Every year at Christmas now I think about Christmas 8 years ago when I nearly died with my wife, child and in-laws.

I share this every year over on the Bird Site and will share it here now.

It was Christmas Eve. 9 year old was just 1. We were staying at my in-laws who had an acreage just outside Red Deer at the time. We went to bed a bit late but the night was good. 1 year old wasn’t up too much.

Around 4AM or so an alarm starts blaring, waking us up.

My in-laws smoke alarm was notoriously sensitive. It would go off every second time you made toast. So this wasn’t unusual. In my sleepy haze I assumed someone was making early morning toast and set off the smoke alarm again.

So I stumble out of the room, grab a towel and start waving it at the smoke alarm like an idiot. It takes me a moment to register that we’re sleeping in the basement. Why would the alarm go off here for toast?

I look closer at the alarm. Is it even going off?

I climb on a chair and look closer at it. I pull it right off the ceiling and hold it in my hand. It’s not going off. What the hell is making that noise? I can’t locate it.

My wife heads upstairs to get her parents to figure this out.

My father-in-law comes down and seems confused. We search around. In the corner there’s a white rectangular box plugged into the wall. It looks like it’s 30 years old. All the markings are worn off. Father-in-law unplugs it & it immediately shuts off.

“What’s that?”

“Carbon monoxide detector.”

He plugs it back in and it doesn’t turn back on. “So what does that mean?”

We all stare at it for what seems like a long time. The alarm isn’t restarting. My wife, the only one with brains, “Shouldn’t we leave?”

Me, a god damn idiot, “Look how old it is. Did it malfunction?”

My wife, again, the only smart one, “I’m leaving with the baby.”

That knocked the stupidity out of me. Where was the baby? He was still sleeping. “Why did the baby sleep through that alarm?”

We get the baby out. Don’t worry, baby was fine. He was just tired. It was -30 outside that night. We haul him out in his sleep sack, turn on the car, and sit inside with him while we wait for the fire truck.

The Red Deer County Volunteer Fire Department came rolling in early that Christmas morning. Left their families in the middle of the night. Determined it wasn’t a fire. Called the gas guy. Poor guy went to bed at 2AM after wrapping presents for his kids all night.

I can’t remember exactly what went wrong but they’d been having trouble with the furnace all year. It kept shutting off. Later we found out poplar fuzz was clogging the intake vent but that wasn’t the whole thing.

Regardless, they determined the CO levels by the time they got there were up at critical levels. They turned off the furnace and aired out the house. We had Christmas breakfast from the McDonalds drive through. Poor 1 year old peed through his diaper because we didn’t have an extra.

Every year I think about that one CO detector. Apparently the only one my father-in-law had in the house. Super old. Never checked.

Had it not been for that, we all might’ve died in our sleep Christmas morning 8 years ago. Myself, my wife, my son, and my in-laws.

Here’s the crazier part. Remember how my wife had to go upstairs to get her parents? That’s because the CO alarm in the basement wasn’t loud enough to wake them up in their room with the door closed.

No one slept in the basement except us when we came to visit.

So if that furnace malfunction had happened ‘any’ other night but Christmas Eve, they might have died in their sleep having never heard the alarm.

I also think about the volunteer fire department and the gas guy (think it was ATCO) leaving their house at 4 or 5AM Christmas morning to come help us out. Community workers are on call again tonight and every night.

Anyways, I have like 5 CO detectors in my house now. My in-laws do too. We’re all good. Lived through Christmas and many Christmases since.

So if I may ‘dad’ you all for a minute: Check your smoke alarms and your CO alarms. Have one at every level.

Also, if you’re stupid like me, marry someone with brains and listen to the damn alarm immediately.

Merry Christmas and hug your loved ones!

@wheatnoil Oh yikes! Thanks for sharing. Glad for the reminder. Merry Christmas!

@wheatnoil And check your outdoor furnace vents and make sure they are free from snow and ice.

#WInter #SnowDrifts #OnStorm #CarbonDioxide

@gemelliz @wheatnoil My furnace vents yesterday morning. The intake is buried.
@wheatnoil Isn’t confusion and slow thinking part of CO poisoning? If that sucker goes off, assume you’re too compromised to think clearly and it’s time clear out asap and call the pros. Provided your brain still works.
@DonnaG @wheatnoil
The beeping of my monitor made me dizzy and tired, so I took out the batteries.
(jk, btw)
@wheatnoil Thank you. I needed to read this. I thought I had a carbon monoxide detector but realised that I didn't. I've just ordered one.

@wheatnoil

A very good lesson, thanks for sharing!

I invite my followers to read the whole thread.

A combined CO/smoke sensor now can be found for less than $50, a lot cheaper than a coffin…

@wheatnoil What a horrible AND heartwarming story at the same time. Thank you for sharing it. I just replaced the batteries for all the smoke and CO detectors at home. I was going to do it next weekend, but after reading your story, decided not to wait another week.
@wheatnoil Thank you for sharing. And I hope your family and your in-laws are having a good Christmas today.
@wheatnoil I put in a pair of Nest Protects in the house in late November.
@wheatnoil
This really made me hold my breath!
Happy ending fortunately, and lesson learned. So happy you all were this lucky.

Merry Christmas to you and yes! Hug them 🎄
@wheatnoil
And a special merry Christmas for the volunteer fire department and the gas guy and other people like them, never out of duty, hoping they had enough sleep and could unwrap the Xmas gifts with their children this year :)
@wheatnoil Stay safe. Merry Christmas. ❤️🎄🎁✨️
@wheatnoil What a narrow escape. 😩 Thank you so much for sharing the story!
@wheatnoil I'm looking forwards to the day when none of us have gas in our houses and the CO monitor no longer needs to be a thing
@silasmariner @wheatnoil actually my father had a CO incident at his company a few years back. They used wooden pellets for heating and for some reason those got wet and started rotting. Rotting pellets slowly filled the whole cellar of the building with CO.
@trav_tan @silasmariner @wheatnoil yep. I witnessed a CO explosion once because a wire burned in an enclosed underground space. It shot a manhole cover about 30 feet into the air.
@wheatnoil Amazing story. Glad you’re here to tell it.
@wheatnoil volunteer life protection workers of all kinds are real world super heroes!!
@wheatnoil I worked at a hardware store where a woman came in with a CO2 detector she had bought that morning.
“It doesn’t work “ she said.
How can you tell?
“I put the batteries in and the alarm went off “.
Have you felt tired or sick recently?
“I have, for over a week. My son told me to buy a detector”.
It’s working , don’t go back in you house, it’s full of CO2. Call the fire department first.
I never saw her again. I sometimes think of her.
@wheatnoil Reminds me of Valentine's Days several years ago. Wife and I were awakened to fire alarm. We'd left a candle burning, and hot wax had dripped down and caught a box of matches on fire, and set fire to the wall. Minor damage only, thanks to the alarm. Now, I check the batteries of my smoke detector every Valentine's Day.
@wheatnoil I'm glad you are here to share this story!! CO2 is scary stuff
@wheatnoil Thank you for the warning and excellent advice. One alternative: heat pump HVAC/water heater + electric appliances. No combustion = no CO risk.
@dgoldsmith @wheatnoil locally heat pump systems are +$5k and two companies told us they'd only make economic sense if we had rooftop solar, which we also can't afford
@olavf @wheatnoil Replacing a perfectly functional HVAC system with a heat pump system is not something most people can afford to do. If you need to replace it anyway, I don’t know why you’d need solar to make it economical. Heat pumps are way more energy efficient.
@dgoldsmith @wheatnoil eh, we replaced with what we could afford (even with help from my folks). Anything's better than the 30yo system we had.
@dgoldsmith @olavf @wheatnoil is heat pump more efficient when it’s freezing outside? I’ve noticed that the heat pump seems to stop working as well when temps get very low.

@unsaturated @olavf @wheatnoil
Here’s an article from Consumer Reports. It’s important to choose the right kind of heat pump for your climate, and have it installed by someone who knows what they’re doing. For very cold climates, ground-source heat pumps work great too, but are more expensive. Most people can use air-source heat pumps, though.

https://www.consumerreports.org/heat-pumps/can-heat-pumps-actually-work-in-cold-climates-a4929629430/

Can Heat Pumps Actually Work in Cold Climates?

Consumer Reports looked into the mixed messages about whether modern heat pumps can truly replace traditional heating in cold climates. Here's what we found.

Consumer Reports

@dgoldsmith @wheatnoil

Well, yes, heat pumps are great and all but:

1) Approx 2010, an apartment bldg near where I worked got filled w CO, despite being all electric, bc something involving a tunnel under the building (!). State mandates CO detectors, everyone got out fine.

2) I had an all electric apartment in what I thought was an all electric bldg. I had lived there more than 20 years bf I discovered the first floor had gas heat.

Get a CO detector anyway.

@wheatnoil earlier this year our furnace died in winter. We went down and checked it out and the pilot light was out. We relit it and it worked again for a while but then shut off.

It was a Saturday and we managed to get a guy out. He did some work and got it up and running...until it shut off overnight. We couldn't get it to stay on, and we couldn't get anyone out until Monday.

Monday a new guy came and it turns out our furnace was shutting off due to a safety failsafe- the first guy hadn't actually checked and just reset it. They had to disable our furnace until they could get a new one in and installed because it was already leaking detectable levels of CO in the basement. So thank God our furnace wouldnt turn back on Sunday or we might have died!!

Stupidly, we didn't even have CO detectors until then. Always have tested, working detectors!!

@wheatnoil wow!!!! What a story!! I’m going to check my alarms
@wheatnoil Incredible story, and certainly a lesson for everyone.
@wheatnoil and mount it LOW. Carbon monoxide is HEAVIER than air, it sinks! I often see CO monitors mounted high on the walls or even on the ceiling, when it's gathering down near the floor.
@Katzedecimal @wheatnoil I did not know that. Thank you. I shall move mine now 👍
@Katzedecimal @wheatnoil No. Carbon Dioxide is heavier than air. Carbon Monoxide is slightly lighter than air. Vapor density of 0.97 as compared to air's 1. So if you have to worry about carbon dioxide then low would be good but you are mixing up two different gases. However it's close enough to diffuse through the room evenly, so you should be OK no matter what height it is at.
@wheatnoil A true Holiday miracle. Thank you for sharing!
@wheatnoil
Thanks for sharing! We'll place one.
@wheatnoil my old boss at J&J died of CO poisoning in a hotel room. Make sure you ask hotels if they have detectors.
@wheatnoil Thank you for sharing this. Your experience will save others.

@wheatnoil We had a 15yo smoke detector age-out and start false-alarming on us a few weeks ago. Discovered all the wired smoke detectors were of a brand that got bought by Kidde, and the old detectors weren't manufactured any more; I could try my luck with a compatibility kit replacing all the old detectors, but that seemed like an unbelievable hassle that would just come back again in a decade.

So I replaced them all with Nest Protect detectors that combine Smoke and carbon monoxide. Have them in every bedroom, and hallway, and the basement besides. When MIL set one off making bacon, every detector in the house told us where the food was happening. Couldn't be happier.

(Disclaimer: I work for Google, who owns the Nest brand. This is my personal opinion and choice on this product.)

@wheatnoil that is one of the craziest CO stories i've ever heard, and i'm glad you're still here to tell it

my sister was hospitalized with CO toxicity when i was 7 years old, and i will never forget it. my father learned never to monkey around with the furnace after that.

@wheatnoil I'd say something like that was just a miracle. Good thing you were there at the time.
@wheatnoil I've been worried for days about people who normally don't deal with cold. They also don't know if you start combustibles in your home, you're likely to generate carbon monoxide. This means gas-powered heaters.
@wheatnoil Great story. You make me happy I don't have a furnace. Our winter heat & summer cooking comes from a small HVAC outside the house. No CO.
@wheatnoil our smoke alarm near the kitchen has always been silly sensitive. we sued to have a CO monitor upstairs between our bedrooms but not anymore. i think it was just old and so they got rid of it. i don't know you but am SO glad all of you got out safely. that's terrifying!