Posted: 2024-05-06 23:16:26

For the first time in four months, disability support recipient Michelle Ryder has doors on her house again. 

But as temperatures drop below zero degrees Celsius in her Riverland home, the immunocompromised 54-year-old will have to make an impossible choice — to heat her home or to eat.

Ms Ryder's front door was in January shattered by vandals, who left the back door in a similar state of disrepair.

From then up until just last month, she used a sheet to try and keep out some of the harsh weather.

A brown door made out of old crate wood is opened half way. There are gaps in the door with nails holding it together.

Ms Ryder did not have a front door for more than four months until a friend built her one out of pallets.(ABC Riverland: Amelia Walters)

"The back door now just has one piece of glass left that it normally would, and I have had to board the rest up myself," Ms Ryder said.

Ms Ryder now has some protection from the elements thanks to a friend who used wooden pallets to make her a new front door.

Most nights, the disability support pensioner layers up her clothing and cuddles her two-year-old American Staffordshire terrier named Budiful to keep herself warm.

Black American Staffy sits on her pink fluff bed as her owners hands pat her in the background. Purple socks stand beside her

Ms Ryder says Budiful feels the cold just as much as she does.(ABC Riverland: Amelia Walters)

"In winter we go to bed early because it is so cold, that way we can snuggle and keep warm," she said.

"I've noticed over the past few nights since having the wooden door it has been less drafty, but there are still bits of cold that come through."

As someone who is immunocompromised and suffers from connective tissue disease, staying warm is a priority. 

A close-up of a brown wooden front door that is kept together by siler nails. There are gaps in the planks

The gaps in Ms Ryder's front door let in the cold winter nights.(ABC Riverland: Amelia Walters)

But with Loxton's minimum temperature during winter sitting at 4C, she worried about the winter to come.

"If you need to use the heating system, [I have to] cut back on shopping because it is so expensive," Ms Ryder said.

"I average between $200 and $300 a month for power, and that's with me being conservative.

"It's a struggle. Most fortnights I pay $25 onto my electricity bills just so they don't cut me off." 

Similar experiences across Australia

According to the Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water, Australians use 40 per cent of their energy on heating and cooling.

The data follows the most recent Australian Energy Regulator's report, which showed the first quarter of electricity prices for 2024 were higher than the preceding quarter in all regions across Australia.

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