Every day this week, Molly Aichele and her family have lugged five-gallon buckets of water from a neighbor's home and stocked up on bottled water so they can wash their hair, brush their teeth and flush their toilet.
The Aicheles are one of three families on their Roseville block whose water pipes have frozen as this bitter winter wears on.
In the metro area and around the state, officials are reporting "a high number of frozen pipes," according to Craig Johnson of the League of Minnesota Cities.
Large pipes maintained by cities, many of them decades old, are freezing, some of them cracking and bursting, as the result of the frost line burrowing deeper this year, and homeowners are having the same problem with the smaller lines that run from curbsides into their homes. It's not a problem likely to go away soon, with frigid days forecast for well into next week.
Aichele, 52, who has been sick and stuck at her waterless home this week, has had to be creative, getting by with bottled water and borrowed buckets. Her family is using disposable utensils and plates to avoid washing dishes. Hand sanitizer is used in lieu of hand-washing. And Aichele boils water and mixes it with cold water to use in the shower.
"It's kind of gross," she said. "It's weird — who ever thought about not having water?"
One of her daughters discovered the water wasn't working Sunday. On Wednesday, city workers tried to use a hot-water system to thaw the line, but it didn't work. So the family will have to hire a contractor to help with the fix, which Aichele guesses won't come cheap.
In Roseville, service lines from water mains to homes have been the most troublesome this season, said Marc Culver, assistant public works director and city engineer. About 55 service lines have frozen in the city this winter, more than 20 of which were not thawed as of Wednesday morning.