Categories
Earthquake Preparedness General Preparedness Hurricane Preparedness Preparedness Planning Tornado Preparedness

Great New Product – The Ascella Bulb

As the founder of 1800prepare, LLC I am often presented with new products that people think would be perfect for the preparedness market. I also find new products on my own on the web or at trade events that I think would be great additions to our product line. Normally I get a sample of the product to see how it actually works and what makes it different from other items we already carry. In most cases the products are very similar to what we already carry. It isn’t that often that we are introduced to a product that really catches our interest.

Well….we have just recently added a new product to our site that I am really excited about. The Ascella Bulb is a very unique item that I think should be in every home and office. Quite simply…it is a light bulb that will automatically come on during a power outage and also can be removed from the socket and used as a flashlight. Power outages are something everyone has to deal with. They occur in every community and can be caused by a number of factors. While there are some things we can’t change during a power outage….remaining in the dark isn’t one of them. Whether it is just staying in your home or office or being forced to evacuate….not being able to see adds a level of stress to any situation. This can be magnified if there are children present. Currently there are a number of options we have available to deal with a power outage. We can use regular flashlight, candles, lanterns or generators if available. The Ascella bulb presents a new option that is simple to implement and use.

Simply put an Ascella bulb into any normal socket instead of your regular bulb. The bulb will act just like a regular bulb but that’s where the similarities stop. It only draws 5 watts of electricity compared to an equivalent 30 watt incandescent bulb. While the bulb is in the socket…it charges itself. If at any time the power goes out the bulb will stay illuminated for an average of 3 hours. In addition, if you need to evacuate or just simply need a flashlight you can unscrew the bulb from the socket, extend the base and now the bulb turns itself into a flashlight. You don’t need to worry about being in the dark anymore and don’t have to worry about where your flashlights are and if they have batteries. The Ascella bulb covers it all for you.

This is a very simple to use item that you should consider adding to your home. It also is great for each office at your business as it adds a level of safety and security for your employees. If you have a student going off to college….you might want to consider sending them up to school with one as well.

Please let us know your thoughts about the Ascella bulb and let your friends and colleagues know about it.

Categories
General Preparedness

Change Your Mindset – Act Now!

Preparing for a disaster is a commitment one must make to preserve a sense of calm for yourself and insure a sense of resilience in your household for at least three days. First you must stop right now and ask, “am I doing enough to safeguard myself, my family, and my property?” Chances are you are not. The majority of the US public believes that an emergency professional will attend to their needs in the first 72 hours. This is unrealistic in a major disaster or emergency, even more so if you are in a rural or overwhelmed urban setting.  Did you know that your community, local, state and federal governments are asking more from you now? In the new National Preparedness Goal, National Preparedness System and planning guides (out later this year) and FEMA’s Whole community approach, you are the center of building and sustaining capabilities for your community. Part of citizenship is taking action to prepare yourself and family for the worst and then aiding your neighbors.  Your relationships to others, in churches, associations and business groups are needed to strengthen your community. Millions of citizens across the nation are involved in learning preparedness programs in Citizen Corps, CERT and Teen CERT and the American Red Cross among others. Check within your community’s office of emergency management to learn more and join in.

Prepare with your local CERT teamSecond, if you say you are doing enough, pause, because – you may just need to get beyond the inattention because disasters are infrequent, it would not happen to you (optimism bias) and be prepared for the feeling of fatalism when you overestimate the impact an event has on you or your family.  I do not wish to see the fear, sadness, and loss in your face when I may visit to assist you like I did for others last summer in Hurricane Irene and find no insurance, improper insurance, no back-up plans, activities for children, coping skills or ideas what to do.  As a citizen, one can take independent study courses online at FEMA’s Emergency Management Institute, especially, IS-909, Community Preparedness: Implementing Simple Activities for Everyone (among many others), which includes activities, handouts and facilitator guides, in many languages, to educate yourself and your loved ones.

Third, if you are doing enough (disaster kit, supplies, etc.), are safe, and believe your family can spare you after disaster, then act for others. Stay in your neighborhood and assist. Go door to door, check on others, and offer your help. State where you are and how to reach you. You can do best for your community emergency services by staying put and funneling that restless energy into your charged iPhone or another device with internet connectivity.  Precrisis, join Twitter, and follow your local, state OEM and FEMA, CDC and others. Your local emergency management can use you as a Community Emergency Response Team member on the ground in a bottom up way. Upload pictures of damage in your neighborhood on Twitter or your local or state OEM’s Facebook page. Send iReports, storm tracking, and damage assessment help. Tweet the damage pictures by using the geolocation that already resides in Twitter and your iPhone: #wxreportWW <your location> WW <your significant weather>  .  For example, WW 5409 W. Wecker St. Lincoln, NE, 67478 WW.  Emergency management officials can use this to speed up response and recovery. Your participation in this way has value more so than risking your life and family venturing out to get a generator in the middle of a hurricane because your power went out ten minutes ago.

Prepare now, tend to your family first, then act for others.


About the author:

Ben Nicely is an aspiring emergency management professional actively seeking new career experiences. He taught 14 years in public education in Virginia, including AP Government, US Government, US History, ESL and World History from 1500. He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in Political Science with a minor in International Studies and a Masters in Teaching from Virginia Commonwealth University. He holds a graduate certificate in Homeland Security and is expected to finish a Masters in Emergency Management through American Public University by December. He consults and works with his local county Office of Emergency Management on Teen CERT and CERT program efforts and other preparedness efforts including advising on youth on Community and Disaster Education at the American Red Cross. He has taught adults in staff development and soon in CERT classes. He has been honored for use of blogs, discussion boards, Edmodo, and instructional 21st century skill based lessons at the district and school level. In his spare time, Ben enjoys running, traveling, kayaking and helping others in his community. He is married with two dogs.

My LinkedIn profile – http://www.linkedin.com/pub/ben-nicely/36/219/626
Gmail- bnnicely06@gmail.com
Follow me on Twitter- https://twitter.com/#!/bnnicely

Categories
General Preparedness Preparedness Planning Preparedness tips

Reacting instead of Preparing

Why is it that most people need something to happen before they will consider preparedness? It is amazing to me that if there is even the slightest event ie: small earthquake tremor in California, a sudden blackout and the hint of a major weather event and people scramble to purchase the items they need. We see the traffic increase on our site and the phone rings off the hook with people who need/want their preparedness kit NOW!!!

A few days after the event…and things go back to normal. It’s as if people forgot it even happened. Then another thing happens and people go right back to scrambling. Why is it that we don’t heed the lessons from the first situation we were not prepared for an make it a priority to get ourselves better prepared? Why do we feel the need to procrastinate and then rush at the last minute?

Here are a few things I can assure you of:

1. Another event will happen. It may be small or large but you will see another major storm, blackout, fire, earthquake, tornado, etc.

2. You will not be the only person scrambling to purchase what you need.

3. Stores will run out of flashlights, batteries, water, generators and other preparedness related supplies

I have often said that the greatest asset we have in terms of being better prepared is time. If you use the time NOW to at least slowly begin to better prepare…you will be in a much better position later. Small actions will add up.For example: Each time you go to the grocery store…buy one or two extra items you may need in an emergency.

Please add your own thoughts, tips, ideas and strategies here.

Categories
General Preparedness

Why the sudden interest in Prepping

Is it the economy, recent disasters around the world, movies , new reality shows or the governments efforts to make preparedness a more forefront topic? Across a wide spectrum of preparedness related products we are seeing an increase in both awareness levels and actual product purchases. Is the tide really starting to shift from being just reactive to taking steps ahead of time to be prepared?

My personal opinion is that it isn’t one factor leading to this change but more of a sum of all the different factors that is driving the awareness and growth in the space. In the past few years we have seen an increase in severe disasters both in the U.S. and abroad (an earthquake in Haiti, a massive Tsunami, Hurricane Irene, the earthquake, tsunami and nuclear disaster in Japan just to name a few). At the same time we have seen over half a dozen TV’s show hit the air related to preparedness and survival (Bear Gryll’s Man vs. Wild, Les Stroud’s Survivorman, Dual Survival, Man Woman Wild, Doomsday Preppers and so on).

The Federal Government, FEMA, The Red Cross and local community government also seem to be doing much more outreach to raise awareness levels and encourage preparation.

I truly hope this is not something temporary. I hope that more and more people continue to take the necessary steps to make themselves, their families, their businesses and their communities better prepared. In the long run..time is our greatest asset and if we use it wisely…we will all be better off.

Categories
Farm Preparedness

Is Your Farm Fire Ready?

Farm fire preparedness

When you walk around your farm yard, are you thinking about fire safety?  Are you thinking about fires starting in your yard and equipment, maybe the hay shed or barn?  What about fires that could threaten your farm from outside sources?  How fire ready is your farm?

You can use Google to search for “farm fire preparedness” and get about 3 million hits in a second or two.  Many publications and websites are dedicated to this important safety issue. Yet how many producers are taking the time to really read them, and then go out into their yard and put that knowledge to use?  Are you?

There are some very basic things you can do to ensure that you are keeping your farm fire ready.  These are as simple as safe storage of flammables such as chemicals, fuels and feed sources.  Having fire extinguishers and suppression systems is vital.

Your response to a fire depends a lot on what type of farm you have.  Livestock or grain, do you have processing or storage on your farm?  Are you close to town or operating in a more isolated area?  Even your geographic area is a critical point in determining the fire readiness of your farm.

Field and Farmyard

Your fields can be a huge fuel source for a fire.  You know this if you burn stubble as a measure for on-field trash management.  If you live near a city your fire days are dictated by the wind direction so smoke isn’t pouring into town.  Dried grass, brush and stubble, even standing ripe crops, are vulnerable to fires.

When you stand in your farmyard and look out at the fields, if there was a fire, where would you plough a fire break?  Do your fields come right up to the windbreak in your yard?  Do you have a dugout or pond to pump water from?  Have you noticed in which season you get the strongest and driest winds?  Fire fighting in southern Alberta for a number of years taught me to learn about wind.  A Chinook wind can take the smallest spark and raise it into a many hours long wildland fire in a very short period of time.

A farm yard can be a fire trap or it can be defended against a fire in the field. Planning ahead and the correct placement of resources can make all the difference.  Most importantly though is the actual practice of protecting your fields and farmyard.   Practice.

Test your ability to hook up the tractor and discer. How quickly could you do it safely?  Can you create a fire break around your yard?  Or is that area cluttered with discarded equipment and other debris?  Are the gates wide enough for you to reach all the areas in good time?

Have a pump and some hose? Great! When was the last time you fired it up and tested it?  A pump that won’t fire and hose with holes or cracks is more useless than no pump or hose.  If you don’t have them you won’t be counting on them. If you do have them and they don’t work you’ve wasted valuable time fooling around with them.

Do you have an evacuation plan for the farmyard?  Who stays to keep things wet and plough fire breaks, who leaves to safety?  When you are leaving your farm, know where the evacuation centre is, ensure you can reach it by the usual routes and have an alternate if the regular way is blocked by fire or smoke.

If you take a piece of paper and draw a map of your farm, can you mark the year round roads, water sources, hazards to fire fighting equipment (ditches, fences, seasonal roads, etc) and other important features like the gas shut off, the storage area for chemicals and fuels, the location of any animals and most importantly your escape routes from the farm.

A fire in the field can start while baling, combining or by another source such as an ATV exhaust.  Knowing what to do while the fire is small is critical in keeping it under control. At no time should you risk your own health or safety. Equipment can be replaced. Crops regrown. Animals can be replaced as well. People cannot.  Your family will not skip mourning you because you died saving the new tractor.

Barn and Livestock

Livestock are very vulnerable in fires to injury and death. Their housing is fraught with danger as it is filled with both fuel and ignition sources. It is also very difficult to remove animals from many modern farm buildings.  Most farm yards with multiple animal buildings are not designed with fire fighting in mind, they are not designed with evacuation or containment of animals in an emergency either.  No one wants to think of the ‘bad stuff’ when they are working hard at farming.  That is human nature.  It is also wrong.

We need to consider how we will take care of our animals in the event of an on farm or off farm fire threat.   More than consider, you need to plan for it.  Barn fires are as different as the varied barn designs you see everywhere.  Each has a strong point and a number of weaknesses as well.  You know your barn better than most. But if you aren’t there, who is going to know what to do?  You may have a top notch fire plan but have you shared it with your local fire department, your neighbors or caretakers of your animals?  If it is to be effective they need to know it and have a copy as well. Their lives could depend upon it.

Field and Farm

Livestock in each can be facing very different threats from a fire. And they will respond in a myriad of ways.  There is no set way or understanding of how animals will react in a fire. There is, however, some common reactions to fire by livestock.

Fight or Flight

Animals do one of these, sometimes one right after the other. They will run away from danger that they cannot fight.  But a fire is not truly seen as a danger to most domestic animals. The fire fighters, the outside noise, lights and sounds of human panic are understood as danger. Their instinct to go to a ‘safe place’ is strong and tragically that place is the very barn you are trying to save them from.

Animal owners owe it to themselves and their animals to take some time to research on line and take available courses in animal emergencies that are offered both privately, through fire departments as well as government offices.  Knowing how to prepare your horse barn, for example, with fire halters and proper strategies for calming moving animals can save their lives and yours.

We’ve all seen on the news the horrific barn fires in which hundreds or thousands of confinement system animals perish.  Fire fighters stand helplessly as the barn burns to the ground. Farmers mourn the loss of their animals.  What can we do?  Better alarms, fire walls, reducing fuel load and ignition sources.  Making sure that a barn can be ‘shut off’ in sections so that the fire cannot control the entire facility.  These barn fires are examples of buildings not designed for preservation of life for animals nor are they designed for fire control by sector.

Livestock on the open range face tragically different dangers in a wildland fire.  Wildland fires will push animals to higher ground or against fences that they cannot see to jump over. They may become entangled in partially burnt fences.  I’ve personally seen cattle with their legs burnt off from extremely fast moving grass fires without even having soot on their faces.  Some horses and cattle if given a chance in open country can instinctively find safety, but this is not a strategy you can count on.   Fences, natural barriers and factors such as noise, wind, water bombers and smoke can disorient, confuse and panic animals back into the fire they were fleeing.

It is important to note that with people and animals smoke inhalation is very often the cause of death in a fire. Toxic smoke suffocates many long before the fire reaches them.  Animals that are ‘rescued’ from smoke will often require treatment, and sometimes euthanasia, due to smoke damage.

Livestock owners need to be prepared for losses during a fire and sometimes long after.  Planning ahead can reduce this but until we can eliminate fires from our farms we won’t be able to eliminate the deadly impact they have on our farms and communities.

Never allow someone into a burning building to ‘save’ an animal. This is a strong instinct but it is also a deadly one.  People can be overcome quickly with smoke, be disoriented and get lost requiring rescue themselves.

We can reduce the risk to our farms, our crops and animals by planning ahead, working with local emergency services and practicing our farm emergency plans.  Can you put on a fire halter in the dark? Do you know the escape routes from your barn blindfolded and on your hands and knees?  Do you know where and how to plough a fire break? Does that pump work and is the hose in good shape?  Are you physically and mentally able to fight the fire on your farm or do you need to concentrate on evacuating your family and animals to safety?

Life and safety first.  Your family can rebuild property and replace animals and equipment. They cannot replace you.

Categories
Farm Preparedness

Farm Emergency Safety – 72 Hours Without Services

Man Working on Power Lines
Canadians and Americans are advised to be able to survive without municipal services for up to 72 hours in an emergency. For rural and farming residents that could be much longer as urban services are typically restored much more quickly.

Is your farm prepared for 72 hours without power, gas, phone, emergency services or even cellphone and internet?

Preparing a house in town for a 72 hour break is an enormous task, preparing a farm can seem monumental. And yet it is essential for us to plan for.   You may think you are prepared, and you could be, but when was the last time you practiced? When was the last time you checked?

The Canadian government has a website: getprepared.gc.ca with general tips and information.  They even have resources for animal care and farming.  The Canadian Red Cross and a number of other agencies have readily available resources, the majority of which are free.

The problem with resources is they are of no use if you are not taking advantage of them.  If you are like a farmer I know who’s argument about preparedness is, “I’m too busy farming!” then you are putting yourself, your family and farm at huge risk.

One Farm’s Story

We have beef cattle, horses and companion animals.  We have a small child.  We live in a rural area which can have, at times, limited road access. We are also in an area of lower population which means we are not first on the list for services when they are being restored.  We choose to live here. That means we take responsibility for planning for those times when we won’t have municipal services.

Our check list includes:

  • Food, water, medications and animal care supplies in our storm room
  • Generators and fuel
  • Pump and hose
  • Well maintained equipment
  • Fire extinguishers
  • Supplementary water supplies for livestock
  • Shelter and feed for animals
  • Supplementary heating
  • Alternative cooking tools (solid fuel stove, propane and wood pellet bbq)
  • Food that does not require freezing or refrigeration
  • Extra medications and well maintained first aid kits
  • Animal health kits
  • Leashes and crates
  • Halters and ropes
  • Weather radio
  • Emergency power source for phones and other electronics

The most important thing we have, however, is a plan we practice for each of the seasons in which there are dangers.  We know what to do in a severe summer storm, we know what to do in a deep freeze with no power, we know where to put our livestock in a drifting blizzard.  We time each other, we practice and we communicate.  We also understand that sometimes one or the other will be alone taking care of things when the unexpected happens.

Family Safety

The safety of your family comes first.  Making sure you have safe places in case of a storm, that you are   able to start the generator and know first aid is key.  Watching the weather, we subscribe to weather alerts on our smart phones.  We watch both US and Canadian radar maps for storms.  A storm coming from the south can give you a day’s warning if you look at the US radar, but only hours if you rely solely on the Canadian weather radar.  That can be the difference between being ready and being caught off guard.

Even children can learn first aid and CPR.  Find a local trainer who is certified with St. John’s or the Red Cross and get your whole family trained.  Make sure you have everyone’s medication, including allergy and what may be needed for a chronic medical condition, on hand.  Have a better than needed first aid kit.  You won’t know when you may need those extras found in the better kits. Have one for your animals as well.

Make sure your pets are able to be crated, and handled if you need to evacuate with them.  Have your vehicles fueled up at all times and in working order.  Even a quad or tractor can be a life saver, but if they don’t run they are of no use.

Have a family plan. Follow it. Practice it. Get to know your local emergency services personnel. They could be volunteer fire fighters that are neighbors. It could be a nurse or EMT.  Be sure they know where to find you and any hazards your farm yard may have for them.

Livestock Care & Animal Welfare

Canada has laws and regulations regarding the care and welfare of all animals. Those laws are both federal and provincial.  In essence they state that you cannot knowingly leave an animal to suffer and die.  That includes evacuating or abandoning your property and leaving animals behind without food, water and shelter in safety.  That being said, most of you wouldn’t knowingly cause harm to your animals.

Have you planned for their care in a 72 hour or longer situation?  How are you going to provide water, feed, shelter?  Ventilation in confinement housing is a very big concern. Most producers with intensive or high population operations have redundant systems with multiple back-ups.  But how long can you rely on your back-up system?  Was it designed for 6, 12, 24 or many more hours?  When was the last time you tested it?

Animal caregivers need to be aware of different conditions that can adversely impact the animals in their care. Freezing rain is an example. Freezing rain on range animals can be deadly, do you have a way of providing shelter and ice removal?  What about footing in an ice storm for cattle?  Creating trails to feed for stranded range cattle may require some literal leg work on your part.  Consider your property and the resources you have available. Could you make a temporary shelter from bales?  Is it possible to move the animals to a treed shelter and still provide feed and water?  How are you dealing with injuries?

Extremes in weather, and loss of municipal services is a reality. How we prepare for it, how we consider our response is what will make the difference on our farm, to our family and in the end our community.  If the power went out right now, and a storm blew in, would you be ready?  Right now?  What are your first steps? If you don’t know maybe now, while the lights are on, it would be a good time to start.

Making choices for the preparedness and safety of your farm is a responsibility that only you can assume.  Make them good choices and your farm will come through better than if you are caught by surprise.  You may even find that you sleep better at night knowing that you are as ready as you can be.  I know I do.

Categories
General Preparedness Personal Preparedness Personal Stories Preparedness Planning Preparedness tips

Doomsday Preppers

doomsday-preppers

I have been asked by a number of people lately if shows like Doomsday Preppers have been good for business. I guess the natural reaction of most people is that since there is a TV show about the topic…it has raised awareness and now more people will buy preparedness supplies.

At this point I am not sure if a show like this actually will help to get people better prepared in the long run or if it will turn people off. While I am sure that some people will see a show like this and make a purchase such as long term food storage or a survival kit….I don’t think that in the long run in will move the needle. And….could it actually deter some people?

In talking about preparedness I have always focused on the masses. I want to help make preparedness a mainstream topic and something everyone thinks about. My problem with a show like this is it shows the extremes. It focuses on “preppers”. I believe that the masses will see a show like this and think the people on it are crazy. They will laugh at the level these folks have taken preparedness too and won’t want to associate themselves with them. I think many will simply say….”I can never be like that” and will decide that preparedness is for the extremists.

I am all for extreme preparedness if that is what is important for you. However…I think it is important to show that you do not need to take these type steps (bunkers, years worth of food, weapons training, etc) in order to be better prepared. You can simply become more aware of emergencies in your area, have a discussion/make a plan with your family, take a CPR class and/or buy some basic supplies such as a 72 Hour Kit. These simple steps will make you better prepared.

It is far more likely that you will encounter severe weather, a car accident, a house fire, flash flood, blackout, injured person, etc than a world devastating volcano or an earthquake that wipes out most of societies infrastructure.

There are levels of preparedness for everyone….start somewhere and build from there. You will be glad you did.

Categories
First Aid General Preparedness Preparedness Planning Preparedness tips Wilderness

Hiking/Outdoor Preparedness

hiking-preparedness

Here are some tips submitted to us by one of our customers who often writes about preparedness. He was in the military and is an outdoor enthusiast.

Being prepared helps alleviate panic as does, training and practice. Practice techniques; make every movement a natural one. Your hands will know what to do until your mind catches up. Muscle memory is repetitive actions without thought. Practice is the only way to achieve this. You must be mentally prepared. You must understand you did not cause the disaster, but your actions going forward are critical to you and your family’s survival. You should practice any techniques described below before a disaster strikes. Use your own judgment, and verify every piece of equipment, tool or technique. Do not stake your life on anyone else’s word. As the saying goes in the military, never let someone else load your weapon or pack your parachute. Survival is up to you.

Clean Water Is the First Priority You Cannot Survive Without It

Water weighs roughly 8.5 pounds per gallon. This means you will not be carrying much in your backpack. You must learn how to collect and make water safe to drink. Boiling is the preferred method. Filter sediments from the water before boiling. You can use a coffee filter, cheesecloth or even a tee shirt. It must rapid boil for three minutes. Use a lid if you have one to collect the condensation caused by the steam. Drain the water from the lid periodically and save for drinking. Boiling removes the oxygen from the water, so once it has cooled shake or stir it well. Note the bubbles; these collect dissolved oxygen from the air. Dissolved oxygen helps control bacteria growth in the water.

Rainwater is safe to drink if it is not runoff, for example, from a roof, sidewalk or roadway. However, collect it and boil it or purify it using household unscented bleach or tincture of iodine. Use unscented Clorox bleach. Eight drops of bleach per gallon is the recommended ratio to kill the bacteria. Boiling or purifying water will not remove harmful chemicals or radiation. Iodine and bleach are the main ingredients in most purification tablets or drops. Tincture of iodine kills bacteria in water as well. Sixteen drops of iodine per gallon is the recommended ratio. Use two percent liquid iodine. Use these methods carefully, and only if boiling and rain collection is not possible. The water must set for an hour before drinking if it is purified using iodine or bleach. It must set longer if it is cool, below 65 degrees Fahrenheit.

Collect rainwater by opening an umbrella and turning it upside down. The water will channel to the center. Drain carefully. Let it rain for about 30 minutes before you begin collecting. This washes smog, pollen and any other airborne contaminates out of the air. You can collect rainwater by using clean plastic or your rain gear, as well.

You may be out in the wilderness and may have to collect water where there does not appear to be any. You can ever do this in your own backyard. Scoop out a shallow depression. Your pack should contain plastic or a poncho. Place the plastic over the hole and secure it with stones along the side. Place a small stone in the center to create a depression. Radiant heat will sweat the moisture from the ground and it will collect on the plastic. You can also place some green foliage in the depression, as well. Plants have moisture in them and the sun will sweat the moisture from them. The water will then run toward the center. It is safe to drink because it is essentially distilled by the sun. Collect morning dew using the plastic. Drape it over some low bushes and create small depressions for the dew to collect.

Never drink water from a still pool. Drink or collect water from a fast moving stream, or find seepage from an underground spring. Nature is one of the best at purifying water. Bacteria grows in stagnate pools. Moving water collects dissolved oxygen. Typically, it will not contain as much bacteria. Water that seeps from underground has been filtered and is generally safe to drink. However, do not drink it if it has collected on the ground or in rock crevices. Drink directly from the source.

  • Have a First Kit in Everyone’s Pack
  • Alcohol Wipes
  • Compression Bandages
  • Aspirin
  • Vitamin C Tablets. (You Can Also Add Vitamin C Tablets To Boiled Or Purified water To Improve Its taste)
  • Scissors
  • Bandages
  • Two Percent Liquid Tincture Of Iodine
  • Eye Dropper

Ensure everyone carries a first aid kit. The rule of thumb is to use the injured person’s kit to treat them. This ensures there is a kit for you if you are injured. Follow this rule because it is important. Other first aid items you should have are splints for broken bones, heavy surgical tape, rubbing alcohol and hot and cold packs.

Any wounds must be treated quickly. Stop the blood flow using a compression bandage. Once the flow is stopped, it must be cleaned to prevent infections. Iodine and alcohol are the best ways to kill bacteria around the wound. Bandage the wound well. When splinting broken bones you must allow for swelling. Besides the loss of blood, infection is the main concern with any open wound.

The list of things a person may need could fill a book. However, some things should be in everyone’s pack. The list is by no means comprehensive. Use your own judgment but begin assembling items now.

  • All Purpose Knife With Needle Nose Pliers Cutting Blade and Various Other Handy Items
  • Small Sheet Of Plastic
  • Compass
  • Magnesium Stick And Flint To Start Fires
  • Rain Gear
  • Needle And Thread Include Heavy Needles Similar To The Ones That Can Thread Leather
  • Heavy Fish Line On  A Spool
  • Coffee Filters Cheese Cloth Or Some Other Suitable Material To Filter Water With
  • Small Folding Shovel
Categories
General Preparedness

Resolve to be better Prepared in 2012

As the new year approaches and you make a list of all your resolutions…its a good time to make the commitment to get better prepared in 2012. As we saw in 2011…it doesn’t matter where you live…emergencies/disasters happen. From earthquakes to massive storms,  flooding to tornadoes, blackouts to hurricanes….almost every community faced some type of event.

Being better prepared doesn’t mean panicking or changing your entire lifestyle. It can simply mean talking to your family about an emergency plan, stocking up on some basic emergencies supplies or learning basic first aid or CPR. None of these actions will take much time but they will put you on the right path. I can virtually assure you that you will feel better after you have taken one of these steps.

For myself…I happen to like being better prepared. I like that I can help myself, my family and also random people who may be in need of assistance. Whether it be an injury on the ball field, a fender bender or something worse…situations arise and if you are the first person on the scene…it is nice to be able to take action.

FEMA, The Red Cross and all other Disaster Response organizations say the same message: Get a Kit, Make a Plan, Be Informed.

Lets make that a resolution in the New Year.

Categories
Disaster Kits General Preparedness Personal Preparedness Preparedness Planning

Give the Gift of Safety

With the holiday season rapidly approaching most of us are making lists or planning out who we want or need to buy gifts for. Typically these lists include games, clothing, jewelery, sporting goods, liquor and similar items. One suggestion you may want to think about is buying a friend or loved one a preparedness kit or other type safety related item. These items might not be the first things that pop into your mind but they are a unique and important present that will truly show you care.

No matter where you live…you can be affected by storms, blackouts, severe weather, accidents or worse. We all know we need to be better prepared…but to often we procrastinate getting it done. By purchasing a survival kit or product and giving it to someone….you show them you care while making them safer. And…while you are at it…might as well get one for yourself.

It can be a survival kit, a great flashlight, a first aid kit, a car emergency kit and anything else you think is important.

Sometimes thinking out of the box is a good idea.

This holiday season…be safe.

Paul

1800prepare.com