Wow! I couldn't figure out why hot dry weather would cause power interruptions...never realized they were turning it off intentionally to minimize fire risk. Very interesting; do you know if this is an automated system, or is it manually disconnected? I'm thinking it must be automated in order for it to be at all effective.
Here in my region of Canuckistan temps are cooling rapidly. Nighttime lows are around 5C, daytime only 15C some days but still plenty of 25+ days as well. There are frost warnings just to the west of us now.
I have been emptying my outdoor stock tanks and dragging the fish indoors for the past couple days; lots of work but rewarding as well. The drainage ditch alongside the country road on which I live is large, probably 5 feet deep and easily 15 feet wide, and the extensive flooding this year kept it well full until the past week or so. As the water levels finally dropped, I went down to the end of my driveway to clear the cattails and other plant debris away from the upstream side of the big culvert under my driveway. As I worked, I was noticing some splashing and activity in the shallow and now-muddy water; I thought it might be Sticklebacks, which have managed to make it this far upstream in the ditch several times in wetter years before; this ditch drains directly into Lake Winnipeg, roughly 20km away.
Naturally, I had to check it out. I found Sticklebacks...as well as Fat-head Minnows, at least two other unidentified species of dace or chub, several Central Mudminnows, at least a dozen common Carp ranging in size from about 4 to over 6 inches...and a single Pike, over a foot long!
I'm sure that at least some of these fish made it into that location by going overland during the floods...based largely upon the fact that I captured a couple of Sticklebacks in the middle of my yard earlier this summer...