You're in the northeast... does your house have heating oil? I'm assuming so if you don't have gas. If so, you can get a diesel generator and run it off the heating oil tank (they're the same fuel). . .
At least in NY, the power seems to hardly ever go out, and when it does it's usually for less than 24 hours.
Huh, and HUH?
For one thing, I have a diesel generator at work (megawatt sized). I can assure you that diesel fuel is NOT #2 home heating oil.
You can use diesel fuel to heat your house, but using heating oil to run a diesel generator will significantly shorten the lifetime of a VERY expensive investment (diesel generators are much more costly than propane, upfront).
I suppose you could just keep your heating fuel tank full of off-road diesel so as to only have one tank, but it does cost a bit more than heating oil.
Diesel fuel also can go bad in storage (it is nowhere near the issue that gasoline suffers from, but it can and does happen). If you have diesel, you must monitor the quality of the fuel, at least annually.
Propane will store pretty much forever (or at least until your tank rusts through), even long after the odorant settles out.
As for power not going out in NY:
At work, after hurricane Irene, we were out for just under 4 days. Since we are a medium voltage customer, our circuit had priority over residential low voltage circuits, in the after-storm triage situation, and was fixed pretty quickly.
At home, after hurricane Irene, I was making a trip to the gas station every morning for 7 days. The first few days were awful. I had to drive past dozens of gas stations that either had no power (so they couldn't pump gas), no gas, or no phone line to accept credit cards (so they just closed, and didn't even bother to accept cash). I was filling every gas can I had, but stores were completely sold out of gas cans for days (I now have enough cans that I can fill up and run for about three days).
A winter storm in February 2011 (just a few months before Irene) left me in the house with a newborn (home from the hospital just a couple of days) without power. Having a generator was the only way I could keep the heat running in my home for that THREE DAY power outage.
Since I bought my house in 2005, I've had well over a dozen outages that were over 24 hours, and another dozen or so that were more than a couple of hours, that got me to start my generator. I don't have an automatic transfer switch, so when the lights go out, I let the battery backup keep the TIVO and TVs running, I reach for the flashlight, and a couple of hours later I'll start the generator to keep the fridge and freezer cold and keep the hot water hot.