No Electricity!

Well not exactly none, if you call one hour a day of electricity, arriving in two half hour doses, having electricity then we have electricity. Brezovica is officially in a Serbian enclave in Kosova and, for largely obsurce political reasons most of the population don't pay their electricity bills. This has for sometime tried the patience of KEK (the Kosova power company) who have now made Brezovica a "Category C" area. This means the we only get electricity when there is enough for the rest of Kosova ("Category A" getting a 24 hour supply). Which is one hour a day. It might get better when the temperatures rise but probably not much. And cold it has been, this last week has seen temperatures drop to minus 25. So its really a wonder that we even get one hour a day.
The picture above is our little Fiat in its parking bay, excavation of which is getting more difficult each weekend due to the build up of snow on either side.
Fortunately our house has proved to be well insulated. But we checked our neighbours house and found water all over the ground floor due to frozen drain pipes. We weren't sure where the water was coming from since we couldn't open the bathroom door due to the leaking water having frozen in a big block of ice behind the door. Anyway we turned off the water at the mains and that afforded a temporary solution. A permanent one will have to wait for a thaw.

The snow just gets deeper, another 45 cm must have fallen since last weekend. No skiing this weekend, just work on the house. But its hard work living without electricity - its more or less a full time job bringing in wood, loading up the stoves, lighting them, cooking and heating water on the stove. Hard enough to do all this and work on the final phases of house reconstruction. Anyway today we more or less completed the varnishing and painting etc. to the second bedroom. Soon we'll be able to have guests, assuming they don't mind 18th century living conditions. Here's a picture of Enita hard at work.
Speaking for myself I, like most of the residents ot the UK, take having electricity at the flick of a switch completely for granted. Here it is like a gift, we almost cheer when our half hour ration arrives. Our relationship with KEK is

perhaps like that of victim to torturer, we are pleased with them when they stop our torment and bring us light. We run around doing all the jobs that need power - boiling water, sanding down woodwork, drilling holes etc before it goes off again. Reading at night is such a luxury.
Finally another picture, the house with a view looking south and up towards the Sharr Mountians. This is why we stay here and put up with no electricity - the mountains.