How are you preparing?
I went to my local HEB and did some panic buying.
Brushy Creek area.
I went to my local HEB and did some panic buying.
Brushy Creek area.
Aggie Therapist said:
Dry January here
If it's snows, I'll drink
Aggie Therapist said:
Or Temple!
The need a Bucees central to Austin
What gives?
SteveBott said:
FYI wife went to HEB tonight and said the shelves were wiped out. Reminded her of the beginning of Covid.
Aust Ag said:SteveBott said:
FYI wife went to HEB tonight and said the shelves were wiped out. Reminded her of the beginning of Covid.
Same. All the meat and chicken was gone, and almost all TV dinners . Most fresh produce too.
Lots of fear .
What island is that?Moral High Horse said:
Sugar isle is well stocked.
I'm with ya man, I went ahead and sold my house on Thursday just so I won't have to deal with issues. Probably buy back in to the market in the post-catastrophe for pennies on dollar too.Hanrahan said:
If very concerned, Just cut your water off at the street for the night. Fill a tub and a kitchen sink for hand washing and toilet flushing. Probably not required tonight but don't want to chance anything freezing in the wall or attic.
The bad one we had a couple years ago with days of under 30 had a lot of my neighbors in bee cave with waterfalls for walls. Not gonna mess with that crap and will just cut the water again and not worry about it. Should just be overnight tonight then back on during afternoon and then off again till Tuesday. Not ideal and not required for this one but gonna do it anyway for peace of mind.
This only works if you have a low point drain, which most homes in TX do not. Shutting off your water and leaving it in the pipes is much worse than leaving the water on and dripping faucets.Hanrahan said:
If very concerned, Just cut your water off at the street for the night. Fill a tub and a kitchen sink for hand washing and toilet flushing. Probably not required tonight but don't want to chance anything freezing in the wall or attic.
The bad one we had a couple years ago with days of under 30 had a lot of my neighbors in bee cave with waterfalls for walls. Not gonna mess with that crap and will just cut the water again and not worry about it. Should just be overnight tonight then back on during afternoon and then off again till Tuesday. Not ideal and not required for this one but gonna do it anyway for peace of mind.
They will be. People like to panic.Aust Ag said:
It's crazy. Pretty sure the stores will be open normal business hours.
Aggietaco said:This only works if you have a low point drain, which most homes in TX do not. Shutting off your water and leaving it in the pipes is much worse than leaving the water on and dripping faucets.Hanrahan said:
If very concerned, Just cut your water off at the street for the night. Fill a tub and a kitchen sink for hand washing and toilet flushing. Probably not required tonight but don't want to chance anything freezing in the wall or attic.
The bad one we had a couple years ago with days of under 30 had a lot of my neighbors in bee cave with waterfalls for walls. Not gonna mess with that crap and will just cut the water again and not worry about it. Should just be overnight tonight then back on during afternoon and then off again till Tuesday. Not ideal and not required for this one but gonna do it anyway for peace of mind.
I'm glad your actions have protected your pipes, but this explanation is not correct. "It's the pressure, not the freezing, that busts the pipes" - what pressure, from what source, are you referring to? Water always sits in a household pipe around 50PSI, but without freezing of course the pipe never breaks. Any expansion pressure from freezing is added to the 50 PSI.Hanrahan said:Aggietaco said:This only works if you have a low point drain, which most homes in TX do not. Shutting off your water and leaving it in the pipes is much worse than leaving the water on and dripping faucets.Hanrahan said:
If very concerned, Just cut your water off at the street for the night. Fill a tub and a kitchen sink for hand washing and toilet flushing. Probably not required tonight but don't want to chance anything freezing in the wall or attic.
The bad one we had a couple years ago with days of under 30 had a lot of my neighbors in bee cave with waterfalls for walls. Not gonna mess with that crap and will just cut the water again and not worry about it. Should just be overnight tonight then back on during afternoon and then off again till Tuesday. Not ideal and not required for this one but gonna do it anyway for peace of mind.
Not sure where you are getting that. It isn't much worse to leave water in pipes under no pressure. Yes it may freeze in the pipes but that isn't going to burst anything if it's not freezing under pressure. Maybe in an empty house with no heat after a very long freeze where you can get pressure from water freezing in between multiple frozen spots and over a long run. But as long as you very slowly turn the water back on you aren't going to mess anything up, frozen or not. It's the pressure, not the freezing, that busts pipes. I do the same at my ranch. No problems through any of the bad freezes and there is plenty of water left in the pipes.
Complete Idiot said:I'm glad your actions have protected your pipes, but this explanation is not correct. "It's the pressure, not the freezing, that busts the pipes" - what pressure, from what source, are you referring to? Water always sits in a household pipe around 50PSI, but without freezing of course the pipe never breaks. Any expansion pressure from freezing is added to the 50 PSI.Hanrahan said:Aggietaco said:This only works if you have a low point drain, which most homes in TX do not. Shutting off your water and leaving it in the pipes is much worse than leaving the water on and dripping faucets.Hanrahan said:
If very concerned, Just cut your water off at the street for the night. Fill a tub and a kitchen sink for hand washing and toilet flushing. Probably not required tonight but don't want to chance anything freezing in the wall or attic.
The bad one we had a couple years ago with days of under 30 had a lot of my neighbors in bee cave with waterfalls for walls. Not gonna mess with that crap and will just cut the water again and not worry about it. Should just be overnight tonight then back on during afternoon and then off again till Tuesday. Not ideal and not required for this one but gonna do it anyway for peace of mind.
Not sure where you are getting that. It isn't much worse to leave water in pipes under no pressure. Yes it may freeze in the pipes but that isn't going to burst anything if it's not freezing under pressure. Maybe in an empty house with no heat after a very long freeze where you can get pressure from water freezing in between multiple frozen spots and over a long run. But as long as you very slowly turn the water back on you aren't going to mess anything up, frozen or not. It's the pressure, not the freezing, that busts pipes. I do the same at my ranch. No problems through any of the bad freezes and there is plenty of water left in the pipes.
Water expands when freezing. Put an unopened water bottle in the freezer and it will burst - due to the ice formation, no other pressure. Pipes can do the same. If you turn off water supply and leave faucets open that will certainly reduce the chance of a pipe bursting but bursting is still possible, depending on piping layout and if ice could form at two ends of a pipe length before the middle freezes. Since you turned off water supply and I assume left faucets open, you have relieved the pressure in lines (~50PSI) so any ice expansion pressure is added to a lower baseline PSI and less likely to bust the pipes (depending on pipe material).
Running enough water the pipes - in teen temps and lower I do a slight stream - is a more surefire way to prevent pipes bursting.