so after 13 hours of no power and a lot of thinking time, what are the best ways to past time with no power? (cant do anything outside, remember its raining)
I listened to music and worked on AP English homework(summerwork?)
so after 13 hours of no power and a lot of thinking time, what are the best ways to past time with no power? (cant do anything outside, remember its raining)
I listened to music and worked on AP English homework(summerwork?)
That, provided it's not too late. After Hurricane Wilma, we had no power for about three weeks. We just lit scented candles and talked to each other while trying to see what we could cook without power. It was fun, and now the scent of fresh baked cookies with extra brown sugar reminds me of Hurricane Wilma.
Meditate, sleep, pillage neighbors homes declaring the end is neigh!
You could alternatively storm into other people's homes and crush their pottery in search for rupees; not only is it a fun activity, but you'll also earn some good money, and get to know new people.
Um, so it's raining. Are you a wicked witch or made of sugar and will melt if you get wet? Sometimes going out in the rain is the best thing, especially if it's warm.
Play in the puddles like a kid.
Grab some nightcrawlers for fishing later on
Watch how the reverlets run down the driveway
See how "fun" it is to build a shelter in the rain
Just sit out in the back of a pick-up and shoot the breeze with your friends
Listen to the "tsinging" sound of the rain on a lake
Swim in the rain and listen to that sound under water
Mudball fight!
Stay in a garage and listen/watch a thunder storm (love the booms when I'm outside)
Practice making a fire in the rain
But, If you're set on staying in without electricity..
Write letters instead of emails to your friends
Read (which can be done outside under an overhang)
Board games
I Spy
Card games
Whittle/carve (soap carving? )
Paint
Go through your stuff and sort things into trash, keep, give away, and resell
Build a model
Sing some Bob Seiger while wearing a button-down shirt, boxers, and sunglasses
Play an instrument
Create an instrument (rubberband and facial tissue box guitars, box drums, rice and cup rattles)
Exercise
Clean the windows
Make an indoor scavenger hunt to share
HIde and Seek
"camp games" or teambuilding games
Toothpick and marshmallow bridge
Make and test an Egg Lander
Legos
Sharpen knives
Sew something
Make a homemade compass
Play wiht different kinds of magnetism by using magnets, graqes, and toothpicks
Chew Wint-o-green Life savers in front of a mirror with your mouth open and in picth darkness after your eyes adjusted.
OK...guess I'll stop...
I've been reading and writing where I currently am, and we get a lot of rain here as well. There's a small bookstore in a mall not far where my dad and I have found a few interesting books, and he also recently got a new one from a book fair in Wal-mart (I think that's what he said) that has some familiar points about writing and it's fairly interesting too.
Back at the house my family is trying to sell, I'd also pass the time by sitting by myself outside or taking a nap if my mom was working with the light on in the room (which usually always bothered me).
It is! So what are you standing around here for, Sonny? Go grab that deku sword, and give your neighbors a surprise they're sure to never forget! It's fun for the whole family.
No power? That means you can actually see the night sky. Try it some time.
Smashing the neighbours' pots for rupees? Remember, whatever you do, don't antagonise their chickens. Always ends badly.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-aW9-wv6gGg
I feel so bad for posting that
I'll remember to stay away from houses with the door open during a black out.
I imagine that I'd be extremely bored. Probably end up using every battery I could find on my old original Gameboy Advance since I'd have no way to recharge my SP or DS.
Then I'd probably end up using my vehicle as some sort of generator for charging things after I remember it could do that. Then I'd be annoyed and go buy a generator or something.
I would read, but most of my books are in the E format.