Unopened Fridges Become Boxes of Horror

Amused

Elite Member
Apr 14, 2001
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Unopened Fridges Become Boxes of Horror
Cleaning Refrigerator Is One of Most Hated Post-Katrina Task
By ROBERT TANNER, AP

NEW ORLEANS (Oct. 2) - Once, before the floods, the refrigerator held savory breakfasts, midnight leftovers, cold beer. Now it's a box of horrors in the kitchen.

Across the flood-ravaged city, refrigerators spent a month sitting silent and dark, baking in the 90-degree heat. Now, as homes and restaurants are cleaned out, tens of thousands of appliances are releasing a gag-inducing stench of rancid shrimp, sulfurous eggs, rotting fruit and putrid meat.

It is an invisible but unavoidable cloud floating in the breeze, faint on some blocks, so potent on others that passers-by have to cover their mouths. It may be most concentrated in the French Quarter, where truck-size waste containers hold the foul contents of restaurant and hotel refrigerators and freezers.

Lujene P. Kidder was determined to clean out her house, still wet from the floodwaters that rose up its walls in a working-class neighborhood called Gert Town near Xavier University. She dragged ruined furniture to the curb and salvaged treasured family photos. But her resolve failed when she turned to the kitchen.

"I'm not going to touch the refrigerator. Just put it outside," she said, her voice muffled by a surgical mask. "Maggots," she said with a shiver of disgust.

On some streets, closed fridges sit on curbs or lie on their sides, some taped shut so their stomach-turning smells - and worse - cannot escape. There is no regular municipal garbage pickup yet in the hard-hit neighborhoods.

"The smell of opening the freezers and refrigerator compartments doesn't compare to anything I've smelled in medicine," said Dr. Brobson Lutz, the city's former health director and a French Quarter resident. "And that's worse than when I worked one summer at a New York medical school and had to autopsy bodies that floated up during July and August in the East River."

The refrigerators and their contents add just one more odor to New Orleans' all-out olfactory assault.

New Orleans is a ripe-smelling town at the best of times. But Katrina coated yards, cars, houses and just about everything else with a film of dried muck that smells like low tide multiplied by 10.

Health officials have warned of dangers from the floodwaters, which contain sewage, garbage, spilled oil and other chemicals, and the possibility of corpses. The refrigerators and their contents, however, do not pose any real health dangers, Lutz said, except if someone "with a queasy stomach" were to faint and hit his head.

"The milk was the least of it," said artist Alex Beard, whose home is in the Garden District. "I went in basically with a gas mask and a big vat of ammonia. I had maggots dripping out of my ice."

He recommended others not follow his example. "Don't even open it. If you have your grandmother's ring in the freezer, leave it there," he said. "Duct-tape up the creases and pay somebody to haul it out to the street."

Across town in the devastated Ninth Ward, Tamyra Bacchus ventured right in. Or she tried to. She lifted the lid of a garage freezer and jumped back, driven onto her heels by the odor. She turned aside and retched, and then retched again.

Her fiance, Durel Wallace, shook his head. Thirty feet away, the rancid blast of smells made him scrunch up his face. He shook his head. He asked: "Why did she open it?"
 

damonpip

Senior member
Mar 11, 2003
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My grandfather moved back a few days ago and immediately disposed of both of his fridges.
 

xSauronx

Lifer
Jul 14, 2000
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i remember cleaning out a fridge that hadnt had power for a number of days once.

not

cool.
 

AnitaPeterson

Diamond Member
Apr 24, 2001
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I wonder what's going to happen next with them? Surely, you put it on the curb, it's not your problem anymore - theoretically at least. And then? Will these fridges - and all they contain, from drugs to decomposing organic matter - be taken to the dump? Is there a dump big enough to accomodate all this? What about toxic gases? And I don't mean the smell, I'm talking about freon and many other dangerous things?

Taking these to a dump site will probably be a very dangerous move - and so would burying them, if they can leak and contaminate the water tables.
 

Eli

Super Moderator | Elite Member
Oct 9, 1999
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Oh God, I can only imagine. :Q

I opened a second fridge at my girlfriends house once. As soon as I grabbed the handle, everybody lept up, plugged their noses and shouted "NOEESSSSSSSS!!!!". But it was too late.

The stench.. OMG.. THE STENCH.

It was a fridge full of salmon & other hunted meats that somehow had the power cut to it for the last week or so.

Ugh, I think I need to go shower just thinking about it.
 

DrPizza

Administrator Elite Member Goat Whisperer
Mar 5, 2001
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www.slatebrookfarm.com
I've offered to everyone I know 2 free freezers... when we bought this house, there were 2 nearly new freezers in the milk room of the barn. Unfortunately, they had been full of meat and other unidentifiable stuff, and had been unplugged for between 2 and 3 years. The smell is enough to make most people start vomitting or dry heaving. The dump won't take them unless they're clean. I won't clean them. So, the room goes completely unused. (until January when I think it'll be cold enough that everything will be a frozen lump which I can dump out in the woods miles from my house)
 

conehead433

Diamond Member
Dec 4, 2002
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Originally posted by: 2cpuminimum
Lesson: If you ever have to evacuate, take all the food in your fridge with you.

And prop both the fridge and freezer doors open.

 

Eli

Super Moderator | Elite Member
Oct 9, 1999
50,419
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Originally posted by: DrPizza
I've offered to everyone I know 2 free freezers... when we bought this house, there were 2 nearly new freezers in the milk room of the barn. Unfortunately, they had been full of meat and other unidentifiable stuff, and had been unplugged for between 2 and 3 years. The smell is enough to make most people start vomitting or dry heaving. The dump won't take them unless they're clean. I won't clean them. So, the room goes completely unused. (until January when I think it'll be cold enough that everything will be a frozen lump which I can dump out in the woods miles from my house)
hmm, 2-3 years is a pretty long time...

Stuff in there's gotta be close to being dirt by now? lol
 

Codegen

Banned
Jul 25, 2005
516
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lol, reminds today at school.

There was a bucked of I-don't-know-and-don't-want-to-know (It was chunky and gray, that's all I know). It just about became the puke bucket for several who went by.
 

AnitaPeterson

Diamond Member
Apr 24, 2001
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How hard is it to don a gas mask, rubber gloves and apron, and use a high-pressure hose for several hours, along with liberal doses of detergent?
 

rh71

No Lifer
Aug 28, 2001
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but but... they should remove the doors so kids won't get themselves trapped in them!
 

Whisper

Diamond Member
Feb 25, 2000
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Yeah, some of the evacuees here in BR have gone back to NO to clean out their homes. None of the ones I know have even attempted to open their refridgerators. Tape 'em up and toss 'em.
 

Viper0329

Platinum Member
Oct 12, 2000
2,769
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I snuck into Lake Charles 4 days after Rita to clean out both of our fridges. That's by far the worst stench I've ever enountered. I've got a strong stomach, and mine was churning. I can't imagine waiting 3-4 weeks...
 

slick230

Banned
Jan 31, 2003
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Originally posted by: AnitaPeterson
I wonder what's going to happen next with them? Surely, you put it on the curb, it's not your problem anymore - theoretically at least. And then? Will these fridges - and all they contain, from drugs to decomposing organic matter - be taken to the dump? Is there a dump big enough to accomodate all this? What about toxic gases? And I don't mean the smell, I'm talking about freon and many other dangerous things?

Taking these to a dump site will probably be a very dangerous move - and so would burying them, if they can leak and contaminate the water tables.

Put them all on a barge and sink them in the Gulf.