Colliemom wrote:
Interesting reading on electric and heating bills. I go just the opposite as this is my highest bill time and Thry gradually go down as warmer weather starts moving in. I have a 1460 sq. Ft. Home, heated with natural gas, hot water baseboard heat. My highest bills are usually January and February. Last Months gas bill was $119. Everything in this house except boiler and hot water Heater is electric. Last minthselectric bill was $74, which is high for me. But since I’ve been working on Diamond Art, my lights over my kitchen table are on a lot, plus I’ve been running my dryer and washer daily to wash Pipers bed cover from her nightly bed wetting episodes and shorter and cloudier days make for more electric use. But other than the light over my table when I'm working on the art, I have no other lights on and TV is off. But this too is starting to diminish. Electric rates have gone up too. And since I now have a light pad u der my art canvas, I am dimming down the overhead lights too.
Anne, you be careful heating with your stove. It’s not recommended due to risk of carbon monoxide. They are always telling people here not to do it for that reason. Cooking over it is one thing, but heating is another.
Good morning, Sue, and all who follow.
So sorry to hear about your sweet pup's surgery, surgeries are always a bit scary (at least to me). Since she is blind in that eye anyway, and probably giving her a bit of pain as well, she will likely be more comfortable once it is done. I hope the surgery goes well, and that her other eye stays at least as healthy as it is now.
Um. . . "duh" time on the electric bill thing. When I opened my bill, and saw the amount due, I really did need to sit down and not look at it too closely.
Finally took a closer look yesterday. PG&E (Pacific Gas and Electric - the electric utility in much of northern California) sends a combined bill - natural gas and electric. When I took a closer look at the bill, it was $125 for the electric part, the rest of the nearly $300 was for natural gas.
Still a shocker - compared to other places (like, for instance, Michigan!) it really doesn't get that cold here. So the gas part seemed unusually high - I'll need to go back and check on the gas part of the bill for previous January bills and see what it was.
Still, it really shouldn't be so high and expensive - northern California actually produces a lot of natural gas.
Oh well. I'll still take Sandi's suggestions for helping with my electric - I'd rather keep my money in my pocket (no matter how much or little it is!), rather than forking it over to PG&E.
Judy, to answer your question - our electric utility doesn't send "estimated" bills - LOL - what we receive is "what you see is what you get", pay NOW. When you get the bill, you gotta pay.
Good advice, too, Sue on heating with my stovetop burners. Thankfully, I am aware of the risk - I have a carbon monoxide detector which I tested to be sure it was working before turning on the stove burners. I also opened a window in my living room about an inch, to let in some fresh air.
When I started, I shut the bedroom and bathroom doors (so the heat wouldn't go into these rooms, and just heat my living room. My living room was at about 55 degrees when I started - not terribly cold, but cold enough - and it only took about twenty minutes to get the living room up to about 64 degrees. When the temp reached 64, I turned off all the burners. The house held above 60 until bed time.
You are 100% correct, Sue, that this is not the best thing to do, and can definitely pose a danger. And it also never hurts to post a reminder of this danger, and I do thank you for doing so.
My problem is that I was getting
very chilled, with temps heading lower, maybe towards the 40's. I was and am aware of the danger, and took precautions (window open, carbon monoxide detector).
Luckily, the outage only lasted about fifteen hours. I do wonder what people do when they lose power in snow country. I have considered getting a generator like you have, Sue, but they are pretty expensive here. Thought of maybe going to a hotel - but in checking the maps, I could see that the electric was out in swaths over a good part northern California, so hotels likely wouldn't have electricity - or heat - either. Thought of getting in my car to go for a drive - but without electricity, gas stations couldn't pump gas.
Oh well.
With the outages so very widespread, I was actually a bit surprised that the power came back on as quickly as it did, after only fifteen hours!
Thanks.
Anne