Jump to content
This site uses cookies. Continued use is acceptance of our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. More Info... ×
  • Welcome to Celiac.com!

    You have found your celiac tribe! Join us and ask questions in our forum, share your story, and connect with others.




  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A1):



    Celiac.com Sponsor (A1-M):


  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Our Content
    eNewsletter
    Donate

Cold Snowy Winter Comin'............ Git Ready


Candy

Recommended Posts

Candy Contributor

Gonna be a traditional winter this 2013, with bitter cold and snow.  Lookin' forward to it, but I hope I won't freeze to death or slip and bust my hip ,but somebody probably will.

www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/capital-weather-gang/2013/08/26/the-farmers-almanac-outrageous-forecast-a-stormy-super-bowl- 

 

What I'm gonna do is get a big bag of rock salt( to melt the snow around my door) as soon as I see it being sold,usually not til late November. But Almanac said it might freeze over before that.

 

Winter Shopping List

Warm socks ,some angora blend

water and cold proof moon boots

I like extra oatmeal,beans(for soups)needed dry goods,for baking,and gluten-free flours

medicines,over the counter and prescription

my mom thinks a kerosene heater is good to keep in,just in case the electricity good off.And kerosene.

knitting yarn-to knit at night

sweatshirts-I got 1 at Walmart....

I'm looking for an ideal fleece hat...

turtlenecks,not for dinner-but to wear

What do you do to prep for the cold ,wintry weather?


Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



  • Replies 336
  • Created
  • Last Reply
love2travel Mentor

Until one experiences our winters in northern Canada, you haven't lived. :-P. Last year we had snow on the ground continuously from October 10 to May 4. Not good. But we are used to it so prepping is automatic. We are always in Europe for October so must winterize everything before leaving. Yucky winters!!!

GF Lover Rising Star

 I always make sure the car is ready too.  I keep a fleece blanket, water, non-perishable gluten-free food, first aid kit, candle and flashlight.  In my everyday "go bag" I keep spare medications, extra cell phone battery, wet wipes, tissues, umbrella and sunscreen, gluten-free snacks and water.

 

I've been caught in Ohio weather too many times not to be prepared.

 

At home, I overstock water and non-perishables,  toilet paper, etc., batteries, candles and such.

 

I especially look forward to the first snow!

 

Colleen 

dilettantesteph Collaborator

I already got my fleece lined bootie slippers, and I'm wearing them.

mommida Enthusiast

We have to pick up a quad with wench and snow plow.  Waiting for the VIN number for street insurance.  At least this can be used for fun off roading, when we don't have to clear snow.  I will still have to hand shovel the walk way to the house.  <_<

love2travel Mentor

It is only 3C, cloudy and very windy at 2:15 pm. Not exactly balmy. Yucky.

bartfull Rising Star

I keep a snow shovel in the car so in case it snows while I'm at work, I can shovel a path to the garage when I get home. I keep one in the garage so I can leave the first shovel in the car once it's parked, and shovel a path to the house. And of course I leave on in the house, in the closet by the back door so if it snows overnight, I can shovel a path to the garage. I also keep ice melt (I don't use rock salt because it's bad for concrete, plants, and especially the paws of our furry friends) in the car, at the shop, and in the house.

 

Actually, we don't usually get much snow here, and although MOST of the country is in for it according to the almanac, the upper midwest is not.

 

I don't usually keep any extra food on hand because I have to come out every day to open the shop anyway, and the grocery store is right down the street.

 

One thing I always do though, is stock up on everything I can when it's on sale so I don't have to buy when money's tight because of heating bills. I buy extra hair spray, soap, deodorant, toothpaste, TP, paper towels, cleaning products, make-up, whatever else goes on sale and won't go bad. I still have to buy food in the winter, but if I've got plenty of that other stuff on hand, not only don't I have to spend so much when I don't have much to spend, but I don't have to take any trips to Family Dollar or ShopKo.

 

Oh yeah, I DID buy an extra comforter when it went on sale in the spring, and a big THICK, long and fuzzy robe. I also found some fake fur lined, really warm slippers that come up past my ankles, on sale four or five years ago at K-Mart. They were only $7 a pair so I bought all four pairs that they had in my size. I just broke out the second pair toward the end of last winter. I'll probably never need to buy slippers again.


Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Loey Rising Star

I have my candles, lighters, batteries and car power cable chargers for my electronics in reach at all times - (I have enuff food in my pantry to feed all of Psillieville!)! When Nemo hit we watched High Fidelity in our car with the heat cranked up. Wish we had $ for a back-up generator. Unfortunately the Farmer's Almanc is regularly spot on! Brrrr... I still want to have fun in the sun at the beach!!!

bartfull Rising Star

Yeah, I've got candles too. LOTS AND LOTS OF THEM!!! And in the nine-plus years I've been here, we only lost power once, and that was for about an hour.

 

(But it's OK. I burn candles in the evening anyway. Makes for a nice mood while I play my guitar.)

GF Lover Rising Star

I'm a candle hound too.  Always a few burning.  

 

Bart, your nightshade - joint pain connection has me jumping up and down.  I can hold my full coffee cup in the morning.  So far so good.  Thanks.

 

Colleen 

PaulM Rookie

Here in Czech the recent years have been mild, usually it's minus 10 to 20 centigrade and snow on the ground for 3-4 months. I hate the cold. 

Adalaide Mentor

Utah got a really cold winter last year. Snow I can handle, I'm used to it from growing up in PA. We actually get surprising little snow in the valleys in Utah. The cold though? I thought I left that nonsense behind me when I headed west.

 

I keep food, water and a blanket in my Jeep. I have no intentions of getting stranded without those. Strangely enough, I don't talk to a lot of people here to prep their cars. Where I grew up though it is simply common sense because you never know when you might find yourself stranded for a few days if a storm is worse than you thought it would be.

 

We're also always emergency prepared here anyway, so nothing special to do for winter. We live in on a fault line and are actually due for the next large earthquake. I forget the timeline but I think they discovered there is a pretty bad one every 200 or 300 years and has been for the past few thousand years. We're slightly past due. We have food and water storage that will see us through until services can be restored, and will surely be enough for bad winter storms if we find ourselves out of power or without water. We also keep go bags in case we would need to leave, either walk out if things were bad enough or evacuate in case of a wildfire.

 

Bad winter? Psh... bring it on.

bartfull Rising Star

I'm a candle hound too.  Always a few burning.  

 

Bart, your nightshade - joint pain connection has me jumping up and down.  I can hold my full coffee cup in the morning.  So far so good.  Thanks.

 

Colleen 

I'm SO glad!! It's worth giving up nightshades if it means less pain, and heck, sweet potatoes are better for us anyway. :)

w8in4dave Community Regular

I live in Michigan , we can have some rough winters also. 3 years ago we had an icy winter, went out to feed the cats, and boom slipped and broke my wrist. That was the second time I broke my wrist. 1st time I was barefoot in the garage because our basement had flooded and I took my shoes off to clean up, slipped in the garage and broke my wrist I tried not to land on my bottom because I had already had back surgery and didn't want to injure that again ... 

One year hubbs was moving a big playhouse , you know the ones on stilts, or way up anyway, well they cut the legs at the ground and had it tipped 3 of us were holding it up. Hubbs said you got it? to his buddy, buddy said nope , so on the count of three we let it drop on the trailer. 1.2.3. boom right on top of me it went. I got a broken leg out of it. right below the knee. They took bone from my hip to repair it. So my last broken wrist was also a pretty bad break. When I was all done healing and going to the specialist the last words I heard was "And we don't have any idea whats going on with your bones"  

For the last 3 years I have been trying to be sooooo careful going out in the snow and ice. But now at least I know why I have weak bones...... Celiac can be so silent at times. 

  • 2 weeks later...
cherries Newbie

I live in Michigan , we can have some rough winters also. 3 years ago we had an icy winter, went out to feed the cats, and boom slipped and broke my wrist. That was the second time I broke my wrist. 1st time I was barefoot in the garage because our basement had flooded and I took my shoes off to clean up, slipped in the garage and broke my wrist I tried not to land on my bottom because I had already had back surgery and didn't want to injure that again ... 

One year hubbs was moving a big playhouse , you know the ones on stilts, or way up anyway, well they cut the legs at the ground and had it tipped 3 of us were holding it up. Hubbs said you got it? to his buddy, buddy said nope , so on the count of three we let it drop on the trailer. 1.2.3. boom right on top of me it went. I got a broken leg out of it. right below the knee. They took bone from my hip to repair it. So my last broken wrist was also a pretty bad break. When I was all done healing and going to the specialist the last words I heard was "And we don't have any idea whats going on with your bones"  

For the last 3 years I have been trying to be sooooo careful going out in the snow and ice. But now at least I know why I have weak bones...... Celiac can be so silent at times. 

Ouch broken bones hurt, and winter is the worst time to break them too. I also live in Michigan, and it's getting colder here. I know I am stocking up on inside activities like crochet, and some new recipes.

nvsmom Community Regular

It's supposed to snow tonight..... :ph34r:

shadowicewolf Proficient

It's supposed to snow tonight..... :ph34r:

...chance on friday... :ph34r:

cahill Collaborator

Ouch broken bones hurt, and winter is the worst time to break them too. I also live in Michigan, and it's getting colder here. I know I am stocking up on inside activities like crochet, and some new recipes.

 I feel every one of those previously  broken bones during the winter months :unsure:

 

I walk out side for exercise / stress relief most of the year  so during the winter months I utilize my  stock pile of walk at home DVD and exercise DVD so I dont have a excuse to slack on my exercise  ( and most of them are fun any way :P )

 

I live in northwestern PA so I winterize my car (blankets ,extra coats ,sweats ect...) Stocking up on non perishables  is second nature when you grow up/ live in the "snow belt " :ph34r:

 

I live in an area where I can take the bus to work and do so especially during the winter months. That way some one else is driving ( dealing with the crappy roads ) while I drink my coffee :D and  If the bus aint running I dont need to be out there :lol:

IrishHeart Veteran

What do you do to prep for the cold ,wintry weather?

 

 

I just moved to Florida. B)

w8in4dave Community Regular

Ouch broken bones hurt, and winter is the worst time to break them too. I also live in Michigan, and it's getting colder here. I know I am stocking up on inside activities like crochet, and some new recipes.

I also crochet and love to cook!! 

bartfull Rising Star

They are predicting one to two FEET here between tonight and Sat. AM!!!! That being said, it's coming up from the southwest which means that often, they split up at the mountains which make the "bowl" we live in in my town. So we might not get nearly as much as the rest of the area.

 

I'm prepared though. Filled my gas tank yesterday, got plenty of food at both the house and the shop (just in case I can't make it home). I weatherized the windows this morning, got my snow shovels and ice melt ready, wore layers to work this morning and I even remembered to bring gloves. I keep a pair of boots here at the shop and one at home.

 

Sometimes when it's icy I really can't get home. I'm less than a mile from the shop but I live at the top of a really steep and long hill. I have a camp pad and sleeping bag here at the shop for emergencies, and even a pair of fuzzy warm slippers. If I'm posting into the wee hours tonight, that means I camped out. The cat has plenty of food and water so she'll be lonely, but well fed.

 

By Sunday it's supposed to be back into the upper 60's so whatever we get will melt quickly. :)

shadowicewolf Proficient

Florida has a very mild winter.  You'd be surprised.

 

 

By Sunday it's supposed to be back into the upper 60's so whatever we get will melt quickly. :)

Same.

Adalaide Mentor

I just moved to Florida. B)

That's cheating!

 

We got snow on the mountains earlier this week. I was pretty excited about it because nothing is more beautiful than snow on the mountains. It has also been wet this week so they mountains have been wreathed in low clouds which just makes them look like something out of a story book.

 

Tomorrow real life will slap us in the face in the form of snow here in the valley. We almost always get our first snow in October I just didn't expect it this early. The bright side is that with rare exception, winters are generally mild enough here that it warms up either the same day or day after it snows and it all melts away. Even in January and February. I'm such a spoiled brat. :P

IrishHeart Veteran

That's cheating!

 

 

MAYBE SO..... BUT IT IS HOW i PREPARED FOR THE WINTER :P

 

 I'm such a spoiled brat. :P

 

ME TOO ;) nuttin wrong with that!

GottaSki Mentor

Did somebody say snow :)

'Course I don't have to shovel it...but do have to drive to play in it!

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Celiac.com:
    Donate

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):
    Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):





    Celiac.com Sponsors (A17-M):




  • Recent Activity

    1. - PixieSticks replied to PixieSticks's topic in Super Sensitive People
      2

      Working in a kitchen with gluten?

    2. - BoiseNic replied to BoiseNic's topic in Dermatitis Herpetiformis
      11

      Skinesa

    3. - knitty kitty replied to Whyz's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      6

      Feeling ill

    4. - Scott Adams replied to Brianne03's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      5

      Advantages vs. Disadvantages of having an official Celiac diagnosis

    5. - Scott Adams replied to Whyz's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      6

      Feeling ill


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      126,535
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Annette Smith
    Newest Member
    Annette Smith
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      120.9k
    • Total Posts
      69.5k

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • PixieSticks
      Hi yes! I was diagnosed 10 years ago through a biopsy. I’ve been gluten free ever since but no one I’m around is gluten free. I sometimes wore a surgical mask in the kitchen. but I believe particles were still getting through. I’ll definitely look into n95 instead. thanks for the reply. 
    • BoiseNic
      Ya I used to react to iodine, but it doesn't bother me anymore after strict adherence to a gluten-free diet for many years now. I am happy to report that for the first time ever in my life, a probiotic formula is not making me break out, but actually seems to be helping. The strains in this formula have been specifically tested to help with skin issues. It is gluten and dairy free also. 
    • knitty kitty
      @Whyz, I take a combination of Thiamin (Benfotiamin), B12 Cobalamine and Pyridoxine B6 for my pain and headaches.  Really works well without hurting the digestive tract.  Riboflavin B2 also helps with migraines.  Most newly diagnosed people have vitamin and mineral deficiencies.  Check with your doctor and nutritionist.   If you follow the updated gluten challenge guidelines, you can wait until two weeks (minimum) before your appointment, then eat lots of gluten, like six slices of gluten containing bread or "name your poison".   Here's the Updated Gluten Challenge Guidelines: Recommended intake of gluten should be increased to 10 grams of gluten per day for at least two weeks. Or longer. While three grams of gluten will begin the immune response, ten grams of gluten is needed to get antibody levels up to where they can be measured in antibody tests and changes can be seen in the small intestine.   Keep in mind that there are different amounts of gluten in different kinds of bread and gluten containing foods.  Pizza crust and breads that are thick and chewy contain more gluten than things like cake and cookies.   References: https://www.beyondceliac.org/celiac-disease/the-gluten-challenge/ And... Evaluating Responses to Gluten Challenge: A Randomized, Double-Blind, 2-Dose Gluten Challenge Trial https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7878429/?report=reader  "In our study, limited changes in Vh:celiac disease (villi height vs crypt depth - aka damage to the small intestine)  following 14-day challenge with 3 g of gluten were observed, in accordance with Sarna et al.  While the 3 g dose was sufficient to initiate an immune response, as detected by several biomarkers such as IL-2, the 10 g dose was required for enteropathy within the study time frame. Based on our data, we would suggest that gluten challenge should be conducted over longer durations and/or using doses of gluten of ≥ 3 g/day to ensure sufficient histological change can be induced." Keep us posted on your progress!
    • Scott Adams
      I don't believe that existing life insurance policies require such notifications--health checks are typically done before such policies are obtained. I believe it would primarily affect any new policy you get, and perhaps any policy renewal.
    • Scott Adams
      You could go gluten-free now, and then start eating lots of gluten for at least 2 weeks before your endoscopy--just be sure to tell your doctor about this beforehand. If your symptoms go away on a gluten-free diet, it is further evidence of celiac disease and/or non-celiac gluten sensitivity.  Approximately 10x more people have non-celiac gluten sensitivity than have celiac disease, but there isn’t yet a test for NCGS. If your symptoms go away on a gluten-free diet it would likely signal NCGS.  
×
×
  • Create New...