• #2,821
Can anyone clarify the temperature in Celsius across the days and nights the week the kids went missing? I imagine that it was cold and damp in the trailer. Perhaps there were times they slept in the vehicle for heat? Carbon monoxide poisoning in the car or trailer?
 
  • #2,822
Can anyone clarify the temperature in Celsius across the days and nights the week the kids went missing? I imagine that it was cold and damp in the trailer. Perhaps there were times they slept in the vehicle for heat? Carbon monoxide poisoning in the car or trailer?
If you give me the dates, I can ask Chatgpt for the historical weather.
 
  • #2,823
Thanks for remembering me but I don’t recall any of Maleyha’s family members mentioning visits to the trailer, where she lived prior to the children’s disappearance.
Same
 
  • #2,824
Can anyone clarify the temperature in Celsius across the days and nights the week the kids went missing? I imagine that it was cold and damp in the trailer. Perhaps there were times they slept in the vehicle for heat? Carbon monoxide poisoning in the car or trailer?

The kids went missing when NS was beginning to see Springlike temperatures. They just came out of winter and the snow was beginning to melt. Conditions were perfect for kids to play outside after a long winter and put some ground under their feet.

I very, very much doubt that they would sleep in the vehicles for warmth. Firewood for the wood burning stove is free. Vehicle fuel is expensive.
 
  • #2,825
  • #2,826
  • #2,827
The kids went missing when NS was beginning to see Springlike temperatures. They just came out of winter and the snow was beginning to melt. Conditions were perfect for kids to play outside after a long winter and put some ground under their feet.

I very, very much doubt that they would sleep in the vehicles for warmth. Firewood for the wood burning stove is free. Vehicle fuel is expensive.
I was thinking more along the lines of how you can keep a car warm with a candle in the case of an emergency. During a brutal ice storm in Ontario and Quebec years ago, power was out for days. A number of people died from carbon monoxide poisoning bc they heated their places with bbqs, heaters, etc. Firewood is free, but some woodstoves don’t throw heat very far, it may not have been sufficient to heat the whole trailer.
 
  • #2,828
I was thinking more along the lines of how you can keep a car warm with a candle in the case of an emergency. During a brutal ice storm in Ontario and Quebec years ago, power was out for days. A number of people died from carbon monoxide poisoning bc they heated their places with bbqs, heaters, etc. Firewood is free, but some woodstoves don’t throw heat very far, it may not have been sufficient to heat the whole trailer.

Oh, I am sure that a wood stove in a trailer would be more than sufficient, and would be usable even during power outages. During the Ice Storm, folks who had wood stoves did quite well. Wood heat is really wonderful, comfortable and warm. You can cook on the wood stove, or dry your boots and mittens.

There are lots of safety standards for wood stoves in mobile homes to prevent accidents.
 
  • #2,829
If someone suffered from CO2 poisoning, would not the first thing to do is call emergency? I guess I may not be following what you're getting at.
 

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