and "old" is the previous lack of rate plan.

But... but... but... we cut back!  I set our house temperature 3 degrees hotter (ick!) at night, and 1 degree hotter during the day!  Surely that got me SOMETHING?! 

Ok, what about my kilowatt hour usage?   How did that compare?

Ok, kilowatt hours usage in the most recent bill is... almost typical.  So the good news is that the new AC unit ("before" new AC vs "after" new AC) is probably helping a lot.  With the outside temperatures so high, this kilowatt hour usage seems pretty good.

The ultimate curse?  Price per kilowatt hour.  That is what gouges us so badly.  It isn't that we are really using an unusual amount of electricity to cool our house.  It is that the COST of what we are using has gone up.  Yes, I do consider $0.14 per kilowatt hour pretty good compared to what it had been before I went on SureValue ($0.16 per kilowatt hour in 2006).  Still... I miss the sweet 2004 days of $0.11 per kilowatt hour.  *wistful sigh*

And the sad part?  I still have it pretty good.  Newer AC unit, lower-cost electricity plan, increased ambient house temperature... It would have been a lot worse without all of this. 
indigo_rose99: (Default)
It wasn't just our house power that went out.  Almost the entire county went with us. 

I had ordered pizza 10 minutes before the power went out.  It was supposed to be about a 30 minute wait, so we waited about 10 minutes after the power went out and set out for the pizza place.   At first, it was fine.  The car had AC, and traffic seemed fine.  But then about halfway there, we discovered that the stoplights were not working.  They were not blinking, they were black.  All of them.  It took us an extra 20 minutes to go what should have been a 2 minute trip.

We finally got to the pizza place to discover that their power was out, too.  They had no record of our order.  Their stoves were electric.  Even their phones were out.  The manager used his cell phone to call the next nearest store and transfer our order. He promised it would be free. 

We did our best to take a route to the nearest store that involved only roads without lights -- interstates, country roads, whatever it took.  And it was crazy!  So many lights out!  Some people at the first pizza place wondered where all of the police that should be directing traffic... We found them.  They were at the lights leading onto the interstate.  I have to figure that so many lights were out that they had to place the police at critical points. 

After having seen the latest Die Hard movie, all we could think was, "Someone having a Fire Sale?"  I got a taste of what just the loss of electricity can do.  We depend on it in ways that truly astound me.

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