
Whole-Home Generator
Back up the entire panel — central air, pumps, the whole house — through a Bayou Cane hurricane outage.
Read moreBayou Cane — the unincorporated area on the edge of Houma, effectively part of the same market. Suburban Terrebonne Parish homes where the whole-home-versus-essential decision is exactly what we help with.
Bayou Cane housing is suburban Terrebonne Parish single-family, much of it on central air with well or sump pumps. Both whole-home and essential-circuit standby units are common, decided by the load calc and the budget. Nothing unusual in the build — just a steady, close-in service area.
Calls cluster after hurricane-season outages and through the spring planning window, with a steady baseline given how close Bayou Cane sits to our Houma base.

Back up the entire panel — central air, pumps, the whole house — through a Bayou Cane hurricane outage.
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Back up only the fridge, a well or sump pump, an AC zone, and a few outlets — for less.
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The automatic switch that stops back-feed and puts the house on generator power, permitted and inspected.
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Oil, battery, and exercise-cycle service so the unit actually starts the night the grid drops.
Read moreTell us the Bayou Cane house — square footage, AC size, pumps, and what you cannot lose in an outage. We talk through whole-home vs essential-circuit on the phone — no charge.
We come out, run the load calculation, check the panel and the gas-line capacity, and confirm the unit, fuel, and a firm number in writing before anything starts.
Pull the local electrical permit, set the generator, run the fuel, wire the automatic transfer switch, and connect to the panel — to code.
Pass inspection, run the unit, set the exercise cycle, and walk you through exactly how it carries the house. You sign off only when it's right.
Free phone quote and a real load calculation. A few minutes tells you whole-home or essential-circuit — and we're honest about when a portable is enough.