Arctic express
We’re bracing for a chilly visitor coming this week from the Great Lakes and although we’re not exactly rolling out the red carpet for her, we’re stocking the cupboards and making sure there’s plenty of cocoa on hand. When we’re told that the temperatures are going to dip into the single digits with forecasts of windchill in the negative 20’s my anxiety gene kicks on. I start worrying like I’m told my great grandfather did, over the fate of our precious plants.
The greenhouse has a sophisticated system of furnaces that keeps the temperature of the houses within a very reliable range and the structure is as solid and tight as anything made mostly of glass and aluminum can be. The only thing we’re lacking is the assurance of a good back up heating system in the worst-case-scenario of the power going out. What we do have is a temperature sensor hooked up through the phones lines and set up to call us at home if the greenhouse temperature plunges. And there’s a heater or two ready to go that will probably send out enough heat to keep the houses from falling below freezing. What would be more reassuring of course is having a generator that could power the furnaces – but that’s a pie in the sky for another budget year. For now, we’ll bundle up, crank the heat and cross our fingers and toes that our arctic visitor goes back to Canada without stealing any of our stuff for souvenirs. And since our “stuff” is a large priceless part of what makes the Blithewold gardens the Blithewold gardens and represents hours, days, months, years, decades of work, it’s no wonder that Gail and I get nervous about the worst case scenario.
How do you prepare for cold weather? Do you worry excessively (like me)? Do you have a backup plan?