Oh, goody, the furnace is out
Dec. 15th, 2008 03:27 pmEdited to Add: Furnace technician has come and gone. As David suspected, the pilot was out. Luckily for such pride as I possess, the ignition assembly needed to be disassembled and cleaned anyway, and they did not charge us their emergency fee. The technician also said that we really, really ought to replace the boiler. Well, in an ideal world, we probably would do so. Thanks for all the wishes of warmth; they have all been granted. I have yet to alter my apparel other than unsnapping the down vest, but that will come.
It's the coldest day of the season, with a vengeance. I think the high temperature is supposed to be 4 F. I got up at 11, which is late for me, but I think I kept not getting up because it was cold. It's a pity my waking mind didn't engage itself, because I could have called the furnace place sooner.
The furnace technician is coming between two and six. I sure hope it's closer to two. I'm not sure what could be amiss with the furnace. It's a gravity hot-water system. The thermocouple went last year and was replaced. It has a new used pressure tank, so I guess something could be amiss with that. I sincerely hope not. It might be the thermostat, I guess. I just hope this isn't the moment when it becomes obvious that we must have a new furnace.
It might even be that the pilot light went out, but I do not mess with natural gas, personally, and it's too cold to wait for a non-professional who does.
So I'm sitting in my office, a slightly leaky sunroom, and I'm wearing two sweaters, a down vest, leggings, oversized jeans, two pairs of socks, my thinsulate-lined boots, and my hat. Lydy has a space heater somewhere, but she's off at class.
The downstairs furnace, which is usually the one that goes wrong, is heating away, so I was able to warm up after shovelling snow and filling the bird-feeders. A sensible person would just take her laptop into the living room, but that is not my work space and I would just fool around on the computer. Which, it seems, I am doing anyway. Hmmmm.
Hope you guys are warmer than I am.
Pamela
It's the coldest day of the season, with a vengeance. I think the high temperature is supposed to be 4 F. I got up at 11, which is late for me, but I think I kept not getting up because it was cold. It's a pity my waking mind didn't engage itself, because I could have called the furnace place sooner.
The furnace technician is coming between two and six. I sure hope it's closer to two. I'm not sure what could be amiss with the furnace. It's a gravity hot-water system. The thermocouple went last year and was replaced. It has a new used pressure tank, so I guess something could be amiss with that. I sincerely hope not. It might be the thermostat, I guess. I just hope this isn't the moment when it becomes obvious that we must have a new furnace.
It might even be that the pilot light went out, but I do not mess with natural gas, personally, and it's too cold to wait for a non-professional who does.
So I'm sitting in my office, a slightly leaky sunroom, and I'm wearing two sweaters, a down vest, leggings, oversized jeans, two pairs of socks, my thinsulate-lined boots, and my hat. Lydy has a space heater somewhere, but she's off at class.
The downstairs furnace, which is usually the one that goes wrong, is heating away, so I was able to warm up after shovelling snow and filling the bird-feeders. A sensible person would just take her laptop into the living room, but that is not my work space and I would just fool around on the computer. Which, it seems, I am doing anyway. Hmmmm.
Hope you guys are warmer than I am.
Pamela
no subject
Date: 2008-12-15 09:42 pm (UTC)I hope it's something no more drastic than the time that we were staying at my mom's farmhouse, and got very cold overnight because the furnace wasn't working (I think it got down to about 50 degrees inside the house). The morning after, we called my mom to report the problem, and she said, "Oh, that!" and explained that there was a big red "reset" button on the side of the furnace that we probably needed to push.
So I went and pushed it and the furnace came on, and I felt rather silly for not having called her the previous night when I first realized the furnace wasn't working.
no subject
Date: 2008-12-15 09:51 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-12-15 09:56 pm (UTC)P.
no subject
Date: 2008-12-15 09:57 pm (UTC)Tea. I wish you tea.
no subject
Date: 2008-12-15 09:58 pm (UTC)There's a pretty funny bit in Shirley Jackson's Life Among the Savages where that's what the furnace needs, only the button isn't red and doesn't say "reset" and she's convinced she'll blow up the furnace, so she sends for the repair guy and then has to pay him in change from her kids' banks because she hasn't got any other cash.
I wish I could pay the guy who's coming here in nickels and quarters. But he'd have a bit of trouble carrying them.
P.
no subject
Date: 2008-12-15 09:59 pm (UTC)Yes, tea is excellent. I don't want to overdo it because it also has licorice root in it, but ginger tea is really good in these circumstances.
P.
no subject
Date: 2008-12-15 09:59 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-12-15 10:22 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-12-15 10:25 pm (UTC)Remind yourself that you're genetically adapted to Northern European winters.
And bring the livestock inside the house.
no subject
Date: 2008-12-15 10:40 pm (UTC)We've never had the furnace go out when it was this cold before. The house, unsurprisingly, holds heat better when the outside temperature is higher and, for that matter, when the sun is higher. I did note the effect of passive solar for the few hours we had it, though.
P.
no subject
Date: 2008-12-15 10:41 pm (UTC)It was not much colder in here at the worst, but it feels colder when the outside is cold and it's getting dark. In spring and fall, I'll turn down the thermostat and open the windows at 57 degrees.
P.
no subject
Date: 2008-12-15 10:41 pm (UTC)It's only 27F here - "only" in the sense that (a) this is by far the coldest we've had it all year and (b) it's piddling compared to what you're stuck with. But I'm bundled in layers and shawls, hand-knitted wool socks *and* sheepskin slippers, and my hands are still cold. I doubt I could survive a Great Lakes winter these days...
no subject
Date: 2008-12-15 10:42 pm (UTC)I fear that the adaptation may have been weakened by long sojourning in the effete British Isles.
The livestock was burrowing under all the covers it could. I was tempted to bring the birds and squirrels in, but I didn't.
P.
no subject
Date: 2008-12-15 10:43 pm (UTC)My cat slept on my feet while I was in bed, but sensibly decamped downstairs where it was warm once I insisted on getting up and charging around. Raphael's cat slept on Raphael's feet all afternoon, though.
P.
no subject
Date: 2008-12-15 10:54 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-12-15 10:56 pm (UTC)I read this and can't help but think of "The Frozen Logger": "At a hundred degrees below zero, he buttoned up his vest."
no subject
Date: 2008-12-15 11:23 pm (UTC)P.
no subject
Date: 2008-12-15 11:25 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-12-15 11:37 pm (UTC)P.
no subject
Date: 2008-12-15 11:38 pm (UTC)I'd try it, certainly, if anybody offered me any.
I love the song too. It's a nice macho Minnesota song, even if we are rather further south than its setting.
P.
no subject
Date: 2008-12-15 11:46 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-12-16 12:32 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-12-16 02:35 am (UTC)I have been wearing nearly as many clothes as your impressive get-up, and my furnace is working just fine.
K.
no subject
Date: 2008-12-16 06:56 am (UTC)I found out that if we turn the thermostat up to 68, my office is actually warm. But then other rooms are too hot, and also I don't want to think about the gas bill.
It's a pity you can't have my hot weather and I can't have your cold weather. I think we would both be better pleased.
P.
no subject
Date: 2008-12-16 01:52 pm (UTC)The basement is positively freezing, though.
K.
Quilts
Date: 2008-12-16 03:24 pm (UTC)We had our furnace red-tagged three years ago on the first day we needed it. Not as cold as this, but 3 days wait to get a new furnace. My houseplants died.
Re: Quilts
Date: 2008-12-16 04:57 pm (UTC)P.
Re: Quilts
Date: 2008-12-16 11:03 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-12-17 02:08 am (UTC)I'm in an apartment now, with ceiling ducts and a heat pump. It heats the aparment with air warmed to something less than 90 degrees F., meaning it feels cold all the time. Even so, I knew there was a reason I moved to SE Virginia! It was 70 yeaterday (although it is currently 44). No fleece vests, long johns, multiple sweaters, or any of that stuff.
no subject
Date: 2008-12-17 02:52 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-12-21 05:49 pm (UTC)I'm very lucky that for such household emergencies, my first recourse is Greg. After all, I have his boat in my garage.
I did have the heat go out at my old house (your older house) several years ago, but I was on the Minnegasco plan, and not only did the guy come at 9 or so at night, he came back at 1 a.m. with the part that was needed to fix the furnace. Apparently Minnegasco considered no heat in the middle of a Minnesota winter to be something serious.
no subject
Date: 2008-12-21 06:22 pm (UTC)All furnace people seem to regard no heat in the middle of a Minnesota winter as a grave emergency. Some of them just charge more than others.
P.