Almost 2 months.
Lightening struck near my house once, blew up the transformer on the power line, exploded a giant oak tree in the back yard, and killed a wire leading from the power line into the circuit box. Also the circuit box blew up. It took over 7 weeks and 4 professionals looking at it before we could figure out what needed to get fixed.
We did use a generator occasionally so it wasn’t 7 weeks straight, but we would go as long as we could between uses because iirc gas was very expensive at the time, and technically the house had no power for that long.
Outside of camping, the massive blackout of 2003.
https://www.cbc.ca/archives/the-great-north-america-blackout-of-2003-1.4683696
A 2 week canoe and camping trip in the US / Canadian boundary waters near Minnesota. Not only did we not have any power, other than batteries for an emergency radio and some flashlights, the five of us never saw another human being the whole time, from drop off to pickup. In was amazing
A few weeks, as i’ve spent some time abroad in some village where they literally didn’t have electricity.
Probably one winter where the power went out for maybe a couple weeks. It was kinda annoying because at one point the people on the other side of the street got power because they are on a different part of the grid. I can remember sitting in the living room watching a video when suddenly the lamp turns on. Immediately called my parents to let them know the good news.
One week, in my own house. We were part of the ones that lost power during ‘snowmageddon’ in the south a couple years back. Thankfully due to some light prep I’d done during the initial COVID outbreak I had plenty of canned meals for the fam and a nice butane cooking stove. Hardest part was keeping the house warm but we basically had some candles and plenty of blankets. Honestly could have been really bad, but looking back it was a nice little respite.
I stay at a building with no electricity or running water for a week about once a year so there’s that, but not by choice? Longest I can remember was a little over two days. Friday evening until Sunday night.
When I lived in a lower income area, I lost power frequently, but not for long. Two years in that condo and I think I lost power at least once every 2-3 months? Sometimes just for a few minutes but frequently for a few hours.
Huge tree fell across our one lane road in the mountains when I was growing up. We had a big snow storm and we got something like 6 feet of snow in two days.
Thankfully everyone out there had wood stoves for heat. Plenty of fresh snow to melt for water. After the snowing stopped everyone trapped behind the fallen tree worked together to cut the trees and get it off the road. It was a pretty big pine tree so it took like 15 people with several chainsaws all day to get it cut apart and off the road.
Still took like a week for a plow to come out and make the road clear enough for the power and telephone people to come out and fix it up for us.
I’ll never forget how unbelievably dead silent it was when I was laying there in 5+ feet of fresh powder. Because the power lines were down there wasn’t even that faint buzz/hum of electricity that you don’t usually notice but it’s always there. Absolute pure silence. You could hear your own heart beating and every little sound your clothing made when you did so much as even breath.
Truthfully I loved that week. The whole family slept in the living room by the fireplace. We had candles around at night since we didn’t have a ton of flashlights and batteries. My mom would send me brother out to get snow with the biggest pot she had. We would like it as high as we could while still being able to carry it. It would melt down to like half the pot haha. We cooked on the wood stove which took some adjustments. I think my mom treind to make spaghetti squash by wrapping a whole squash in foil and tossing inside the fire place on the red hot coals. Ended up burning it pretty badly but we had fun anyway. Played lots of board games and just kinda hung out as a family. Went on some hikes to see what our usual paths looked like with so much snow on them.
10/10 would get snowed in again.
In a home, 10 days because ComEd is bad at what they do.
Personally, a 30 day hiking trip. Those are very different circumstances though.
Two weeks after a hurricane. Couldn’t get out of the driveway for a few days either. Fortunately we were renovating a bathroom and had an empty bathtub in the yard that filled with rain and were able to use a gas stove to boil water.
Week long camping trips mostly.
Otherwise, I was alive during the coal miners’ strikes in the 1970s in the UK which lead to widespread powercuts on a regular basis but I don’t remember them myself. Though I do remember that my parents always kept some candles and a couple of oil lanterns around the house.
one day.
1.5 days
Can’t tell if it’s a joke question, a questions about having agency over your life/others’, or if it’s specifically about having access to electricity. And at this point I’m too afraid to ask. Based on the responses, they don’t clear it up at all.
Electricity, yes.
Man, all of these responses are crazy to me. They sound like living in some corporate cyberpunk dystopia instead of a developed economy. Been living in Sydney for 35 years. Grew up on the outskirts that were minutes from bush and farmland. I have essentially never experienced power loss for more than a day. I don’t think the powers been out for more than 6 hours in the last 2 decades. I don’t even think the power’s cut out once in the last 2-3 years. There may have been 1 or 2 occasions that took longer than a day, after severe storms, when I was a child, but the memories are so vague I’m not sure they even happened, and definitely not more than 48 hours.
I grew up with computers and cable, so I would remember if I were forced to raw dog existence for fucking days. It would of been trauma.