SLIGHTLY OFF THE MARK
I recently
received an e-mail from a local utility company informing me that September is
Emergency Preparedness Month.
I got it on
October 1st. I guess they just weren’t prepared.
Still, it’s
an appropriate follow up to Fire Prevention Week, and a reminder would be good
for us any time of the year, not just when I’m working on deadline. I mean, the
Feds shut down, so it’s not like they’re going to show up if somebody drops
Mentos into the local Coke bottling plant and your town is overwhelmed by a
fizz flood.
Which I
believe is an upcoming SyFy Channel original movie.
The thing
is, most of the things you should do to prepare for a disaster are good for any disaster, so it’s not like you have
to specialize. Your emergency kit is going to have much of the same stuff
whether you’re cut off by a blizzard, flood, tornado, or all at the same time,
which in Indiana isn’t impossible. The other day vacuum cleaner salesmen
rampaged through Albion, but I was prepared to hide out for days in my
basement. If Churubusco was attacked by a herd of angry turtles …
Wait, let
me check something ....
Huh. If
Churubusco was attacked by a turn of
angry turtles (who knew?), or if Huntertown was attacked by a mob of …um …
hunters, you’re still going to need to eat, drink, stay warm, and listen for
alerts from the Emergency Broadcast system:
“The Center
for Disease Control reminds you to keep fingers and toes away from angry
reptiles … and wear orange.”
So create a
disaster plan, build an emergency kit, learn first aid and CPR, and for crying
out loud, tell no one that you
stockpiled a year’s supply of chocolate. People have killed for less.
Here are
some of the things you should have in your emergency kit:
One gallon
of water for every person, per day. Remember, if the power goes out for an
extended period of time, the water supply could be affected. Or the water
supply could be contaminated by zombies, or angry turtles, or angry turtle
zombies. You should keep a two week supply, which in my house would mean 28
gallons if you include the dog. I have my water in jugs labeled “fuel”, and
fuel in jugs labeled “water”. Somebody steals from me, they’ll get a nasty
surprise.
A two week
supply of non-perishable, easy to prepare food—you might not have gas or
electricity. Got cans? Great. Got an electric can opener?
I have two
fifty pound bags of dog food. Hey, it’s good stuff, very nutritious. Makes
gravy with water.
A
flashlight and battery powered radio. And here’s a crazy idea—batteries. They
make hand cranked versions of both, but I figure I’ll be cranky enough after
two weeks without The Big Bang Theory.
Yeah, no
TV. Panicked, yet? Get some books.
A first aid
kit. It should contain stuff for first aid.
A week’s
worth of your favorite medications. If you get stuck with kids in a home
without TV, internet, or video games, you’ll need to be medicated.
Personal
hygiene items. Let your imagination do the walking.
Cell phones
and chargers, and since we covered the electricity thing, keep those cell
phones charged. They usually work even when the electricity goes out, so at
least you’ll have Candy Crush.
Emergency
contact information and personal documents. That way you can call people with
those cell phones to let them know you hit level 80.
Extra cash.
I don’t know, find some. I usually keep at least two dollars in my couch
cushions.
An
emergency blanket. Yes, you should have blankets around the house, but have one
packed in your kit in case you have to run for it. On a related note, you might
want to keep maps of the area in case you’re one of those people who gets into
a rut, only takes one way out of town, and finds that one way blocked by
something truly terrifying, like road construction or mimes.
A
multi-purpose tool. You’d be surprised how handy those can be. I’d throw in a
roll of duct tape, too, since that stuff is handy for almost everything and can
also be used to quiet down the kids after the fifth or sixth day.
Personally,
I’ve also got a huge supply of candles and—on a not unrelated note—a fire
extinguisher. Candles have some advantages, but rarely do homes get set on fire
by flashlights.
While you
may need a few more items to drive off zombies, vampires, and politicians (but
I repeat myself), the basic stuff really is good for just about any disaster or
emergency. Here in Indiana it’s not unheard of to have blizzard and tornado
warnings in the same month, and don’t get me started on the Great SnowFire
Tornado during the Drought of ’88. If you want to get serious about it (and you
should) try going to a website with fewer jokes, but a lot more information:
And be
prepared. ‘Cause I’m not letting anybody
near my stockpile of chocolate.
Turtles are sweet but it's still good to be prepared.
ReplyDeleteOh, are they? I've never had turtle soup.
Delete;-)
Turtles can get pretty angry, pretty fast, when they're snappers!
ReplyDeleteThat's for sure!
DeleteGet information I don't want the zombie turtles to get my stockpile of chocolate!
ReplyDeleteYeah, and those things are hard to kill!
DeleteGreat article but as usual I loved the humor in it. I am a little frightened of the mentos in the coke processing plant though. I can see that all too vividly.
ReplyDeleteMaybe I spend too much time dreaming up unusual disasters ...
Delete