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HIGH-DESERT LIVING

Surviving Winter in the High Desert

Tell someone you live in Arizona and they picture cactus and 110-degree heat. Then January comes, the snow falls, and the pipes freeze. The high desert has real winters, and a little preparation is the difference between cozy and miserable.

Wait — Arizona gets cold?

At 5,000–7,000 feet, absolutely. Up here you get four real seasons, and winter brings hard freezes and snow. Nighttime lows well below freezing are normal, and a good storm can leave you snowed in on dirt roads for a day or two. Plan like a mountain dweller, not a desert one.

Heat: have more than one source

Keep water from freezing — the big one

Frozen and burst pipes are the classic high-desert winter disaster. Protect your water:

Remember: out here a frozen tank can mean no water at all until it thaws. Freeze protection is survival, not just convenience.

Vehicles and roads

Power and home

Solar produces less in winter — shorter days and a lower sun — right when you may want more power. Size for it and keep a generator handy. Seal drafts, add insulation where you can, and hang heavy curtains; the cheapest heat is the heat you don't lose.

Stock up before the storm

Keep two weeks of food, water, propane, firewood, medications, and pet and livestock supplies on hand. If you have animals, plan for heated water and wind shelter. When you're far from town, being snowed in should be an inconvenience, not an emergency.

General preparedness information based on high-desert living experience, not professional advice. Follow manufacturer instructions for heaters and generators, and never run fuel-burning equipment indoors.

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