We had a near miss with a large hurricane last year. Our town didn't really get more than a little wind and a tiny bit of rain out of it, but our families living in Houston got nailed. They were without power for nearly a month. Now my wife is feeling a little paranoid with tropical storm activity in the Atlantic starting to ramp up again, and she wants us to get a generator.
Personally, I'm not sure I see the point. I could get something to run the lights and the refridgerator easily enough I guess, but if we're out of power for three weeks, in Corpus Christi, in the middle of the summer, no A/C?... that's going to be a living nightmare. I've been measuring temperatures over 105ºF in the shade earlier this week. To me, the smart thing to do is just get the heck out of the way until things calm down. What good is power for lights and a fridge in that kind of environment?
So... I'm considering getting something with enough horsepower to run the A/C, but that's basically talking about a static (non-portable) solution. I'm not sure I can bring myself to do that. Not just from a cost perspective, but I've been hoping in the back of my mind to save up enough to eventually buy some kind of alternative power generator (solar, small-scale wind, something to, you know, actually reduce load on the fossil fuel plants down the road).
I guess, from a practical perspective, has anyone here had to get a generator before? What did you get, why, and how did you power things with it? Did you tie it into the house's power circuit somehow, or did you just run individual extension cords?