On Father's Day, I woke up to discover the power had gone off at 12:39 am during a storm with severe winds. Later learned that straight line winds were clocked in excess of 100 mph. I went outside and was pleasantly surprised to see my roof looking just like it did after the re-roof in April - no visible damage! Yeah!

Had significant damage to 3 trees that required cleaning up, including dropping one tree. I have spent several hours almost every morning since 6/18 running the chain saw, cutting and hauling brush to the green waste site, and cutting and stacking brush for pickup at curbside. Finished that process this morning.
Of course, with that much chain saw work, I needed to spend some time in the shop tweaking the chainsaw.
Went out to the shop to work on the chainsaw (clean and sharpen chain) and was greeted with a flickering light fixture. Since it was over where I clamp the chainsaw to work on it, I thought I should first take care of that problem. Hauled a couple of new fluorescent bulbs out of the attic and installed them only to discover that apparently the ballast had given up the ghost. Looked around the shop and remembered the last time I had a ballast go, I had invested in LED bulbs and conversion bits to change an 8' flour. fixture to 4-4' LED fixture with ballast bypass. Seemed like I remembered buying enough to convert 2 fixtures and only 1 had been converted, so I found the bits I needed to convert this fixture.
That is when the fun started. If I had been paid for every trip up and down the ladder (caused by dropping the screws I was using), I could have eaten out for a week. I prevailed and got the fixture converted.

Of course, while all this was going on, I pulled my phone out of my pocket and thought it looked a bit strange:

Took it apart and removed the swelling battery and ordered a replacement phone.
I was lucky that I was only out of power for 42 hours and only lost a few refrigerated items of food plus the contents of the freezer compartment of the refrigerator. I saved my chest freezer contents. As of last night, some people in the metropolitan area were still without power - 8 days after the storm.