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August 15, 2003
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In case I
disappointed my fellow bloggers who honoured Fair and Balanced
Reporting day today throughout the blogosphere by renaming their blogs
to include the revered and copyright term of the preposterous Fox News,
Fair and Balanced, I
offer this late apology, and the fair and balanced photo at right,
showing Mr. & Mrs. Bush renewing their wedding vows last weekend in
Niagara Falls, Ontario. Regular unbalanced reporting will resume
tomorrow. |
11:16:44 PM
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Gary
Trudeau's strip takes on bloggers' block and the temptation that we're
all sometimes prone to. Read the whole
strip.
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10:11:55 PM
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Noon Friday
and we just got power back after 20 hours. I thought I'd set aside the
usual heavy stuff and let those affected, especially those without
blogs of their own, tell their stories in the Comments about how the
blackout affected, and continues to affect, them. It might make an
interesting archive.
At 4:15 yesterday afternoon I was driving home from downtown Toronto
and had just reached the last stoplight on my commute before I pass
that great divide from city to country (about half my commute is urban
expressway, and the other half idyllic country roads). Suddenly the
stoplights went out and chaos ensued at the intersection. I tried to
phone the local police and radio station on my cell to tell them about
the outage, but both numbers rang busy. And the all-news radio station
wasn't even on the air. So I drove blithely home through the country,
found the lights off at home as well (not an uncommon occurrence that
far out in the boonies), and decided to take Chelsea the dog out for a
walk on the lovely and renowned Bruce Trail (about 5 minutes from where
I live) and pick up some groceries at the same time.
Well the village lights were out, too, so I was starting to catch on
something was amiss. But we went for a leisurely walk on the trail.
When we returned to the car and headed up to the supermarket was shut
up tight. So I went back to the convenience store, and saw the large
lineup of people buying ice and bottled water in the darkened store,
and, standing in the lineup, got the story that 80 million people were
afffected and the blackout was expected to last for hours or even days.
Returning home I called my wife and found that, due to gridlock at
every intersection, she would be an hour late getting home from her
work, and then a neighbour knocked on the door and invited us
(including Chelsea) for a barbecue and bonfire at their house until the
lights came back on (she walked a half mile to deliver the invitation
-- our neighbourhood is like that).
So we spent the evening with a small group of neighbours, looking at
the stars, helping each other plan what would be needed if the blackout
lasted for days, and betting on what time the lights would return (we
all bet they would be on by this morning, so nobody won the bet).
Because of the danger of candles (six families lost their homes in
three Toronto area fires caused by falling candles last night), I
brought in the six portable solar lights from out by the pool and set
them around the house so we would have a trail to the bathroom during
the night.
This morning we set aside our work schedules (all offices in Toronto
are closed today) and we went outside and enjoyed the pool, the morning
quiet, and a bit of reading and gardening. Now the power is back
(though we're threated with two-hour rotating shutdowns), but we're
just going to take the day off and do things unelectric.
In the meantime, please use the Comments to share your story of the Great Blackout of
2003. And take care of yourself, and each other.
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1:48:18 PM
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© Copyright 2004
Dave Pollard.
Last update:
19/02/2004; 2:51:37 PM. |
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