When Sandy hit, I was living on a dairy farm in Bucks Co PA. We lost power except for when milking took place, when my landlord would run his generator. So for two - four hours a day, we had power. Those hours were moments to breathe, cook (I had an electric stove), charge gadgets, and check email, etc. It was quite a week.
When Sandy hit, I was living on a dairy farm in Bucks Co PA. We lost power except for when milking took place, when my landlord would run his generator. So for two - four hours a day, we had power. Those hours were moments to breathe, cook (I had an electric stove), charge gadgets, and check email, etc. It was quite a week.
In south NJ near the Delaware shore, where I now live, I see damage from Sandy that was never repaired and people who did not receive funds because they lived on the wrong shore. Their homes are now mostly abandoned to the sea
It’s so interesting how different places endure—damages from storms over a decade ago unfixed is absurd. And again, leaves us where, precisely, in terms of preparation for the next one?
When Sandy hit, I was living on a dairy farm in Bucks Co PA. We lost power except for when milking took place, when my landlord would run his generator. So for two - four hours a day, we had power. Those hours were moments to breathe, cook (I had an electric stove), charge gadgets, and check email, etc. It was quite a week.
In south NJ near the Delaware shore, where I now live, I see damage from Sandy that was never repaired and people who did not receive funds because they lived on the wrong shore. Their homes are now mostly abandoned to the sea
It’s so interesting how different places endure—damages from storms over a decade ago unfixed is absurd. And again, leaves us where, precisely, in terms of preparation for the next one?