Didn’t expect to see a disaster that I actually lived through on this channel. I remember my dad burning scrap wood in the fireplace so we could stretch our firewood supplies, and moving all the food in the fridge into the snow so it wouldn’t go bad. Crazy times.
@Andy_the_Collector9254 ай бұрын
The Racoons: 🤤
@onyx_might724 ай бұрын
They freezing too lol@@Andy_the_Collector925
@WholeWheatWhale4 ай бұрын
Bizarre, isn't it?
@BillRevis4 ай бұрын
I "lived" through this, nothing changed except my energy bill going up for the month.
@Tyrannosaurus_Wrexx4 ай бұрын
Same. In Dallas, and didn’t have it near as bad as some. Neighbors in my apartment complex came together to help each other out with water, batteries and flashlights, food, and use of microwaves (the buildings that had power. At the very least, I love that we came together as a community.
@matthewcarbone22013 ай бұрын
I thank the creators of this video for not sugar coating this disaster. The massive vehicle pileup was particularly disturbing, but something we need to see.
@fghyjhku2 ай бұрын
My co worker lived right by the highway. He said that all of a sudden he started hearing the sounds of tires squealing, cars crashing and screaming. He called 911 and he was told help was on the way. He heard this go on for hours. He said that’s the scariest thing ever.
@ericaweiss25302 ай бұрын
Agreed. I worked at a nearby hospital that took a lot of the trauma patients.
@jessicakiely28492 ай бұрын
I’ve had people in other states comment how all us Texans were mad that the don’t know how to drive their big trucks in the snow, when in all honesty I told them that Texas homes are built to keep us cool, not to keep us warm. Not to mention my nephew was not even a year old, other states people just don’t understand how horrific it was to be in it. Other people said that they “didn’t think it was that serious lol” but 92 is considered a heat wave where they live
@jimpemberton15432 ай бұрын
@@Wontreplyeverdontbother black ice was the culprit and it happens up North as well. Can't see it until you're on top of it. Road conditions can change from wet to frozen in a space of a quarter mile (or less).
@dynagaming2693Ай бұрын
@@jessicakiely2849 Watching people going highway speeds in unfamiliar conditions is what gets to me. I'm sorry, but up North even we don't go 65 / 70 MPH (most us, there's always people out there who think they're invincible) during ice / snow. You see videos and dashcam videos of Texans carrying on like this is normal. You can't help black ice (happens up North too), but hitting it at 70 MPH is a much different outcome than hitting it at 50 MPH.
@TheRandompaint4 ай бұрын
You can't have this story without mentioning mattress Mack ( you even used a picture). He let hundreds and hundreds of people into his stores to sleep,eat and stay warm. He's truly an angel ❤.
@marquishafreeman4 ай бұрын
Definitely
@renewestbrook57554 ай бұрын
He is a treasure.
@nicholasmorris39244 ай бұрын
Mattress Mack is absolute a trash excuse for a human when you actually learn how he treats people when there's no good publicity in it for him. Ask anyone who's worked for him. His abuse and dehumanization of his workers-in public-is legendary.
@19Willy674 ай бұрын
He is still the most awesome person ❤
@jvinclarence39774 ай бұрын
@@nicholasmorris3924my friend use to work for him and went to his welding school in the back of the store. He didn’t have any issues with him
@karenann82222 ай бұрын
I was living in Austin, in a Senior Community. What really impressed me, was how everyone helped one another. We really pulled together, sharing food, blankets, phones, etc.
@OfficialSinViolinАй бұрын
I was 10 when this happened, honestly I didn’t even suffer that bad,
@eminempregАй бұрын
@@OfficialSinViolin that's great, but sadly a lot of people did
@eminempregАй бұрын
One thing i refuse to belive is that humans are inherently evil. Because everytime a disaster happens, people band together so quickly. We're born to care about one another, we just learn to be apathetic
@peachy_lili4 ай бұрын
this was the one time that living in a tiny, crappy, run down apartment actually wound up working in my favor. it's a lot easier to keep a tiny room warm.
@CassandraY4 ай бұрын
Small mercies can mean the world at the right time.
@melkerandlefin93244 ай бұрын
@@CassandraYreally have to live a life to learn to count your blessings. Many don't understand that concept. They live life, even successfully, yet lessons fly right over their heads.
@_moocow4 ай бұрын
yup, holed up in a room with every blanket in the apartment, layers, and another warm body. my apartment dropped to 36 degrees in the first night and i spent about 80-90% of the time without power and having to drive around the city to find some sort of food was so difficult, we were not prepared at all.
@daniellegonzales42234 ай бұрын
Had thick blankets on the door frame and windows, thick blankets over all the mattresses in living room floor, had thicker blankets tied off the hallways and stayed in room. Didn't know why they hell I collected blankets all my adult life until that day. Glad I was a blanket hoarder.
@tomorowsnobodys4 ай бұрын
Yep i did the same. Used my grill to heat up bricks and then had the bricks in pots and pans in the room with me to radiate heat. Showed the trick to my neighbors and warned them about running grills or cars indoors. People panic in moments like that and make foolish choices. Gotta look out for each other. It was really sad when i got power back to go online and see all the cases of carbon monoxide poisoning.
@nolan20expert4 ай бұрын
Its sad to see that many people dont know the dangers of carbon monoxide
@mikaross46714 ай бұрын
It makes me sad that it isnt common sense. Something similar happened in upstate NY, I believe where a woman died from carbon monoxide poisoning because she slept in her car, but she didnt check to see if her exhausts were blocked by the snow. They were.
@Kemachris4 ай бұрын
@@mikaross4671 Oof, actually that one might have got me too. Unless i was sleeping in my car because i was snowed in of course 🤔
@ScaredyGinge4 ай бұрын
It's equally sad that there are states that don't have a carbon monoxide alarm mandate. There are just so many things with this whole situation that could have saved so many lives.
@kristinsreese4 ай бұрын
@@ScaredyGinge This happened in the garage though. I don't know any states that have carbon monoxide alarms in the garage, seeing as, it's the garage. With cars that give off carbon monoxide.
@ScaredyGinge4 ай бұрын
@@kristinsreese And the little boy in the trailer? Would that not have possibly saved him?
@Alferia4 ай бұрын
The biggest punch in the face is that a LOT of this could have been avoided if Texas learned from what they had experienced roughly 10 years prior to this. The Groundhog's Day Blizzard of 2011 was catastrophic to parts of the Texas Grid, so bad that the state of Texas had to get power from Mexico. The US Army Corps of Engineers told them they needed to winterize their power grid, extreme winter weather happens more often than people think. Texas straight up ignored that until it bit them in the rear end.
@TeeDee874 ай бұрын
Capitalism doesn''t work if essential things are not in law. Recommendations do nothing when only thing companies care is money.
@Wft-bu5zc4 ай бұрын
They still haven't learned. It'll happen again in 10 years lol.
@SpaceRaptorJesusJedi4 ай бұрын
Dude. The sheer amount of ignorance that is so common among people has never made sense to me. Like carbon monoxide due to indoor combustion is something I knew about as a CHILD. It's one thing for children to be ignorant because bad parenting, but it's a totally different thing for grown adults to be so ignorant.
@CassandraY4 ай бұрын
@@SpaceRaptorJesusJedi I think a lot of people forget about that sort of thing because of how we get power and heat. It's not really an issue for most people and it quickly turns into an 'out of sight, out of mind' situation. Then you throw in a disaster situation that a lot of those people have never experienced and that's when things start to spiral. It's a damn shame more people don't take care to prepare for these times of situations BEFORE they happen. And many will not take steps afterwards since 'when will it happen again?'. Prepare like it's guaranteed to happen every year.
@TheDenofBadgers4 ай бұрын
They did, they had the systems in place, they failed to maintain them.
@nonames11392 ай бұрын
It’s crazy because living in Maryland a year prior I watched on the news thinking “ what’s the big deal it’s just a little snow and cold” But moving down to Texas and now seeing how unprepared the electric grid is here , how frequent power outages happen from minor weather , and the roads coupled with how “insanely fast” people drive down here , I can see how this became a disaster
@musickat344Ай бұрын
It's a big deal because we don't get snow in Texas. I lived in Wyoming for a stint, and can say with full confidence that Wyoming would struggle just as much in the heat and humidity we get in Texas; they don't have near enough capacity for cooling down a house in such temperatures. Likewise, we in Texas don't have snowplows or chained tires or even fireplaces in many homes. We're each equipped to deal with the weather we're used to.
@pnice0610Ай бұрын
I'm from Maryland and now live in Texas. I can definitely see how everything happened the way it did
@eminempregАй бұрын
That was the infuriating part for me. I'm not a Texan, one state above, but I also got hit. Just to see people up north mock Texans for being weak. "It's just a little snow". Like yeah you can say that when you live in a place that gets snow often. Youve got the infrastructure to deal with it. Texas doesn't. Our houses are built to let heat out cuz were usually sitting around 80 degrees for the most of the year. Obviously this hostility isn't directed at you, just previous emotions bubbling up. It hurt to see people one state over and in my own state dying from the freeze, and then getting online to see others mocking them.
@LyricsQuest11 күн бұрын
It's a big deal because people from Texas don't know how to drive through snow, so the snow falls, and practically everyone stays home, including the gas truckers so the gas stations were empty for 3 days. I was in houston, and an inch of snow brought the city to a standstill. Seems absurd to a northerner.
@nonames113911 күн бұрын
@@eminempregof course I definitely understand . We were watching thinking “ why would people light a grill indoors “ as ppl died of carbon monoxide poisoning…but then I felt awful saying that bc ppl here were just thinking “ we need to stay warm” on the rare occasion we have snow now I try to help my neighbors with salt on their driveway/sidewalks so that any ice melts immediately
@BearJwG4 ай бұрын
Fort Worth here and we never lost power thankfully. Me and a buddy went around in his truck delivering food, water, and firewood to families in need.
@injusticeanywherethreatens48104 ай бұрын
🫡Based comrade move. Thanks comrades🫡
@Avx-sj9hj4 ай бұрын
Based
@realTheHomelander4 ай бұрын
Another Ft. Worth here, also never lost power (possible because we were on the same power grid as a hospital). My family opened up our home to people who were less fortunate. Scary times man, can’t believe it was 3 years ago
@MenteMaestra914 ай бұрын
God bless you, gentlemen. Respect.
@Danceevie10044 ай бұрын
We lost power in Houston for 5 days. There were so many empty buildings in downtown with all the lights on 😒 while everyone else was left without electricity.
@deannareadsandsleeps4 ай бұрын
i think it's genuinely insane that someone could call saying they heard their family member faint over the phone, suspect carbon monoxide poisoning, and no sense of urgency was used to save a family with reported children inside........
@El_Presidente_53374 ай бұрын
"Mhh no one answers at the door. I guess they aren't at home."
@dsandoval93964 ай бұрын
@@El_Presidente_5337 Exactly! Like _WTF_ is a wellness check good for anyway!?! They might as well have just drove by slowly, yelled "Aye! Anybody there!?" Not even getting out, and as they roll past the house 2 seconds later, just drive off and been like "Yup. We did a damn fine job on that one, boys! Let's go get breakfast!"
@sridharponnaian23034 ай бұрын
Criminal negligence
@randymillhouse7914 ай бұрын
It was the person who put themself into the life-threatening situation that is to blame. No one else.
@theangryliberal4 ай бұрын
@@randymillhouse791 Imagine blaming the victims
@N0R1PDF4 ай бұрын
the pileup mentioned near the beginning happened 5 mins away from where i live, my dad was supposed to have gone to work that morning but was told to stay home bc of ice on the roads, glad he listened and stayed home
@reneewooley12404 ай бұрын
I lost a good friend that day
@michellestewart91974 ай бұрын
I live in canada. Every year first bad snow storm. I stay home. There always crashes on the first day. Your dad did the right thing. People forget how to snow drive the first day.
@zarasha82204 ай бұрын
@@michellestewart9197 one of the main issues is, here in Texas, we don't really get much in the way of snow. Instead, we tend to get freezing rain. It doesn't matter what kind of tires you have, or how much experience you have driving in snowy conditions, when you hit black ice there's really not much you can do. You can't tell the difference between simply rain-wet roads and black ice, and you're just screwed if you have to be on the road.
@SarahCole-lf1ss4 ай бұрын
@@zarasha8220 you can’t prevent black ice but, good defensive driving skills helps stay in control. Like she said, people forget how to drive first day, and like you said, Texas doesn’t get it much. It sucks no matter what but looks to be an unfortunate situation with a bit of lack of knowledge.
@SarahCole-lf1ss4 ай бұрын
@@zarasha8220can tell you I hit really bad black ice my first winter; absolutely wrecked my car. Got a drivers course and taught myself and practiced, hit black ice a few years later and I kept myself in control for the most part. you can’t completely gain control over it but there’s a few things you can do to help not just lose all sense of control.
@RedsDeadBaby2 ай бұрын
My girlfriend was pregnant with our daughter at the time and was expected to give birth on the 24th that month but our girl decided to come early, while the worst of the storm was hitting, and I had to drive my girlfriend to the hospital. The only ones on the road that evening. Only to turn into a night in the hospital because she wasn’t dilated enough. We were discharged the next morning and by that evening it was time. But this time, the weather was worse and snow covered the freeway entirely. Being from a little ways north of Houston I never experienced driving in that kind of snow, ever. So I had to drive us again to her planned delivery hospital further into downtown Houston. After driving as quick and as safe as I could we managed to make it and get her ready for the delivery and 3 hours later we met our daughter for the first time. (She had a massive conehead lol) but as luck would have it, the lights in the hospital went out. Our first night with our newborn we were freezing and hoping she would survive the night. There was no water available in the building the entire 3 days we were there so she couldn’t have the afterbirth washed off until several days later. But all along the way we kept in heavy prayer and I believe it was due of God’s mercy everything worked out the way it did. She is turning 3 1/2 in a few days :) time sure does fly by
@kevinalexander18772 ай бұрын
No one cares
@tezcanaslan28772 ай бұрын
@@kevinalexander1877 i care
@deelaynee2 ай бұрын
How scary that must have been. The hospital didn’t have generators??
@kb_98802 ай бұрын
@@deelaynee They did but generators can fail -- big building. Plus, they had to turn off lights due to pipes bursting. The water was not drinkable. Had to have bottled water. The staff was low, too.
@kb_98802 ай бұрын
@@kevinalexander1877 Then don't comment. No one cares? A lot of ppl did during those days and even now.
@minnime3904 ай бұрын
I was working at a nuclear power plant when this hit, and the nuclear power plants nationwide were able to run at 100% throughout this, due to their design benefits. It was surreal -- because their input to the grid was so critical, absolutely nobody was allowed into the plant for anything except absolutely essential tasks for running the plant. There's normally people going in and out all day and night doing odds and ends, but for about 2 weeks our job was to just sit there, just in case something happened and we were needed.
@shaunstrasser14 ай бұрын
It doesn't matter when the power lines snap due to ice
@ccormx4 ай бұрын
Texas is on our own grid, uniquely. So we can’t import electricity or export, I know those aren’t the terms but you know what I mean.
@neilkurzman49074 ай бұрын
You forgot that some of the nuclear plants in Texas went down because their instruments weren’t winterized and froze shutting the plant down.
@Sam-sj4pd4 ай бұрын
meanwhile here in australia..ffs
@henrymorgan39824 ай бұрын
You probably saved many, many lives!
@KitsonHeart4 ай бұрын
My friend lived through this. He was constantly connecting onto discord calls whenever he could because he was isolated and his area was heavily blacked out. Even to this day he still thanks me for being there to help him stay sane, I can only imagine the fear he must have gone through. We joke about it now, but back then I wouldn't be surprised if he was on the verge of tears.
@SuperMarioThatWhore4 ай бұрын
Sounds like a biotch. It wasnt that bad we were stuck too and had covid.
@CesarPreciado-s6x4 ай бұрын
Womp womp
@GamerLife-hv5kx4 ай бұрын
@@CesarPreciado-s6xshut your goofy ahs up cesar
@Vastatio4 ай бұрын
It wasn’t that bad 🤣🤣
@IsaiahMiguel4 ай бұрын
Bruh it wasn’t even that bad and everyone acting like it was an apocalypse People really have zero survival skills whatsoever
@lanceberry89834 ай бұрын
I went through this while undergoing chemotherapy and my family had to constantly bounce me between homes just to keep me warm and safe from infection. It was a terrifying time in my household.
@terripeterson45333 ай бұрын
THANK THE LORD 4 UR FAMILY! AMEN!
@englishmadcow74613 ай бұрын
I hope you're doing well?
@notahumanbeing68923 ай бұрын
that is horrible, I’m glad you had a support network and got the care you needed
@qjiid82913 ай бұрын
that sounds absolutely horrible! we had to take in my great grandma during the freeze for the same reason.
@aewtx3 ай бұрын
How scary! I assume you're doing better now?
@ncrveteranranger44543 ай бұрын
I was 16 when this happened (I'm 20 now) it feels like an ancient memory. I remember it started on Valentines Day, the first time I've ever seen snow with my own eyes. It looked beautiful. Power went out for an hour or two in the morning, which prevented me from doing classes online due to covid still being high. It came back on, and class resumed as usual. It was a normal day besides the snow. Woke up next morning, and before I could log on, all the remaining active electronics shut down, and I was super excited not to log on to school today. It was still snowing, more than yesterday. I wanted the power to come back on after school hours passed, but it never did. We didn't have power for 3 days. Our food turned rotten, and we had to throw it all away. We boiled water to keep us warm along with our gas-powered stove. The nights were the worst. Me and my older brother would stay up late doing whatever we can to pass the time. Neither of us could sleep in the cold or warm up in our beds at night. I still remember when both of my brothers and I were in our dining room at night wanting this to end and after chatting for almost an hour. We hear a fan go off in one of our rooms before the light turned on and we all hurdled with joy like idiots glad to see it all end. Our fear was that it doesn't go off again. It didn't, but it was still cold outside, but the snow was melting already.
@alexdewayne9392Ай бұрын
Im still baffled that some people said their food went bad when it was a literal freezer outside. Like why didn't you just set your food outside in a bag. It's below freezing. Make it make sense to me
@ncrveteranranger4454Ай бұрын
@alexdewayne9392 Nobody is expecting a massive state wide power outage that would last for days
@DarlingsOrgansАй бұрын
I remember this too ! For me, i remember mostly the hotels being asshats and pretending they had power. I remember when school finally opened so people could get warm. My area was lucky, most of us got power within a day, i got mine after 3 days. My grandma woke me up at 3 AM, saying "there's power, there really is power". But even so, it took a while for the house to get back to warm. The pipes burst and everything. It was kinda scary, my experience wasn't even bad compared to a lot of others
@LilMeep_xАй бұрын
It snowed in Texas in 2017 but you probably in part that didn't
@ncrveteranranger4454Ай бұрын
@DarlingsOrgans There was some fun to be had during my experience. It's definitely something you can't forget. I remember the walls in my home gathered a lot of humidity and starting dripping/oozing this dirty greenish yellow liquid, which was the dirtyness the walls had gathered over the years that was pretty gross. Some of them even froze on the way down.
@Heyxtre4 ай бұрын
My cats were so worried bout my siblings and I, they tucked into the blankets and tried to keep us warm. I will always remember that and all the stray animals we helped. My heart still aches for those who didn’t make it
@AngelDiaz-os5fz4 ай бұрын
They did not give a rats ass about you, they were trying to use YOUR warmth for their own survival.
@CynthiaRockroth2 ай бұрын
When we had power outs the dogs and cats were allowed in our beds. The fishtank( 20gallons) lost all the fish do to heater going out. But it was fun reading to cookie(dog) under the covers with a flashlight. And mischief (cat) kept my feet warm. ( had another cat on my neck till dad swiped it for sister bed) We grew up with sleeping bags in the closet for power outs in winter.
@awswtrash7758Ай бұрын
As a cat owner… I’m pretty sure they were using you to stay warm lol
@dynagaming2693Ай бұрын
Your cats weren't snuggling with you for your benefit, they were doing it for their own. It's sorta like how in nursing homes people think that the cats are predicting death meanwhile they're just bouncing from one person to the next to find the warmest, and the byproduct of that is being able to tell when someone is fading.
@gordondafoe351629 күн бұрын
Your cats tried to keep themselves warm!
@FloodExterminator4 ай бұрын
So... The firefighters thought a wellness check was just knocking on the door and leaving if nobody answers the door??? Dafuq... That's just a ding-dong ditch...
@KhanaHatake4 ай бұрын
That's what most "wellness checks" are. If you don't answer the door they just leave.
@mockgothgurl4 ай бұрын
Really! If after being told by the family three times they were concerned about carbon monoxide dangers, the fire fighters didn't have the sense among them to think the people could be passed out??? I hope the family sued them for their stupidity.
@ScaredyGinge4 ай бұрын
I hate to be that person, but I hope that fire chief thinks about the way he spoke to that man on the phone for the rest of his life. There's a chance the mother and daughter could have been saved, especially knowing the father had fainted on the phone. Complete incompetency, imo.
@user-kz4ro9uq4q4 ай бұрын
the thing is that they can't break into the place. maybe look through the windows would of been better but not if the curtains were fully closed. there isn't much that could of been done if the person doesn't answer or no immediate evidence something is wrong.
@ShaimingLong4 ай бұрын
@@KhanaHatake Different country, but in the UK during the ol' lockdowns, my next door neighbour had a welfare check. Three police officers arrived, spent half an hour knocking on the doors, the windows, anything they could do to see or hear anything inside and asking the neighbours if we had seen or heard anything recently. After that half an hour they called for a locksmith and camped out front in their cars waiting and watching the building for any sign of movement, while occasionally coming back and knocking on the door. When it came to their lunch break they staggered it so there was one of them always present. Three or four hours later, the lock smith arrives, opens the door and he wasn't home. I actually don't know where he was or what happened as he never came back. But it's scary to go from seeing how the police just hung around until they could confirm one way or another if he was in there and if he was alive or dead, and then you hear stories like in this video where the welfare check gets the no sign of life result, and the authorities just give up and leave.
@a.h.i2674 ай бұрын
2:02 i hada friend who lost 3 family members in this accident. She was traumatized and spent 5 months in a psych ward and never fully recovered. We graduated last year, hope her and her family are ok
@trustjesus83893 ай бұрын
😢😢😢😢😢😢
@remy_plascenciaАй бұрын
Fort Worth Texan here, I was 21 years old and bed ridden with COVID when the storms hit, we lost power and my family gathered in the living room with blankets and the fire place and I was quarantined in my room. I woke up shivering harder than I can even explain, my face was hurting so bad and l'd lost feeling in my nose completely, I turned on my flash light and I'm not exaggerating when I say I could see my breath inside my room, I had no energy to do anything but put my head under the covers and try to keep warm with my body heat and breath, I couldn't even call for my family for help or another blanket. The next day my mother said she could barely wake me up, my skin was ice cold and my cough was visible in the air, I don't remember a single thing for almost 10 days after, all I did was sleep, occasionally drink water, and use the restroom, or so I was told. I'm thankful my family and I survived knowing so many didn't.
@annaferguson57134 ай бұрын
I remember "Snowmageddon." We boiled water in our kettle for warmth and hydration, shared beds, and even drove around the pitch-black neighborhood with our blankets to warm them up before trying to sleep. I heard of people chopping up furniture for firewood and grilling food inside, leading to monoxide poisoning and fires. The first time we left the neighborhood after the storm, we were running low on food and ate at a local Vietnamese place. Everyone inside shared the same exhausted look one has after a fitful nightmare. The place was one of the only ones open after the freeze, so it'll always be an MVP in my book.
@FickYT3 ай бұрын
Snowmaggedon ROFLMAO - tell that to me once you spend some time in Fairbanks, Alaska for a winter......when your vehicle freezes up in a block of ice, the outside temps get closer to -20F or more and the snow is not going anywhere since the plows are not able to keep up with the snow itself......and this is a place that is used to having bad winters haha
@arowhead93 ай бұрын
ooo i got an idea! maybe have 2 cases of water and 1 weeks worth of canned food. so when shit like this goes down you are prepared and dont need to boil water
@CG-Cowgirl3 ай бұрын
@arowhead9 I do those things, because I camp off-grid periodically. But many Texans are poor & live paycheck to paycheck. Stocking up is not a luxury they can afford. Nor is thinking your energy company, with a monopoly mandated by state govt, will not honor their OBLIGATION to provide energy ESPECIALLY at the time it's needed THE MOST!! Think... before you use snark to those who've SUFFERED, & some still not fully recovered, from the AVOIDABLE UNNECESSARY literal INCOMPETENCE of our State government. Grow up, or at least grow a heart! 💪
@arowhead93 ай бұрын
@@CG-Cowgirl reality doesn't care about any of that. you have the supplies to survive or you don't. sorry the world has hazards. survival of the fittest
@Quaking_Aspen3 ай бұрын
@@arowhead9LITTLE BRO DOESN’T HAVE EMPATHY OR EVEN SYMPATHY ‼️🗣️❌‼️
@mariusfacktor35974 ай бұрын
The most infuriating part of this is that during this whole disaster, the Governor was lying through his teeth about what caused it. That's unforgivable.
@curiouser-and-curiouser4 ай бұрын
A politician lied? Well that's unheard of.
@PaulyWally304 ай бұрын
Sadly Texans were too blind to the events that they didn’t vote him out.
@ILovePancakes244 ай бұрын
Texans weak control over their government only emboldened him
@joseleoncordero52434 ай бұрын
And he was in Mexico lol
@marksmess1364 ай бұрын
Ted Cruz took his family to Cancun to sit out the freeze. When confronted he blamed his daughter. Still in office.
@summerjc4 ай бұрын
i remember the house being so quiet and my mom tucking me in with 3 blankets as a 16 year old.. i remember praying my mom was okay driving on the frozen roads to work, and my family lighting candles. texas was really not prepared lol
@Saberking8754 ай бұрын
WTF your mom had to drive to work stil???
@nickthompson20234 ай бұрын
@@Saberking875many of us still were required to work. Amazing country with such amazing workers’ rights
@Saberking8754 ай бұрын
@@nickthompson2023 IK we have the worst workers rights in the western world
@threeminuteshate4 ай бұрын
You really don’t realize how loud your house really is until a power outage and it’s deathly quiet.
@robertoreal11174 ай бұрын
@@nickthompson2023i came here illegally when i saw 8 years old. Now i have DACA but it breaks my heart when i see veterans homeless or elderly people who live so poor. This is so wrong. The government aint doing right to all of the usa citizens. 😢 i always try to give my last money to them. One time this white chick was so high on drugs but had 2 dogs next to her. I felt so bad i just saw people pass by and didnt do nothing. I went inside to cvs bought some covers for the dogs and her another hispanic guy told me "thank you" i told him "i do what i can" honestly now a days people dont care about each other. We need to change.
@DavineBlue512 ай бұрын
I was there. Ercot had the audacity to say that they weren't responsible for over 200 deaths, saying residents should have prepared for snow, which is bull because it just happened. Ercot was given immunity because of the billions of dollars they take by overcharging for electricity. 😮
@kridreklaw4 ай бұрын
On day two of this storm in Dallas I just had to get out of the house. I hopped into the car, mainly to get warm lol and went for a drive. It was like driving through a distopian scene in a movie. I was the only car on the road and I there weren't any people in sight. 7-11 was the only thing open and the guy inside was so happy to see me. He said that not a soul has come in all day. I talked with him for a while, bought a couple of things and went back out into the wasteland of Dallas covered in ice and snow. It was a surreal experience.
@jerrythebanana4 ай бұрын
dang, props to the guys to keep working on such weather
@Ratatidis4 ай бұрын
Dallas felt so surreal those few days !!
@StyleshStorm4 ай бұрын
Day after tomorrow type stuff sounds like.
@mats74924 ай бұрын
thats how life in the winter is in northern europe every year
@frankt59874 ай бұрын
What happened to “Texas strong” had to cry for government assistance real fast 😂
@nightstalker8244 ай бұрын
I'm from SA,TX. I remember being at home with my family, and we were so excited for the snow to come. It never shows here. On day one, we were having so much fun, missing school and work and having fun in the snow. Around day 3, we had enough. We didn't have electricity or running water for like 2 days.
@lilsquirrels44 ай бұрын
Same I'm from south Texas and I've only seen sleet, never real snow, we were so excited, and we didn't even get any
@stdwproductions50904 ай бұрын
same here i was really excited but by day 2 i knew something was wrong
@ReisterJP4 ай бұрын
Lucky everyone in San Antonio is fat all that lard kept them warm.
@jacksonkoeppel25334 ай бұрын
Best 7 days ever for me bc no school, we got snow, and we didn’t lose heat water or electricity
@lilsquirrels44 ай бұрын
@@jacksonkoeppel2533 Man ur lucky we literally froze for four days straight and didn’t even get snow, it hasn’t snowed since 2004 apparently but i wasn’t born for another half decade after that soo
@crestmoon84234 ай бұрын
I remember this horrible week. We fully recovered within in a month. However, the whole no power, 5 blankets wasn’t enough to keep warm was horrible. Even though we lived in a small apartment, for us it wasn’t enough to keep fully warm. Dogs almost passed but made it through. My father almost got hypothermia but we acted quickly so he was fine. We could see our breath inside our home, the ice was making its way through our window and door. It was horrible. At some point we had to chip off the ice with a hammer to go out and charge our electronics through our cars. I will never forgive people in charge who kept lying telling people that the power issue would be solved or be back by midnight. I lived at the time, in a neighborhood considered “low class” and our power was gone for the entirety of the storm. My friend who was a house sitter at the time, was house sitting in the nicer neighborhood and she explained that the power went out for 30 mins and that it never went out again after that. The whole situation was horrible. My heart will always be with the families who lost loved ones during this storm.
@kab97064 ай бұрын
In almost any disaster, service providers will act much quicker and give more priority to higher income areas. It's horrifying whey you realize your life can be in danger because of class inequality.
@stitchedmitch3 ай бұрын
It truly did suck. My family and I live in a middle class neighborhood, but we were still out of power for about a week. We live near an upper class neighborhood and I remember seeing that all the houses there were dark when we went drove to get food. I think it's basically just luck of the draw for if you happen to be connected to a good power grid. I just don't want you to feel bad that you were excluded for that reason.
@ariana-vt2wi3 ай бұрын
that’s heartbreaking! 💔 i live in a lower income area and we only lost power for less than 5 hours at max, so sad you had to go through that
@blueleafy71673 ай бұрын
Five blankets?? It was colder in my house that's for sure, but I just put on a hoodie and I was fine...
@dezmounts9782 ай бұрын
I live in Monterrey, Mexico, a city 2 hours away from the border. This city is known for having temperatures of about 110 degrees Fahrenheit in the summer, so I’ll never forget the 14th of February of 2021, it snowed like I have never seen in my life
@Idkmate_4 ай бұрын
I remember this happening. I was in my kitchen when I heard on the news that there was a risk of a blackout. Power went out that same night. We went over 62 hours without power. I'll never forget sitting outside in my car eating olives and cold black eyed peas.
@Unkown66782 ай бұрын
I’ve went a week without power in WA couple years back only places That don’t experience it that often are states that actually deal with bad winter storms n what bit
@glizzygladiator80552 ай бұрын
I was out of power for 5 days during Hurricane Irma in Florida. It was hot and difficult, but humans were/are made to persevere. And we always do.
@glizzygladiator80552 ай бұрын
@@FirstLast-hs4gw Jesus christ dude your lack of self awareness is showing off big time. All I’m hearing is you’ve used basic information and practical knowledge as a way to inflate your ego so you can justify looking down on people and make light of a serious situation that they had to deal with while also blatantly disregarding their state’s lack of infrastructure and general readiness for such a wild event. This might come as a surprise to you but no one else is you so they won’t ‘disregard useless emotions’. You sound like an edgy child. Rarely will people even begin to consider your opinions when you sound like a stuck up know-it-all, again, something teenagers and children do not understand.
@PoopenSchloopen2 ай бұрын
I was cooking food by the barrel outside in the backyard for a couple days/nights and drinking the heck out of my dads booze 😂 my lips had never been so dry and cracked
@prepperpatti-rc3nl2 ай бұрын
Cold black eyed peas with olives as a side or garnish now that's Texas surviving and initiative. Bet those peas were the best tasting blackeyed peas you ever eaten. Glad you persevered. IT was really something wasn't it?
@fallonfish1904 ай бұрын
As someone living in northeast USA, I remember hearing about this when it happened, and there's still a lot in this video I HAVEN'T heard. Hearing about the way people were treated is heartbreaking, especially that man trying to check on his family and first respondents doing essentially nothing for HOURS. Price hiking during this event was awful too. The cold is no joke. Even if you think you'll never see snow, it's NEVER a bad idea to learn about cold and snowstorm preparedness.
@redline19164 ай бұрын
What's even worse is people are making fun of this in the comments section, I thought you americans were "united."
@BewareTheLilyOfTheValley4 ай бұрын
@@redline1916 I am sorry, do you not know what kind of election we have going on this year?! 😂 United? Oh, that is cute, lol!
@teganvought12484 ай бұрын
I lived through this and there was stuff in here I hadn't heard about!
@magicvampirelver13214 ай бұрын
@@redline1916Sadly it isn't like that anymore, only half of us are I'd say smh.
@MrBattlecharge4 ай бұрын
Part of the problem with having every service be private and little/no safety nets is that when a disaster occurs, the company still puts profits first. Having a high demand for heat and being the sole supplier to 90% of the State gave them a unique monopoly, and they used it to their advantage. And being immune to lawsuits meant there was nothing to put pressure on them to not do what they did. And I bet moving forward there still won't be any measures put in place to limit or restrict the amount they can charge or change their prices in a short period of time, so if it should happen again they will price hike again, no doubt about it.
@Endy_yooutube694203 ай бұрын
0:11 As a Texan myself (I live in Georgetown/Leander area) it does get extremely hot with highs in the 100s in the summer, but people don’t talk about how cold it gets. It gets down to the teens every winter.
@PlasticStrws3 ай бұрын
You don't know heat buddy. Dallas gets hotter. Period.
@Endy_yooutube694203 ай бұрын
@@PlasticStrws yeah i know
@Eli-ni8us2 ай бұрын
@@PlasticStrws🤣🤣Austin area is way hotter
@SomebodyThatYouJustSeen2 ай бұрын
Born and raised in leander here. I was in austin at the time
@SomebodyThatYouJustSeen2 ай бұрын
@@Eli-ni8usonly because its a city. The vehicles make it hotter.
@riefcamАй бұрын
It's so surreal to see something I had lived through in a disaster video. I still remember cuddling up with my parents and brother. We were lucky to have gas stove and fireplace that was able to keep us warm and boil snow. My parents kept us distracted so i didn't realize just how bad it was since they didn't want us to panic.
@Veldrusara4 ай бұрын
I live in Houston. The power was out in my area for about five days. It was 13 degrees. I've never been more glad that I collect comfy blankets. I'm disabled so I work from home around 70% bedbound and have to take medication to not sleep for days at a time. When I heard how cold it was going to get, I piled all of my blankets on me and while the power was still on I filled a gallon jug with hot tap water and put it under the blankets with me along with a bunch of non-perishable food. It was so warm and cozy that I had to lift the blankets to let some cold air in occasionally. Just like camping with lots of sleeping. I wondered if most people just didn't own a lot of blankets. Weirdest thing I learned was that some computer mice break easily in the cold. I had to buy a new one because somehow it permanently broke my mouse wheel. At least the food in the fridge was okay after all that time!
@jasperzatch6104 ай бұрын
I was just wondering if I'd have managed okay due to my similar set up, I didn't even notice covid until a couple of months into it.
@Veldrusara4 ай бұрын
@@jasperzatch610 I felt really fortunate that I didn't have much preparing to do for it, because I'm one of those 'be prepared for anything' types and just don't have the money to do so most of the time. I had some kind of mean humor around Covid time because my friends always tell me how nice it must be to be able to do for the most part whatever I want at home all the time, and I've told them yeah it seems nice until you realize how very not-quaint it is not being able to go anywhere when you want to. They've always told me yeah yeah no problem, I'd deal with it for the freedom. Covid rolls around and suddenly they're wailing ermegerd being stuck in your house all day is sooo lame! How can anyone staaand it? Yeah, I thought so... It's weird to hurt being envied for things you don't want for yourself. In any case, I hope you don't have to ever worry about dealing with such disasters!
@erikagigstad96044 ай бұрын
My thermostat said 43 degrees….
@mrtaxi2044 ай бұрын
CANCUN CRUZ SAID F TEXAS I'M OUTTA HERE
@primoz94134 ай бұрын
Same, my family has those heavy mexican blankets so we tried to use them as double insulation on the walls, charged powerbanks when power came back for like 30mins, and ran off ramen boiled off a small pot from a generator and hot plate. It sucked so the best thing we did was 500pc puzzles and to pass hunger just sleep through it but definitely had it better than others who were truly struggling, now I buy all sorts of tools to be prepared.
@ZmaniacSuperRealOmg4 ай бұрын
During this total frozen outage, me and my father would heat up in the car, watch movies and eat snacks, and honestly it’s one of my favorite moments I spent with him in an outage.
@terripeterson45333 ай бұрын
EXPERIENCING HARD TIMES W/ LOVED ONES CAN B BLESSINGS IN DISGUISE!
@Saucygremlinsks3 ай бұрын
That’s cool that you found something positive in such a dire circumstance.. we need more that in the world 😊 hope you’re doing well fam ❤✊🏿
@ZmaniacSuperRealOmg3 ай бұрын
@@terripeterson4533 your very right!
@JB-ot7sd3 ай бұрын
I was just writing about my positive experience. Yeah, it was cold. But man I loved being by our fire with my kids and wife. And we played games. I got to introduce my kids to the ancient art of POGS.
@glep4 ай бұрын
i've been told stories of people finding their grandparents frozen solid in their chairs, that shit is heartbreaking
@SharmV4 ай бұрын
Chilling story
@taotaoliu22294 ай бұрын
@@SharmV Uh, no pun intended, right?
@redline19164 ай бұрын
the fact that people actually made fun of that shit is even worse
@Lana-pf5ce4 ай бұрын
At least freezing to death is one of the more peaceful ways to go.. right?
@awol3334 ай бұрын
@@redline1916Fr it leaves me frozen in my seat
@brookebenton81922 ай бұрын
We had no power or water for 7 days. Thank God we have a fire place!! We had to break off branches from trees in our apartment parking lot for firewood. We used our bedroom closet as a "fridge" for our food and cooked outside on a little grill. We kept frozen stuff on the patio. Fortunately we had just gone grocery shopping a few days before and were stocked up on food and bottled water. At night we put the fire out but kept some embers burning, and we had to huddle together in the living room in our sleeping bags to stay warm. Covering the windows with blankets helped too. It was still only 40-45 degrees in there, even with the fireplace! It was scary! Luckily I grew up in the Midwest and knew what to do. A lot of people weren't so fortunate though. These apartments are so drafty and aren't built for that kind of freeze. So many people weren't prepared and had never even experienced that type of weather.
@S0ULJA0064 ай бұрын
Middle class here not rich. Living in Dallas Texas, and we were fortunate to get through the disaster with no issue at all. My family always stock up groceries every week, we always let the water run during freezing temperatures, and I didn’t knew how bad it was when seeing this video, because I still went to work everyday (yes I drove on the ice, but very slowly). Most coworker said they had no power at their home, so again. We were fortunate compare to many who suffered.
@S0ULJA0064 ай бұрын
Oh, we always had power and didn’t mind paying what the bill was.
@mrtaxi2044 ай бұрын
Remember this November CANCUN CRUZ SAID F TEXAS I'M OUTTA HERE
@Rostmeo14 ай бұрын
Upper/middle class here our whole neighborhood (Preston hollow) and surrounding ones had power where were you at?
@Jesse.G12464 ай бұрын
my grandma somehow had power in her apartment, here in the rgv
@swellybelly59704 ай бұрын
i live north of dallas and i was in a similar situation
@mattjm21124 ай бұрын
I lived in Southeast Texas when this happened, And boy was it crazy. We literally were stuck at houses for days. Most of the roads were frozen, nobody could get out, and we were completely running out of food supplies. And what’s worse, my backyard roof collapsed. So much ice and snow was building up on it, until the point where it couldn’t hold on, and then it just collapsed. I tell you from experience, it was the worst thing that ever happened to us.
@DarlingsOrgansАй бұрын
I remember people still needing to go to work. I still needed to go to school. It was so scary
@MrJmcrash4 ай бұрын
I lived through this for over a week with no heat and no water. It was so cold in my house that all of the plants that I moved inside froze and died. I’m convinced the only thing that kept me alive was the three pups who laid under the covers with me to keep me and them warm. I lost all of the food in my refrigerator and two freezers. There was no reimbursement for food spoilage or frozen pipes. Our governor who’s in the pockets of ERCOT did nothing and our senator Cabo Cruz fled the state with his family to Cabo. What a POS.
@OtsegoGhost4 ай бұрын
The governor appoints ERCOT. It's not a company
@user-ih4mw7fz9q4 ай бұрын
Cancun
@joebyron94 ай бұрын
@@cyber8000😂😂 fr some people are so out of touch
@condyshares4 ай бұрын
Reimbursement? 😂
@kasenschwab59854 ай бұрын
@cyber8000 Did u live in this?
@wolfwings16932 ай бұрын
It’s insane that I live in Texas, remember this storm, and still didn’t know it was this bad. I’m so lucky to have gotten the mild end of this situation
@thedude73193 ай бұрын
This channel really shows we are really peak incompetitance problem, the lack of responsibility feeling companies have throughout the decades. Is jaw dropping
@Maltlicky502 ай бұрын
No regulations because the politicians in charge are paid off. It's that simple.
@amberb.59644 ай бұрын
What people don’t see is all of our livestock that died. Our roads couldn’t handle the cold and broke up and apart all over my area outside of Austin. I wrecked my truck but I had 30 horses without water and nothing would’ve stopped me from bringing it to them. We got lucky, others were not.
I also live on a farm in Canada, and we regularly get power outages during the winter, (once, 6 in 5 weeks and one was 4 days long), -20 weather, and up to 2 feet of snow. When we have no power, we have no water from the well. I have to bucket water on a rope out of the well and trudge 320 feet to the barns to get the animals water. For heat we have a wood stove, so are okay for heat and cooking, and dollar store battery lights, but it is truly a pain to have no power and no water. I felt so bad for the Texas people and couldn't imagine having herds of cattle and livestock to feed and water.
@Praisethesunson3 ай бұрын
@@ontheridge2019 A farm in Canada has the same reliable access to electricity as one of the largest cities in Texas.
@serenasorensen67343 ай бұрын
There was a lot of talk about that among the farming community up here. They knew how hard hit you all were going to be.
@thatonechick13184 ай бұрын
I live in Atlanta, GA and was visiting my boyfriend in Texas when this happened. We didn't have heat or power for four days and my flights kept getting canceled. Luckily, his roommate has a backup battery that used solar power to recharge so we could have our phones charged and a small heating plate to warm up canned soup. We wore lots of layers of clothes and drank alcohol just to stay warm. They didn't have a fireplace or portable heaters. It was quite the experience but we were a bit better prepared than most people. They had plenty of canned food, blankets, and clothes to bundle up. My heart goes out to the people that lost loved ones.
@SoManyRandomRamblings4 ай бұрын
Just an FYI....alcohol only provides the illusion of warming up. It actually drops your core temperature and that's why you think you are warmer, because it is about the difference in temp that affects our perception.
@XX-xv6xe4 ай бұрын
Alcohol doesn’t help lol
@Balrog-tf3bg4 ай бұрын
Most Texan response I’ve heard 😂 lucky the storm didn’t last couple more days
@Sl1m3yslattАй бұрын
He was probably cheating
@nana8135Ай бұрын
❤❤
@oldschoolman9878Ай бұрын
I was a student at St. Edwards University in Austin Texas when this storm hit. Thankfully we didn't lose power, but there was no running water anywhere on campus for 5 plus days. I wasn't able to was any of my clothes for that entire week. I wasn't worried about running out of food, because I was more concerned about having a steady supply of drinking water. Me and many other of my other fellow students had to melt snow and ice just to flush our toilets. In fact two of my professors requisitioned some of the water from the pool at their apartment complex to flush their toilets. In short, what was originally one or two rare snow days in Texas turned into a blizzard of apocalyptic proportions, with many stories of survival and acts of kindness both big and small from good Samaritans from across the state. Especially from the grocery stores that allowed their customers to take as much perishable food as they could when the power grid quit, just so there wouldn't be as much food spoiling that could be used to feed people that needed it at that moment more than ever. In the coming years, there will be books published about this on week in Texas, and will highlight the wide range of diverse and shared experiences battling sub-freezing temperature in February 2021 in the Lone Star State.
@Yanrogue4 ай бұрын
Our town had a few deaths because of this. One guy brought his grill inside to warm part of the house at night and the whole family suffocated. Another family had their home burn down due to using grilling coals in his fireplace that wasn't rated for it. Then a hotel in town (killeen) burned down and the pipes were frozen so they had to let it burn. At one point Lowes started to sell all their lumbar for people to burn, they had a line out the door. It was pandemonium, our house went over a week with no running water as the main pipe feeding the subdivision had burst.
@tomahawk72594 ай бұрын
Bringing a grill inside to heat the house is some big brained thinking
@SharmV4 ай бұрын
Standard in America when 1/4th of your people are mentally not all there or as you call “slow”
@davidmcgill10004 ай бұрын
@@tomahawk7259 but not big enough to remember that carbon monoxide exists.
@ChutneyGames4 ай бұрын
Grill in the house is the most Texas way you can die to be fair
@ewe3924 ай бұрын
That is so funny
@LuisHernandez-tb6we4 ай бұрын
I was in the thick of it, it started on a Sunday & stayed like that for a week & it was brutal! -3 to 0 for several days straight. My parents 68 years old say they have never seen such weather here 20* and we are dying here and only at night usually. The roads turned to ice skating rings. My son I started offering free rides, gas & propane service for people. Later we started just doing medical, elderly & essential needs first. It was rewarding to help many elderly people get to loved ones & see the relief in their face. We helped who we could along the way pulling ambulances, power utility trucks up hills & stuck people trying to get basic supplies. We slept only for 4-5 hours a day, ate what we could at gas stations and kept at it my son ran the navigation and decided who was priority (he hardly turned down anyone). We ended up getting a phone call about a hospital not having enough food because delivery trucks couldn’t make the drive, so we took our clean stock trailer & ventured to make the normal 1-1/2hr trip that ended up being about 5hrs one way. Then ended making another run to another one the next day. Many others that were brave enough to drive also helped & it was nice to see our fellow Texans jump into action without being asked to! People prep now when the forecast calls for cold weather.
@frbird514 ай бұрын
I spent 2 days preparing before the storm came. I cleaned the carb on my generator and made sure it was in working order, got 20 gallons of gasoline for it, picked up 3 propane tanks and a propane heater, winterized my house as well as I could manage, stocked up on groceries, filled up a 40gal plastic trash can with water, etc. We never lost power at my house thankfully, I had one pipe freeze and burst under the house but managed to catch it pretty early and cap it off. It was actually a fun time for me just staying home and playing in the snow for a week. It's tragic how many lives were lost and the suffering that a lot of people went through but I'll always have good memories of this storm personally.
@KayButtonJay4 ай бұрын
You’re not like the other girls
@LPOband4 ай бұрын
I was lucky enough to never have lost power, have a pipe burst. I had to drive but never went over 20 mph and stayed very clear from anyone on the road. I saw trucks slipping and sliding going 50 not giving a fuck about other drivers, just wanting to do some snow drifting. Crazy how everyone experiences disasters in such different perspectives.
@LvL1henchman4 ай бұрын
I only lost power for 5 hours and I was already stock with food so I was fine.
@MenteMaestra914 ай бұрын
Good for you!
@zoenoelle88444 ай бұрын
this is a lot like my experience -- my sister and i had so much fun out with our dogs in the snow, but i know not everyone felt the same way. i'm lucky that we saw this as more of a fun time than a terrifying one
@carelixacosta56014 күн бұрын
I'm from Connecticut, but have lived in Texas for 13 years. Thankfully me and my family were prepared for this winter storm, since we had experienced so many in Connecticut. My heart goes out to everyone that died or lived in misery during this horrible week! ❤
@asukashinohara56044 ай бұрын
As someone from europe: This was absolute nuts. Seeing this whole scenery fold out LIVE on the other side of the world, realizing that these people basically have no way to help themselves, has changed me in some way im not able to explain. I cannot remember if it was Texas or another state, but there was a story of a couple of tourists only surviving because a family let them in.
@thetapheonix4 ай бұрын
I’m from TX and lived through this. What was nuts was I went out and drove around to warm up in my car and no one was out. It’s like every living soul disappeared. I luckily had a fireplace in my home and I chopped wood and slept with my dogs to stay warm and not freeze to death. I was without power for over a week in -10C. I grilled outdoors, made cowboy coffee, and melted snow for water. Crazy times but I survived.
@TheShockwaveDragon4 ай бұрын
I know how you feel; I felt the same way when we heard about the thousands of people that died last year because of that heatwave and the wildfires it caused. We work in 110° F (44°-46° C) temperatures even still at 3:00 AM at night at the production facility I work at here in San Antonio; it rocked the shit out of me that so many people were dying from something we're used to.
@Recheron4 ай бұрын
@@thetapheonix I lived in the Dallas area and in my town you couldn't even see where the roads were, it was like gone.
@LyricsQuest11 күн бұрын
@@Recheron I was in Houston, and there was an inch of snow on the roads, and you could most definitely see where the roads were, but that didn't stop the entire city from refusing to drive on it, and grocery stores closed down and the gas stations were out of gas (Trucks weren't making deliveries). As someone who came from a snowy region, it seemed funny.
@jamesforschler34174 ай бұрын
I remember this time very vividly. I was a GM at a local restaurant and I remember looking at the weather forecast on a daily basis. I was shocked to see how cold it was supposed to get. I have lived here almost 40 years and we have never seen temperatures get to single digits, much less 0 with wind chill going below 0 degrees. It was a Valentine's Day I will never forget. The store shut down early thank the Lord, all though higher ups wanted us to stay open as late as possible as usual. The next few days were heart wrenching. The power was out at home, My sibling and I were contemplating on staying home or driving to our parents house close by. We were shocked and scared. We aren't used to dealing with deathly cold temperatures. We had to sleep in our cars because the generators were frozen and wouldn't start. Now granted we knew about carbon monoxide poisoning and our cars were parked outside in the country, not in a garage, but for people with small children, who are scared for their lives might not think clearly when the choices are: freezing to death, drive around treacherous roads risking your life, or keep the car on for heat at your home. Most people don't think to prepare for a catastrophe. It's all in the moment. No one expected to be without power for 4-7 days. Hell, I had to go back to work 3 days later. The 2nd day one of my family members had a mental breakdown and said they'd rather freeze to death in their house stunned me. Thankfully no one passed away in our family, but what a lot of northerners need to know, is we do not have adequate resources here for winter weather. We don't have snow plows, and the de-icing trucks we have to get from elsewhere. The worst is like this fine KZbin video illustrates the state officials, energy companies, and even emergency response did not listen to the OBVIOUS WARNINGS. The Weather Channel was sending warnings, actual warnings a week in advance, and nothing was done. I'm not sure if they could have stopped the power outages, but they could have saved more lives instead of leaving us out to dry. Anyway ranting over hope everyone stays safe and Happy Independence Day!
@Mr___f4 ай бұрын
Did you move out of Texas in 2011? This was an almost identical storm to the 2011 one.
@timothyclark8114 ай бұрын
Dont forget that our senator went to Cancun with his family during all this.
@TheRob812824 ай бұрын
If you voted republican then you voted for the conditions you live in . 🤷 That's what y'all tell us about the crime in our blue cities. Maybe prepare yourself better.
@olliewithab19264 ай бұрын
@@TheRob81282 dude what? that is not related jesus
@jamesforschler34174 ай бұрын
@@Mr___f I've lived here my entire life since 1986
@jcfc81974 ай бұрын
I lived in Austin TX when this happened. My apartment didn’t have a fireplace so I survived by using my backpacking gear and my snow skiing clothes. Thank the good Lord, I had a couple of goose down sleeping bags, and backpacking fuel/stove and backpacking food. Feel bad for my neighbors who didn’t have winter gear like I had. I feel for those who died during the winter storm of 2021.
@Sun33daze4 ай бұрын
It was 28 degrees continuously indoors during that time but I remember going out during the day into the empty streets of Lamar and Congress. Absolutely surreal. Then walking along the river park and coming across a body under a small makeshift tarp. Haunting to say the least. The homeless population definitely had it hard during those times.
@jcfc81974 ай бұрын
@@Sun33daze yes the homeless had the worst of it during those days of below freezing. They have the worst of it when the temperatures are consistently above 100 everyday. They never can catch a break.
@nana8135Ай бұрын
❤
@Mielhttps25 күн бұрын
I live in a suburban city of Dallas, we lost complete power. We huddled up together for warmth, cooked sausages over candles, and charged phones in our car. Our grandmother was transported to hospital which thankfully had power. Our neighborhood was one of the last to get power back, but everything was still so cold. I don’t ever remember being that cold in my life, the memories were fun as we bonded but I don’t think I’d ever want to get stuck in a freeze like that again.
@beegee19604 ай бұрын
I woke up one morning during this storm with water pouring into my master closet through the overhead light fixture Fortunately, I did not lose much in my apartment. But other apartments in my complex were totally destroyed and had to be gutted. It took a year for all the repairs. I was 81 at the time and I really don’t know what I would have done if I had not had family nearby. I called my son and he told me to pack a bag; he was on the way. I spent the next ten days with him and his wife. Although we had rolling blackouts, they had plenty of food that did not have to be cooked or could be heated quickly. And they had a gas fireplace that we were able to use. They were both able to work from home so they were able to spend a lot of time at home. I was so lucky to have them.
@emmanguyen91384 ай бұрын
One my cousins died from this, so his family member had to live through this with his dead body in the house. I was lucky that I had a bunch of warm clothes and stuff but my heart broke when I heard the news. I hope any families or friends who lost someone close are doing well right now.
@MarquishaFreeman60433 ай бұрын
Wow
@0bs3ss3d_15U3 ай бұрын
Oh my gosh I am so sorry, that’s awful
@lify32992 ай бұрын
I wouldn’t wish this on my worst enemy holy shit
@nana8135Ай бұрын
❤❤
@RileyHarris-cp6sx4 ай бұрын
I survived this disaster with my family, We burned newspapers, old books, and any safe material we could find to keep warm, we lost power, for over 2 days, luckily we were able to find warmth and shelter. I was with my parents and my sister, we had plenty of food from our garden and from previous groceries. I thank God everyday for keeping us all alive in the worst of times Edit: thanks for the likes, I appreciate it But, I have more information to add to my story, I remember looking at the outside temperature my phone and it read -2° F which is almost unheard of for Texas, some broadcasts that still worked reported temperatures as low as -28° F so, we were very fortunate
@ziggystarlord4 ай бұрын
Close to 10 for me if I remember right... negative outside in a sub of ftw. With a shit power structure that my boyfriend 2 streets away got power in 3 days. Welp I moved north east of ftw ... I'm expecting more hell
@feoltmanns76244 ай бұрын
My son lives in Dallas and for whatever reason, he had power and invited friends to stay with them until they got their power back.
@willtaylor67934 ай бұрын
I hate to say it but our state government's denial of serious climate issues was a factor in this. Our summers are going to be getting hotter and our winters are going to be getting colder because of the impact our pollution has on our climate, and even if the current state government for some reason doesn't "believe" in it the least they can do is prepare us for disasters that might be due to repeat themselves sooner than you think.
@mrtaxi2044 ай бұрын
Make sure you rightly reward CANCUN CRUZ for his DELIBERATE ABANDONMENT OF HIS PEOPLE
@mrtaxi2044 ай бұрын
@@ziggystarlordCANCUN CRUZ SAID F*CK YOU AND TEXAS; I'M OUTTA HERE
@Reptileandfelinelover2 ай бұрын
Dude it was brutal. I was in 5th grade when it happened and I’m in high school now. Me and my little sister were freezing. We couldn’t sleep in our beds cause our rooms were to cold. We had to sleep in sleeping bags in the living room. We had to fill a agh tub with water before the freeze cause we never knew if the faucet would work. My mom distracted us from fear with the board game trouble. And without a shower in days I felt disgusting. I honestly thought I’d die from hypothermia. Nearby organizations passed out hot spaghetti to warm our bodies which worked. I was relieved when the freeze was finally over. I just hope that I’ll never have to go through that again
@maximillianlylat15894 ай бұрын
My personal experience with this freeze: a roommate just moved in and got settled, they were a coworker of fiancee and I, other roommate's dog gave birth to puppies. First day of the freeze we try going to work, keyword try. 2nd day water no longer works. For the rest of the week we are trapped in this house unable to work with the only silver lining being we still have power. I scooped up ice from outside and boiled it just to have water. Me and the new roomie get closer as friends and i adopted one of the puppies. The puppy is now three years old. It was one hell of a greuling week but our job paid us in compensation.
@mrtaxi2044 ай бұрын
CANCUN CRUZ SAID F-TEXAS I'M OUT
@mrtaxi2044 ай бұрын
CANCUN CRUZ SAID F*CK TEXAS I'M OUTTA HERE
@randymillhouse7914 ай бұрын
@@mrtaxi204 YES! CANCUN CRUZ!
@Cramblit3 ай бұрын
As someone who has always lived in the northern part of USA, where winter can see tons of snow, and super cold weather. I forget just how much an entire city can turn an every day situation we deal with everyday in the north, and is a no biggie occurrence, into a catastrophic nightmare and a literal life threatening situation for its residents for another area of the USA that isn't used to it. It's just crazy.
@aewtx3 ай бұрын
Let's see how well your state fares when the entire state, being the second biggest state in the nation and who knows how many times bigger than your state, is frozen over and you have no electricity, because the extra reserves of gas froze too. It was bad and an epic scale, not because the people were stupid. When it's as overwhelmingly bad, there's only so much you can do. Oh, and Texas gets snow. We're used to it. Just not the entire state, even down to the coast. Educate yourself. But when you've got a state as big as Texas freezing over in its entirety, it doesn't matter how used to it you are, it's going to stretch the resources to the limits.
@Cramblit3 ай бұрын
@@aewtx we'd fair just fine... The entire country of Canada does just fine too, every year, and that's 30x bigger than texas lol. Your argument makes no sense.. And you took offense to something really stupid as well..
@aewtx3 ай бұрын
@@Cramblit You basically called us all stupid. Yeah, let me call you stupid and see how offended you get. Look at you, you're up in arms already too. :rolls eyes: And that is Canada. Not quite the same. You're not even at the same level as Canada.
@wbae13403 ай бұрын
@@CramblitYour original comment was really dumb. Just so you know, you haven’t felt cold - where you live isn’t “cold” - there is always a place that’s much colder. Also you live in your colder northern area with thinks like heaters, etc - the problem wasn’t just the temperature number, it was how it shut down electricity throughout the area. Get help
@charonstyxferryman3 ай бұрын
@@wbae1340 Weird that you're *still* offended that he just told about climates and preparedness. Regards, a North European (from a Nordic country).
@GabrielRodriguez-l9w4 ай бұрын
I was a delivery driver in this time period. I still remember the Thursday I had to drive out into some very curvy roads to make it to Hunt, TX. It went from a normal cold day, to water droplets icing the moment it settled. It was approx 35min from the office, and by the time I arrived at my destination everything was covered in a white filter. It was scary enough passing by this one icy bridge, but to have to pass by it 3 more times was something I'm lowkey traumatized AND amazed with myself with how I handled it. Luckily my co worker and I were always on the same page, so we tried lightening the mood by telling funny stories. With how top heavy the truck was I'm sure he was also scared that it could've gone bad any moment. The funny part is that because I did an excellent job still doing my work, I was sure I would've gotten a raise after that, but no. Boss man said that if I wanted a .25 cent raise I had to socialize more with the other employees. That was the moment I realized that you should really put yourself above work sometimes
@nude_cat_ellie74174 ай бұрын
And your safety. I don’t care what job you have, it’s not worth compromising your safety.
@carelixacosta56014 күн бұрын
I was working at Dominos and they made us drive in this storm! Only two drivers and the GM showed up to work.
@connies.peters2874Ай бұрын
I remember this blackout!! It was terrible!! We were freezing but thank God we survived!! We haven't experienced this type of deep freeze for decades
@quinnhen23254 ай бұрын
7 days no electricity. My 80 year old mom did not do well. She started having seizures she was so cold and upset. I had prepped as much as possible and had dripping water and was able to cook on my propane stove top. Charged my phone in the car. (We couldn’t leave because we were iced in. The car was in my carport and I was able to carefully get to it. I threw cat litter out on the ice.)Firemen were finally able to get to my door (on foot breaking the snow and ice)on the 5th day with wool army blankets, bottled water and snacks. Those blankets were amazing! My house was 4 miles from our tiny town. I moved us to way upstate New York and it’s awesome up here. It may get unbelievably cold, but they’re prepared for it. The electric company actually lets you know ahead of time about storms and messages to keep you updated. That would NEVER happen in Texas under idiot Abbott. They also have utility discounts and programs for the elderly and disabled up here. Abbott canceled the discount program in Texas years ago. 😡
@tim31724 ай бұрын
I'm glad to hear that you moved somewhere decent.
@Praisethesunson3 ай бұрын
Why are you blaming abbot instead of the private actors that own Texas electricity?
@diane5593Ай бұрын
I would have moved to California, Arizona etc.!!
@slowbro13374 ай бұрын
I was camping outdoors during the freeze. However, I was uniquely prepared for such events as deep winter camping at such below temperature is a hobby of mine, and I had the correct gear giving me that ability. At the peak of it, my logs read it hitting -9°F. The kid from Honduras who died was from my area and lived only minutes away. I still feel so bad for him and the others who lost their life and wish I would have been able to help everyone. I was the only person with running water as well on my road due to my preparations after everyones pipes burst, so we gave some of it out. I also did what I could to help others as much as I could to stop flooding once water pressure came back causing their pipes to burst(I used a t-bar to shut my water off once pressure dropped to prevent mine from bursting when pressure was reintroduced to my possibly frozen pipes). Ercot and Abbots' deregulations to the grid are heavily to blame for a lot of the suffering. I will never forgive them or the rest of Texas leadership. They still haven't prepared for future events as power has gone down due to heat as well. The grid repair cost was also put on consumers as well after Abbot said it wouldn't be. Wouldn't be surprised if he took a legal lobyist bribe after making that statement. My power bill before the ice storm was usually 170$ month. Power every month since then has been 380$ and looks to be going up again.. Rip to all those who suffered and mercy to those they left behind
@Praisethesunson3 ай бұрын
Texas is a barbaric place.
@Datsalilweird0-04 ай бұрын
As a Texan this was very unusual to see snow and frozen roads. Luckily me and my family survived that disaster, rest in peace for those who didn’t.
@Digimonisbetterthanpokemon4 ай бұрын
Peace* but thank you for the laugh
@Datsalilweird0-04 ай бұрын
@@Digimonisbetterthanpokemonoops my brain cell messed up 💀😔😭
@aliasno.4andover644Ай бұрын
Here in Odessa, TX, I was living at my Grandparents old house with no ventilation. It was so cold one night that multiple layers of covers and blankets couldn't shield the freeze. I didn't think I was going to make it. It was mothing short of a miracle when I woke up the next morning.
@tristanbowles72584 ай бұрын
I got hit pretty hard by this storm too. To our benefit, we were friends with a neighbor who had a fire place, so we went over there during the days to shelter around the fire as much as possible. We essentially lost all water and power, we would get 10 seconds of power every 2 hours. Couldn’t even microwave soup. So we lived off grill heated (grill was outside) soup and pancakes. Eventually they ran out of logs, and we were stuck back on our own. However, we learned that one of my schoolmates family house still had full power and water. We suspect because they were in the same grid as a fire station. They hosted us and a couple other families for a couple days, letting us have a warm place to be, hot food, and hot shower. My dad and I kept going back to our house periodically between all this to keep pipes from bursting and see if it was livable. I think the lowest the house got to was about 39 degrees. I remember waking up feeling like my bed was frozen. Luckily, after it all, we just had a few frozen pipes and boiled water for a few days. I also just so happened to have a heavy duty winter jacket because I was about to go to New York, so I was well prepared at least. It became a “grit and bear it” situation, but we got through relatively well comparatively. I would also like to shoutout that an owner to a massive furniture store was able to keep the building powered with back up generators and opened the building and all the furniture to whoever needed it during the storm. I know it was a great place of respite for a large sum of people.
@joeydestructo4 ай бұрын
Yeah that was a rough time. It started out so beautiful too, the first snowfall was magical and I finally understood why people love it so much. But it soon turned bleak after we lost power. Strangely, some places, like our apartments, were without power for days (aside from a precious few minutes every few hours), whereas other homes in our city never lost power. Without power we were unable to cook, so we either had to eat things that required no cooking, or risk going out on the roads to pick up food from a restaurant that still had power. We tried making a fire in our fireplace to keep warm, but the effect was limited. Our insulation was just too poor and the fire was not hot enough. The apartment got down to at least the 50s so we just tried to bundle up with blankets as much as possible to sleep. Then one morning we woke up to a burst pipe, so after cleaning that up we were without water for a number of days, until maintenance could come and fix it. Until then we had to flush our toilets with buckets of pool water. Fortunately, there was little damage to our apartment, just a couple of sections of drywall that needed replacing. All in all we got off relatively easy, but we found out just how underprepared we were. We've since stocked up on firestarter logs for our fireplace, and purchased a propane camp stove for cooking and heating water (in a ventilated area of course). We also take drip warnings during freezing temps much more seriously now - going from slow drips to thin streams, to make sure a pipe won't freeze again. I'm sure there's more that we could do, but even just those things would have helped a ton during that storm. I really hope Ercot is ready for the next one, but I have my doubts.
@Praisethesunson3 ай бұрын
It is 2024 and Ercot has installed weathering on exactly one power plant. No prizes for guessing if that power is for rich people or poor people.
@possiblyamon4 ай бұрын
Currently watching this during a blackout that’s been going on for a few days now after the hurricane that hit, my connection is cutting in and out as of right now but i was able to download this video to watch using youtube premium and this just feels so crazy to watch considering my situation. I remember when the freeze happened back in 2021 and to think we weren’t prepared for something like this again is crazy to me.
@CrystaIGem4 ай бұрын
Hope you get power asap. Many people still don’t and I’m one of the lucky ones to have my power back on at 9pm on Monday (the day Beryl hit my area)
@nayeyi10124 ай бұрын
its so angering to live through this. i really hope you get power soon. praying for you and your family
@PlanetOps_Rng4 ай бұрын
Hope You're Doing Okay, I was In The Black Out Too, But Our Power Is Back, Hopefully None Of You Got Hurt.❤
@Praisethesunson3 ай бұрын
The mistake you are Making is thinking preparing is a "we" problem. Texas individualism means looking after you and yours. Any group larger than that acting in the common good has to be a church. Otherwise it's communism and Texas banned communism last century.
@JNC_173 ай бұрын
Same my Power was out for 6 days because of beryl
@thebaddawg71672 ай бұрын
i live in way down in south texas, and i’m so grateful i didn’t have to go through anything as horrific as this. we lost power short of a week, but my father used backup generators he stored for some electricity + heat. i remember my whole family bundling in my family’s room watching napoleon dynamite over and over. i remember freezing showers. i remember us constantly playing board games.. i remember the shock of frost in a region known for its hot humidity, at least thankful for not getting snow. for i remember my father banning opening the fridge unless absolutely necessary. i remember my family arguing over who got to charge their phone next in my dad’s truck. i remember all my mother’s plants being pushed indoors and only a few making it. i remember no school. surprisingly, my worst memory is that my abuela’s mango tree died. forever grateful my family didn’t go through anything horrible, and my heart goes out to those who were forced to. 💕
@LegendOfBoberto4 ай бұрын
The weather during this storm was NOT unprecedented. They have gotten prolonged below freezing temperatures in the past. So much of the disaster is due to horrifically inadequate weatherization of power generation, water mains, and building plumbing. Not to mention the completely isolated texas grid with the inability to import power. If this cold freeze happened anywhere else in the US, the worst that would have happened is roads being shut down.
@grmpEqweer4 ай бұрын
This. And yeah, we seem to have one of these severe winter storms about every 10 years.
@ItsJustLisa4 ай бұрын
Let’s not forget that the state of Texas is run by and represented by a bunch of a-holes who are more concerned with calling anyone who raises the alarm about climate change and the need for paying attention to potential disasters like this “libtards” and “snowflakes” than actually governing for the safety and betterment of the people. Let’s lay this right where it belongs: at the wheels of Gov. Abbott and all the elected and appointed officials who are more concerned with making sure women can’t get proper medical care than paying attention to the infrastructure necessary to withstand weather events like this. Wouldn’t want to have had regulations that didn’t allow for charging customers $10,000 for one month’s power bill (yes, those happened) get in the way of record profits for energy company shareholders.
@Ncyphen4 ай бұрын
We had a similar storm in the 90s. Also, Texas has interstate power connections with all surrounding states that can be connected in emergencies, it was even mentioned in the video. Those connections were active during the event to purchase and import power from the western grid.
@db95gt4 ай бұрын
I live in NW Iowa and we were seeing -25F with -55 windchill during this time. Thankfully we didn't lose power (all it takes is that one tree branch) and my furnace survived running 24/7. After this storm I bought a generator just in case.
@Surannhealz4 ай бұрын
That is incorrect. You can search “feb 2021 power outage” + any state around Texas and see that most of the states in the middle of the USA lost power during those couple days. The media was very happy to target Texas though, so you only heard about Texas.
@samanthaw38453 ай бұрын
As someone who loves your channel and had to evacuate from Houston during this event, it’s absolutely wild to see it on your channel!! Fortunately, I grew up in Alaska and I had recently moved from Wisconsin, so as soon as all of the weather alerts started going out, I rolled up a bunch of towels, and lined the doors and windows as best I could to insulate. I got my dog and the four month old kittens I had recently rescued and piled them all in my room on my bed with all my blankets when the power went out. It got cold pretty quickly - it was mid-50s Fahrenheit in my apartment when I left, and I don’t know how low it got before power came back. My dog and I would’ve been rather cold and uncomfortable but fine, but the kittens were young and rescues and they started getting too cold for comfort. Fortunately, I hadn’t gotten around to replacing my hardcore winter tires with something more appropriate for Texas yet, so I loaded up the animals in my car and drove (carefully!) to my mom’s place in San Antonio. Edit: to clarify, most of the roads were frozen and black ice was everywhere. The only reason I felt comfortable evacuating was because I grew up driving in ice and snow and I still had my Wisconsin winter tires. It was still nerve-wracking - obviously, there wasn’t salt or sand, or anything on the roads like you usually get up north, and I had to stop and help several people who had spun out. As one happy note in this whole mess, though - two of my rescue kittens were born to a stray mom that we hadn’t yet managed to catch and fix. She was pregnant again, and a good Samaritan found her and brought her inside when temps got bad. Mama cat gave birth during the freeze, I adopted her trio of kittens (half-siblings to two of my rescues), and we finally got momma cat fixed once the trio were weaned.
@kateg72983 ай бұрын
Thank you for being such a wonderful human. We need more people like you.
@samanthaw38453 ай бұрын
@@kateg7298 this silly website keeps deleting my comments for some reason, but thank you very much, that’s very sweet of you to say!!!
@samanthaw38453 ай бұрын
Ok, how can bots go ballistic in comments, but I post ONE pic of my cats and all my comments are nuked lol. Was trying to send you a pic of the cats now, Kate, (bc they’re cute as heck) but I guess not lol.
@samanthaw38453 ай бұрын
@@kateg7298 anyway, even if sending you a pic of the cats didn’t work, I wish you all the best and I hope you have good fortune throughout your life. And if you ever meet anyone in Colorado looking to adopt a cat, send them my way bc I’ve moved up here and I foster now lol.
@popsugar09934 ай бұрын
I had moved to texas temporarily to help take care of my elderly father in 2020. I stupidly chose to live in a family owned RV as I didn't want to rent, being I didn't know how long i was going to be there. I went through that winter of 2021 and then the late summer storm that hit in 2023 with 90 mph winds while living in that RV. The late summer storm hit two weeks before my planned departure. Let's just say I am glad to be back in my home state. No state has perfect weather, I know this, but I am okay with the weather where I have lived all my life. It pissed me off to find the Ercot meeting had spoken of previous concerns of the upcoming 2021 winter storm, all of maybe 3 to 4 minutes. It also pissed me off to see ppl in other states on social media scoffing at Texas for whining about the "cold weather". My heart bleeds for the lost lives in 2021. 🙏
@Praisethesunson4 ай бұрын
Come on man. You can't brag about the weather where you live and not say the state. If you say Wyoming I would be incredibly disappointed.
@believeroftheword46274 ай бұрын
@@Praisethesunsonsame! I want to know where "home" is with the great weather!
@t.dig.20404 ай бұрын
I love my Wyoming weather... summers are comfortable and winter keeps the tourists from growing roots.
@Whocares1584 ай бұрын
It wasn't even that bad, Texans are unprepared for Cold Weathers because they think their State is only HOT Weathers. 🔥🥵 🤣
@mooonblooom2 ай бұрын
Ah, Snowmageddon. Luckily I live near multiple hospitals, so we were saved from the worst of the power outages, but I remember hearing horror stories from people in different neighborhoods and cities. From someone outside of Texas, a couple frozen days sounds like nothing, but you have to understand that none of us are used to this. It's exactly how northern states or countries aren't used to blistering heat. We aren't built for freezing snow days, and it results in devastating consequences.
@GabeBugel2 ай бұрын
Ur pickup trucks didn't have heaters?
@LyricsQuest11 күн бұрын
@@GabeBugel The gas stations ran out of gas, as trucks weren't making deliveries.
@tskulli3 ай бұрын
from the dfw (arlington) and when our power went out my mom courageously drove us all the way to lancaster where my aunt had power and gas because she lived nearby a hospital. what was typically a 25-30 minute drive took 2 hours!!! a bunch of my family members piled into her house and we just spent the week at her house. my birthday was the 12th but i can't even remember what happened that day... and i'll never forget how i had to leave my fish, paris, who either froze or starved to death. rip to her:( for me, that week was filled with overall joy and happiness (that we had no school), but i was only 12 and much too young to understand the severity of the situation. however, the now 15 year old me, has realized just how privileged i was to be garnered with such a joyous experience during such a time of difficulty. it really shows how maturity can change the way you see an event. my heart goes out to all the victims of the storm and i hope their families have, and or, can someday find peace
@aewtx3 ай бұрын
Why couldn't you take your fish? That's terrible!
@shakarussanders99114 ай бұрын
I'm from the Dallas/Ft Worth area I had never experienced that kind of cold! My electricity was out for days! Thankfully my friend had power and told me to come over I'm so thankful for that because it was absolutely brutal!
@the_ejumper_08044 ай бұрын
I live in Roanoke TX and remember this event VERY well. We had no power for two days straight but we were definitely among the lucky few who were able to stay warm successfully. To this day, thats still the most snow I’ve ever seen in my life
@OXY-rl4 ай бұрын
Same bro
@sebz4474 ай бұрын
same here but in northern houston
@cxxxynАй бұрын
Houston here! I remember this like it was yesterday. The numbness up to my calves. The uncontrollable pitch black darkness and silence that came with it once the sun set.. I remember trying to find gas and passing by people stuck on on-ramps to blocked off frwys. Cars and trucks sliding down the streets. People fighting over resources. There was a older homeless guy who frequented the store I worked at and unfortunately a friend of his told us he passed during the freeze
@NumbuhWonDierecta4 ай бұрын
I remember this like it was yesterday. This entire week was crazy, people getting into accidents, people dying, the pile of cars on freeway. Then ERCOT going all monday night raw on us Texans when we got the electric bill. We were fortunate enough to have a well insulated home and blankets for days. We had 3 dogs at the time and they loved the snow and 2 of them weren't cold at all since they had thick coats. I was getting ready for my wedding at the time so my wife and I began planning our wedding since our schedules didn't allow us time together to plan it. We didn't have a generator or gas in our house so we had to deal with the rolling black outs. It was wild to see that El Paso was not affected by the storm at all, but all the news and press from our Governor didn't really help either. It was a huge blame game but I had no idea about the house bill being passed. This was a great piece of content, thank you.
@mrtaxi2044 ай бұрын
Remember this November CANCUN CRUZ SAID F TEXAS I'M OUTTA HERE
@deeznoosh4 ай бұрын
are you under the impression that they generate and provide power? lol
@NumbuhWonDierecta4 ай бұрын
@deeznoosh no I know that they controlled how much each provider would pay for electricity and this impacts the cost for the consumer regardless of the company you had. If they were connected to ERCOT, your bill would increase.
@deeznoosh4 ай бұрын
@@NumbuhWonDierecta lmfao are you under the impression that they set the electricity rate? lol
@NumbuhWonDierecta4 ай бұрын
@deeznoosh i mean they manage the grid and facilitate the market. Without ERCOT, you need find another power source.
@Lil-Britches4 ай бұрын
😂😂 well I never thought I'd see this. Born and raised, man water pipe broke didn't have water for 2months. When the power was out I walked to my job(power was on to charge my phone) fell and ate it. BUT got to my restaurant job to charge our stuff (we definitely weren't gonna open) Then people started knocking in the glass asking if we had food. We looked around the kitchen everything was fine....we smiled at each other opened the kitchen and just started giving out free food! It was crazy everyone was caught off guard. People asking to buy everything we said no it has to be able to go around. They gave us cases of beer 😂 and cash it was free. It was a unique moment for us helping our community.
@gohawks35714 ай бұрын
2 months?! ☹️ Cool about sharing food though!
@angiepangie9894 ай бұрын
Sucks when it takes a literal disaster to bring humanity together. I'm a Floridian I see it after every hurricane
@su1cidesauce4 ай бұрын
You are an angel on earth, which makes up for your sin of being a Texan. Bless.
@Lil-Britches4 ай бұрын
@@gohawks3571Yeah I was getting those massive Ozarks jugs walking them down the street. 😂 It was "a time"
@gohawks35714 ай бұрын
@@Lil-Britches Dang, dude! Must have looked ready for a Mr. Muscles competition after that! Wow... I would not have fared well, since I was sick during those times 😱
@stephknoodle4 ай бұрын
I was extremely pregnant during the storm left without water and electricity. I was one of the few fortunate enough to have been provided with a safe hotel room and a constant flow of fresh produce and groceries during the storm by my job at the time. I’ll be forever grateful for that blessing because I don’t know how we would have survived without the help. We were left without water a few days before the snow even hit the ground because everything was freezing. Blessed my home was spared of any damage but I definitely endured a lot of stress wondering what the heck I’d even feed my son before being blessed by a helping hand. We lost two neighbors to the storm and a few friends left displaced for months because of the damage. Hands down the worst experience this video definitely pulled some heart strings.
@Whocares1584 ай бұрын
Corpse Bearer!
@peppermeat80594 ай бұрын
lost two neighbors?
@bweezy218711 сағат бұрын
It was so bad. I’ll never forget living through this. Watching this video brought back a lot of emotions.
@MoniPoly4 ай бұрын
The poor 12 year old Conroe boy that died from the freeze went to my little sister’s school. Our house was 37 degrees when the power finally came back on. Other than hurricanes, this is probably the worst natural disaster that we’ve even been through. Glad to see that it’s been covered
@Erakius3234 ай бұрын
37 degrees?!?! Jesus, your house was warm at least. 😂 How ERCOT got protection from being sued for their failures, when they are a private company, is staggering.
@MoniPoly4 ай бұрын
@@Erakius323 37° Fahrenheit, haha
@michaelramirez20014 ай бұрын
@@MoniPolyyea it’s crazy because that freeway where everyone died and crashed, I passed on the rite side of that freeway . And my car was literally moving on its own . Good thing i didn’t get on that lane where that crash happened
@Erakius3234 ай бұрын
@@MoniPoly Oh. Ok, that is pretty cold then. I was just picturing a room with like 3 propane heaters set up and roaring away. 😂 Glad you at least survived it.
@Kordon874 ай бұрын
I think most of us Texans have a degree of PTSD cause of this. Toilet paper, bread, and water frequently go out of stock due to any little thing now. As for myself, I decided to visit a friend in Galveston that weekend and decided I can beat the storm if I left early enough back to Austin. A 3 hour trip took 2 day, and I nearly got stuck (almost died, I'm sure) on the road. I had never been so scared in my life, I was 26 at the time and traveling alone.
@whitneylosh-johnson24204 ай бұрын
Did it change any Texans feelings about their power grid setup?
@benjie1284 ай бұрын
Same. It was a defining moment in my community.
@squeekydinky4 ай бұрын
@@whitneylosh-johnson2420 my company decided to get a back up generator so if there is a power failure or ice storm again, we'll still be able to come in and work. 😂
@whitneylosh-johnson24204 ай бұрын
@@squeekydinky That's one of the most Texan things I've ever heard.
@squeekydinky4 ай бұрын
@@whitneylosh-johnson2420 Right to Work means Get to Work lol
@MazdaBass9714 ай бұрын
I live in Texas, i thought the freeze would never end since it lasted a whole week, the aftermath was just as bad with empty stores everywhere. I was one of the lucky ones to have power and hot water all week except for the last few days of the freeze power shut off for several hours it was because my apartment was on a priority node for my towns hospital.
@lorraineyanez43014 ай бұрын
I took ice cold showers. It was terrible
@glennzanotti33464 ай бұрын
I belong to an Electric Coop in North Texas, and they were doing rolling blackouts, with a 30 minutes on, 30 minutes off rotation. It got down to the low 50s in my house, but it didn't freeze.
@SlashinatorZ4 ай бұрын
I was one of the lucky ones with power too. I also saw ice in places I never thought I'd see it
@PlumbCarton56074 ай бұрын
@@SlashinatorZsame, was across the street of a fire station. I was rather young so i didn't understand the magnitude of it since i was unaffected
@flimsysteve4 ай бұрын
it was only a week and it got this bad? That's wild, i'm so sorry- I genuinely thought it was like a month or something (from the uk, we haven't had a big freeze like this since I was a kid and I'm only 26)
@RavonWhitАй бұрын
I live in Louisiana I vividly remember this. Me and Childs father drove around helping people who where stuck
@irenemartinez61524 ай бұрын
This horrendous event seriously gave me PTSD... as a single mom with 2 little ones, living in SA with no family, it was the worst!! 😳 We had no water or electricity for DAYS!! I prayed every night that we wouldn't die alone frozen in our apartment. We all had to wear layers of sweaters and clothes with mittens and beanies to bed because the nights were unbearable. All the food in our fridge spoiled and the one in the pantry was gone...I couldn't get to my car to at least warm up because it was stuck in a garage and the garage was electrical... i tried manually opening it but was unsuccessful 😭 no one was around to help... my phone died because I couldn't charge it... my family was in another city 500 miles away and couldn't get to us to help because roads were closed due to icy roads.... it was the absolute worst event of our lives 😳😭 A few months later in July, I said peace out San Antonio, and left that city quick!!! I have never looked back or even visited it since then. Now whenever we have a storm in my hometown, I tend to freak out and start praying that we don't lose power....😭
@JM-fo1te4 ай бұрын
Food spoiled? It was freezing outside.
@CC-hf7tc4 ай бұрын
@@JM-fo1te the same thing also happened to me. We lost good food since we recently got groceries
@peppermeat80594 ай бұрын
how was it that your garage was an electrical one with no door to the side? it has to be a manual though, else its frozen shut
@peppermeat80594 ай бұрын
@@JM-fo1te it lasted for months im pretty sure? there was also rolling blackouts
@sugalofe41314 ай бұрын
@@JM-fo1te Not all apartments have porches. We were on the third story with no way to store food outside because of this and the blackout lasted much, much longer than the food-safe outdoor temperatures did.
@thundermite12414 ай бұрын
Huh who would of thought a independent power grid where you cant import power was risky
@celticlass85734 ай бұрын
I'm sure that's how many states view themselves and how they're organized. If they're sovereign states, then what happens elsewhere won't happen to them, right? But the opposite can happen and they get toasted. Similar to how many Americans talk about their own rights and autonomy, but when something bad happens to them, they're all about "you need to help me".
@mattwolf76984 ай бұрын
That's republicans for you
@celticlass85734 ай бұрын
@@mattwolf7698 Human lives are worth less than a profit to them, that's blatantly obvious.
@haruhisuzumiya66504 ай бұрын
@@celticlass8573just look at Europe, they all attempted to wean themselves off of Russian gas
@haruhisuzumiya66504 ай бұрын
@@mattwolf7698the rep for Texas Ted Cruz went to Cancun Mexico 😂
@yotoland25434 ай бұрын
Having lived through this, it is weird to see this documentary. My son actually sent me the link. I didn’t even know a documentary had been done. Here in Texas we called this “Snowmaggedon”. This storm went all the way into Mexico too. Usually North Texas or the Panhandle gets snow/ice, but not all the way to Brownsville at the southern tip. I was so glad our new home was so well insulated. Without any heat, our house stayed above freezing on the inside. We put towels under the doors and in the window sills even though we have double panned storm windows. Just so now warm air leaked out. We were so layered up in clothes, we were thankful we didn’t have any bathroom emergencies as you would not have been able to get all your layers off in time. 😬Luckily we could snuggle in bed with our dogs and cats and lots of extra blankets.
@geminuri9 күн бұрын
As someone who went through this a few years ago, and was slightly prepared, it was still really tough even in a new construction home that was built to keep heat out during the summers and heat in during the winters. We didn't take it seriously, a lot of people didn't prepare sufficiently, because we've had a good amount of snow before and everything was fine, but this hit pretty much allllll of Texas. Our power was basically out day 1 of the storm and didn't come back on for 4 days. When we were able to have electricity for a few minutes with rolling black outs, our thermostat was reading 50-52 degrees, it was VERY cold. I can't imagine how it was for others who live in older homes, trailers, and those who were/are homeless. We're definitely a lot more prepared this time! Texas is built for the scorching heat and brutal summers, but even during the summer months, losing power like that for extended periods of time is fatal.
@QueenChass4 ай бұрын
I remember this like it was yesterday. I live in Irving Texas and my power was out for a week and a couple of days! It started February 15th, 2021, I will never forget. I'm single, live by myself in a 1 bedroom apartment. I remember sleeping in sweats and 2 coats wrapped in my blanket for over a week, it was freezing! I did not eat and drank bottled water. It was hard, but I made it through because my Lord and Savior Jesus Christ was with me the whole time. I survived that whole thing. My whole apartments power was off, but my friend about 2 blocks away their power was on. ERCOT had different locations where they would have people to have power and some don't, they would regulate it back and forth, but my apartments never got it the whole time. I was so glad that it was over! And all the deaths i heard that came through that week. I thank my Heavenly Father that im alive! That was a crazy time.
@iris18374 ай бұрын
I will always remember that date Feb 15 2021 we where trying to celebrate my little sister's birthday in the cold we light up fire to keep us warm and everyone covered with blankets trying to not worry so much about what was happening and just celebrate my sister's bday. .
@Kaboomboo4 ай бұрын
Amen. I was in Dallas and had just moved back here the week before. I lived in California, then moved here and the weather was very nice. Then this happened 😂
@X1erra3 ай бұрын
My cousin almost died in a blizzard inside the car. Someone saved him, and I'm eternally grateful for the person who saved and sheltered him.
@DarlingsOrgansАй бұрын
That makes me feel relieved. I'm glad everything worked out
@ForumArcade4 ай бұрын
I was living in Austin at the time. Fortunately, the house I was in never lost power. We were served by a local electric cooperative. A lot of people within a few miles of us did not fare so well. I have pictures of the snow and ice all over everything, and I'd love to share them, but KZbin doesn't have that option.
@Itzcuauhtli2 ай бұрын
I was traveling the U.S. working Uber and DoorDash during this time, amazing Chinese restaurants and a few others refused to closed so I delivered through this whole storm in my Mustang. Was a ton of fun, so many people were so grateful for the deliveries. I made like $500 a day working all day long. RIP to those who didn’t survive. I had a rough time too. One night I forgot to book my hotel room and they were packed because of the electricity. I had to sleep in my car. It was miserable.
@genxrants4 ай бұрын
We barely moved into our new home when it hit. I’m originally from the Northeast and even I wasn’t prepared. We were fortunate that we weren’t part of ERCOT (we were part of a small rural co-op) but we still lost power for eight hours. By the end of the outage, my husband was checking the temp of the water to see if we needed to winterize (shut the water to the house, drain it, and add antifreeze to all the s-pipes and toilets). We were digging out our RV antifreeze when the lights came back on. Not sure what we would have done if it were for more than a few days. A week is crazy! Some people probably still haven’t recovered, I bet.
@queenb674 ай бұрын
We have SHECO. Never happier with them because we never lost power. It never even blinked.
@AmandaSchnaare4 ай бұрын
Co-OP's are 100% the way to go.
@wolfinhiding78574 ай бұрын
@@queenb67 same here. Tri-County. Never even flickered a single time. However just 1/4 mile around us, all directions, power was out for many others. The city water froze, but our family was smart enough to fill 25 5 gallon buckets with water. My internet even stayed up the entire time. Co-OPs are nice.
@wolfinhiding78574 ай бұрын
@traybern I did have the water running slowly. It still froze up, but it fully froze up at the city side, water pumps froze and stopped working.
@deeznoosh4 ай бұрын
are you under the impression that they generate and provide power? lol
@cauliflower80594 ай бұрын
As a Minnesotan I remember watching the news and being absolutely baffled. I couldn’t understand how people were dying in a storm that we have dozens of times a year up here. That was the type of weather where kids here would still go to school through. It was just so puzzling until I realized that none of the people who built the infrastructure there even thought about the possibility of things going even slightly wrong.
@ShaimingLong4 ай бұрын
I've experienced a similar sort of thing here. The news will be trying to brew some panic over England getting a few days of below freezing temperatures, and I'll joke to my Scottish friends that it looks like I'm in for a cold week and they'll laugh back with, "ken we've had for a month? Stop being a big baby!" But then their friends from up in Norway laughs at the Scottish for being disgruntled at having to deal with snow and ice every winter, when it's just everyday life for them! It's not just the infrastructure either, I've only met their Norwegian friends once, at their wedding, but they had quite the laugh at seeing some of us struggle to drive on the slippy roads due to the complete lack of experience dealing with the weather that bad to them.. mostly the English lot that chose to drive there. The way he tells it, in Norway you either become a Rally driver, or you due to a tree on the side of the road. So for people living in what's basically blasting heat 99% of the time, that complete lack of experience dealing with that cold snap regularly enough, it led to far too many fatal errors.
@DonutVIP4 ай бұрын
Minnesota here also, I agree, then last year California got hit hard, now we are experiencing flooding and im impress that 100 year old dam still holds up, I don't wanna think what winter holds for us this year
@MJIZZEL4 ай бұрын
Global warming caused it.
@robinkonig58284 ай бұрын
In central europe this would be a completely normal thing Wonder what they would do in texas if they get 2 meters of snow
@AmandaSchnaare4 ай бұрын
because.... you're built for it?
@scot604 ай бұрын
I still have PTSD from this ice storm. I live in an all electric house. The power was out for 6 days. It was 32 degrees in the house by day 3. You could see your breath inside the house. We have a pool and my daughter and I had to go out every few hours to break up the ice so the pool wouldn’t crack. I tried to use the propane heater on the pool and it blew up. I have since bought a very expensive generator and a propane fireplace. Every winter now I’m terrified that the power will go down again.
@Galaxxymeeps4 ай бұрын
wtf is an “all electric house”
@ahokay31194 ай бұрын
@@Galaxxymeeps I guess they mean they have no natural gas.
@Praisethesunson3 ай бұрын
@@Galaxxymeepsmost houses in the world
@JustMeUpNorth3 ай бұрын
Welcome to poor people’s winters in Britain (minus the pool). Can’t afford gas (if there is any) and certainly not electric heating. You learn very fast to live and sleep in one room, dress in layers, and use hot water bottles to stay warm. I have a coal fire and I don’t care what environmental laws they pass, they’ll take that fire from my cold, dead hands - sometimes it’s the only heat, light and cooking facilities we can afford.
@videt74593 ай бұрын
Rather than buying yet more technology that you're reliant on for your survival, you'd have been better served to learn self-reliance. You all go into hysterics when the grid goes down because you're helpless as infants. Humans survived for 99.9999% of their history on earth without electricity, yet you hapless and helpless moderns consider yourselves superior to them.
@TheMagicalFlutePlayer12 ай бұрын
I was younger when this happen, in the 5th grade, and it is still something I remember. We were thankfully lucky enough to only lose power for 24 hours or so, but I still remember watching the snow coming down, and going outside to the temperatures I'd never seen before.
@alexludwig32354 ай бұрын
San Antonio here. Friends and I were out when we could to distribute blankets to our unsheltered communities. We lost so many that year. I will never forget Olivia. Olivia was a disabled elder. I was only able to meet her a few days before she passed. I was handing out blankets and a group came rushing over because she couldn't get to me in her wheelchair. People had already given up their blankets so she could have extra warmth. Above all, I believe in autonomy, and good lord was Olivia a woman of her own decisions. Olivia passed, as I mentioned, a few days later. I'm thankful the freeze led me to meet this specific area of people, I still hangout with them. We had Olivia's vigil on the same street she froze on. I think of her every day and the streets still love her. Rest in peace, grandma ♡
@alexludwig32354 ай бұрын
As for me personally, we were without power and hot water for days. Luckily, we had a fire place and I was able to keep my lizards warm throughout!!
@lunaireous94254 ай бұрын
I was 14 and lived in Dallas when this happened. I was surprised at the number of people who had died/freezed in their homes. My brother and I slept in our parents' room to share body heat, but the bed was too cramped, so i slept on the ground under 4 covers. we also had an indoor kerosene heater that we had kept on for a couple hours at night before going to sleep (we kept most of the windows open when it was on). The indoor and outdoor pipes were also dripping at all times. Our 5 budgies and 3 dogs we had at the time were also kept as warm as possible and didn't freeze. We even had 2 portable camping stoves that we used. My dad had lent one to our old neighbors and would check on them once a day. Me and my brother also went to play in the snow till we literally started seeing red, lol
@bricksandtech79584 ай бұрын
im glad the budgies survived, I have a cockatiel and he barely stays warm in 70 degrees so I would be terrified if it ever got that cold, but at least were prepared in the midwest. I can't believe how scary it must've been sleeping with that cold. Glad it was ok in the end.
@Recheron4 ай бұрын
@@bricksandtech7958 I was 12 around the time (16 now) but holy that was a crazy time I had to wrap my lizard in 2 blankets just to keep him warm, we also had a fireplace that ran on gas instead of electricity so thank goodness, we got power back I think the same day it went off, sadly some people in the area didn't get it back for over a week.
@davefear114 ай бұрын
Barely a mention of how Texas is cut off from the rest of the countries grid. Meaning power cannot be rerouted from another state into Texas. There are 3 major power sectors in the US. Eastern, Western and Texas. Then they jack up prices when things like this happen. Case study of what deregulation can lead to. And lead to "Cancun Cruz."
@ShaimingLong4 ай бұрын
Without going back through the whole video to check, I feel like the grid being mostly self contained got mentioned three times. Maybe there should have been more focus on it as a dedicated point, but it wasn't quite barely mentioned.
@hascrack37834 ай бұрын
The wholesale price for electricity fluctuates wildly, but most consumers are on fixed price plans. The people affected by the price spike were on plans that directly exposed them to the market rate. They were perfectly happy paying $0.03-0.05/kwh under normal conditions but when it spiked to $3-4/kwh they ended up with massive bills. The problem wasn't the spike in price, it was that consumers weren't properly informed of the risk and didn't set aside money in case of a massive surge. This was a relatively small percentage of people, but the news blew it out of purportion. As far as the surge pricing goes, it was the consumer's decision to go with the plan they did, not the price being "jacked up. Prices fluctuate normally on all grids. I'd recommend doing research before making assumptions. Texas lawmakers do plenty of things you should be pissed about, this isn't one of them.
@80sHeavymetalchick94 ай бұрын
I'm sure that POS Cruz was nice and warm...along with Abbott.. As long as the money rolls in they could care less about the people of Texas.. Well at least the ones barely making it or poor people
@justinr97534 ай бұрын
Imagine still being salty he went to a warmer climate instead of climbing up the power poles and trying to fix it like I'm sure Nancy would have 😂
@ryanguy90004 ай бұрын
@@justinr9753 Cute cope, but there's hundreds of things that coward could have doing as the state's Senator. Organizing fundraising, tapping your billionaire benefactors' cash stacks, requesting federal aide, preparing contract packages for emergency repairs, etc. But nah, vacation with his wife who he lets people call ugly.
@marshallc62153 ай бұрын
3:30 this is actually incorrect. Texas depends heavily on natural gas-fired residential furnaces, which at the time, was given a higher priority than power plants for natural gas service. This means that when gas gets tight, power plants will have their gas flow restricted before residential homes will. That's exactly what happened. Wellheads froze, reducing supply, and everyone cranked their heaters, increasing the demand. This shut down several power plants for fuel shortages before their equipment was even affected by the cold, and caused other units to force offline for low gas pressure tripping generator protection systems.
@antoniocasias55452 ай бұрын
Sure Jan Wellheads?
@marshallc62152 ай бұрын
@@antoniocasias5545 yep. Natural gas wells froze up because they weren't winterized. And because it's cheaper to remove hydrates (water) from the natural gas at scale, the pipelines, which were also insufficiently winterized, also froze while carrying the hydrated natural gas to processing plants. You can find articles about it. Also did you like your own comment? This chain is 3 weeks old and your comment has a like within 30 mins. Sus.
@antoniocasias55452 ай бұрын
@@marshallc6215 sure they did. I thought you were talking about something else. It’s a habit I picked up. When you like your own comment and you immediately get “an unknown error has occurred” that means your comment has been censored