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General Preparedness Personal Stories Preparedness Planning

Design Your Own Survival Kit

There are many types of survival kits on the market. Some are larger than others and come with different types of survival gear. If you ask experts in the field of preparedness you will get different answers as to what should go into your kit. There isn’t one right answer. A disaster kit is really a personal thing. While there are some basic “mus have’s”…it is also important that you customize any kit you buy to meet your individual needs.

If you had to build a 72 hour kit and could only put 1o items in it….what would you put. Below is a small list of items you might want to consider…but please post your 10 items list here.

Emergency Food and Water

Multitool

Survival Blanket

Water Proof Matches

First Aid Kit

Emergency Whistle

Flashlight

Radio

Signal Mirror

Emergency Hygiene Products

Rope

Water Purification Tablets

Gloves

I look forward to seeing your lists posted here.

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First Aid Personal Preparedness Personal Stories

First Aid Kit’s

When people think of emergency preparedness they often think of earthquake kits or survival gear. In my opinion…one of the most important things to have…and certainly one of the most frequently used is a first aid kit. In the coarse of our normal, everyday lives there are literally dozens of different things that can happen where having a first aid kit would come in handy. Below is just a small list:

*Cuts from sharp objects

*Scrapes or cuts from slips or falls

*Playground accidents

*Minor or even major vehicle accidents

*Sports Injuries

*Bee stings or other Animal Bites

*Headaches or Nausea

*Splinters

*Sprains or broken bones

*Bloody Nose

I personally keep a number of different first aid kits in my home, office and in my car. I also keep one in each of my sports bags. A week doesn’t go by where I don’t have to pull out one of my kits for myself or someone I am with. Again…this isn’t always for something major. However…being able to treat minor injuries is very important.

Here are two quick stories where having a kit came in handy.

*Last night during our softball game one of our players made a hard slide into 3rd base. Both of his knees where cut/scraped up and he was a little sore.  When the inning he was able to clean the cuts and apply an antiseptic to speed healing and prevent infection. He was also able to bandage the area. When the game was over I was also able to give him an ice-pack to help with the pain and swelling. Would it have been life threatening if I didn’t have a first aid kit handy? No. But did it make the situation a bit better with very little effort? Yes.

*Two weeks ago I was away for the weekend and was at a restaurant. An older woman walked into the restaurant and slipped and smashed face first into the floor. She immediately started bleeding and had severe pain in her nose. The restaurant did not have a first aid kit. I ran outside to my car and brought in mine. We were able to stop the bleeding, clean the area and bandage her up until she could get to the hospital. I was also able to give her an ice pack for the ride. Again…not a life threatening event. Just an simple situation that could happen to anyone at anytime.

If it happens to you, a family member, a loved one or friend…you will feel much better if you have what you need to deal with the situation. Preparedness is an everyday thing. Take some time to think about how you can be better prepared.

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Charities/Groups we support General Preparedness Personal Stories Preparedness Planning Uncategorized

Preparedness for Pets

Sometimes being prepared is not fun.

Prime example is getting a phone call at 7am from a friend who NEVER calls me at that time of day.  We also happen to be on the search team together so I thought he was calling me for a deployment but it turns out, he needed the after hours contact for our vet, he also has dogs.  This was not a usual question for him and on the way to my fridge (yes the fridge)  I asked him what had happened.    Turns out his retired search dog had fallen and hurt herself.

I keep two (yes two) magnets with the office and after hours office numbers for my vet on my fridge.  They have been in the same location for the past 5 years.  I don’t move them, not even when I clean.  You see, in a panic, people don’t think, they just do.  I’m sure my friend could have easily looked up our vets number in the phone book, or maybe he had magnets on the fridge and was sitting with his dog and didn’t want to leave.  For him in that moment, it was his first thought to call someone who could find the number for him.  I was that person.

I’ve had to use those magnets myself when one of my search dogs went down with a seizure 4 months after moving into the house.  The magnet was in that same spot then as it is now.  Every person who I might have watch my pets knows where those magnets are, I show them in person when they come in to pet sit.

Those magnets or contact numbers are as important to your pet as the poison control hot line is to your small child.  Make sure the family knows where the numbers are and that they don’t move.  I also have my vet’s information programed into my ‘in case of emergency’ function on my phone.    Under “other” it lists:  In case of a car accident please look for my search dogs.  The number of their vet is…..

Many of us view our pets as a part of the family, make sure you treat preparing for an emergency your pet  might have the same way. You also should have a pet preparedness kit that you can use to treat minor injuries.

Unfortunately, the injury that my friends’ dog sustained would not allow her to make a full recovery.  That day he had to make the decision to end her pain.  My thoughts are with him and his family.

Robin and K9 Dunder
Paws of Life Foundation

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Charities/Groups we support Emergency Responders General Preparedness Humor Personal Stories Uncategorized

First Responders Also Need to be Prepared

For the last two years as Dunder, my search dog, and I have been going through training, most of the time has been spent on him and getting him up and going as a certified search dog. We accomplished that task this last January in California which was a huge relief to me (I still get testing anxiety). But recently it sort of hit home as to how prepared the ‘people’ portion of the team, meaning me, also needs to be prepared.   I was talking with a friend of mine about how long it takes me to ‘get out the door’ after being deployed.

My answer, about 45 minutes.  (but that includes driving home from my work).

You might think that’s not a very long time but I have a 10 minute commute home (that’s if I hit all the red lights). I have to change my clothes, grab my two ‘go bags’ and get out of the house.  I also check to make sure I have fresh water and food for the dogs in the truck.    Doesn’t seem like it should take that long but it does (I also usually have a hard time finding the right socks for some reason, which is odd since I own 5 pair of the ‘right socks’).

After doing search and rescue work for about 10 years, I have this all down to somewhat of an art but it’s taken me about 8 of those years to NOT forget anything.  I also have to go through every spring and fall and rotate out what exactly is in my go bag for clothes.  I live in a climate that in the winter we need something to keep you warm in -10 degree weather and in the summer you need to have extra socks/pants/shirts  because the ones you are wearing are sweaty and wet.  In essence, you have to be prepared for anything when you walk out of the house.

However, I found myself on the phone today talking with my mom to find out when I had my polio shot.  Turns out the FEMA level task force I am hoping to be a member of requires my “shot record’ along with my dog’s.    This is part of me being prepared for deployment.  I also found it humorous to be wracking my brain to try and remember what year I had the chicken pox.

However, the one good thing I did find out, I’m probably do for a tetanus booster.  I would encourage everyone to check the status of your ‘shot record’ with your doctor….it’s part of being prepared.

Wags,

Robin Habeger and K9 Dunder

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Charities/Groups we support Emergency Responders General Preparedness Personal Stories Preparedness Planning

Search Dogs in Haiti — coming home

As the efforts rescue efforts in Haiti wind down and the recovery phase begins,  think about what happens to all of the personnel who responded to the call for assistance, including the search dogs.  All will return to their ‘normal life’ back at home, whether it be a full time job as a firefighter or for many of the search dog handlers, going back to that ‘office job’.  As for the dogs, they go back to training and normal every day dogdom of eat, sleep, play, train (play and train since they should be the same thing).

I didn’t go to Haiti, Dunder and I have yet to be certified by FEMA. However, for the past two weeks I have had someone either stop by my office or send me an email  every day asking if I was going to get deployed.  I even had several people call to confirm meetings.  We will hopefully be attempting our FEMA certifications this summer, putting us on the roster to be deployed.  Dunder and I are now wilderness certified so we do respond that way. 

I know several handlers who were/are in Haiti and think about them every day.  In my experience as a search dog handler, there have been multiple day deployments which result in an almost euphoria filled feeling that when you get home, you go through something of a ‘aderinline crash’….meaning that you were so busy, you knew the job you were doing was incredibly important and getting home, back to the routine of your life, is some how a needed relief but incredibly anti climactic.  For me it often results in long bouts of sleep followed with the emotional release of a good cry.  (everyone handles it differently)

Guess what, dogs go through that too. 

In the case of Haiti or any other type of long term deployment, the dog was the center of their handlers attention, getting to go out and search (or for them, play) for hours with their handler, getting the attention of everyone else in the area and even checked regularly by a vet.  They also serve as an emotional balm to victims, other volunteers, the members of their own team and their handler.  Not to mention having the press follow them, random people asking to pet them and in general, being the center of the universe.  When the dog gets home, guess what, it’s back to just them and their handler and the every day routine of ‘just being a dog’.

One of the things as a handler we actually are trained to do, is watch out for ‘depression’ in our dogs.  This has more too do with the dog being so used to the attention, that when they get back home, they think that type of attention should continue.  We have to make sure they have an adjustment period.  In addition to trying to recover ourselves, we also have to help our dogs recover.  One of the best ways for us to make sure our dogs are mentally sharp is to continue to have them work, but to do as many fun things as possible in training.  Keeping up the motivation to train is sometimes very hard when you think no one cares several weeks after that big deployment is over.  We as a nation have a very short memory.  Don’t let these hero’s, whether they have two or four legs, be forgotten.

If you know someone who is a search dog handler or who went on this deployment to Haiti, the best thing you can do is thank them…then ask if you can hide for their dog to do a fun motivational search problem.  Also, thank them, agian in a month, and ask to hide for thier dog, agian.  Many, if not almost all of the handlers that went on the deployment to Haiti from the USA are volunteers, yes even those with the FEMA teams.  Some of the handlers are full time firefighters.  Most are volunteers who put their own personal life on hold to answer the call.  They are adjusting to being home, getting their life back in order, and having someone who will ask to be a victim can be a motivating tool for the handler.

If you are interested in becoming or learning more about becoming a search dog handler, you can go to www.k9handleracademy.com.  You should also spend some time and learn how to be prepared yourself for the type of natural disasters that are common in your area, have supplies stored.

As always, if you have questions, please ask.

Wags,

Robin and K9 Dunder  (NASAR Type I Area Search Team)

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Emergency Responders General Preparedness Personal Stories Uncategorized

The Best Gift of the Evening

My daughter is one of those kids for whom it is always difficult to buy a gift. I say “kid,” but she is 23 years old, a Flair Bartender (think Tom Cruise in “Cocktail”) and a Paramedic. She has been self-supporting for years and as a single working woman, has the luxury of being able to buy, what she wants cash when she wants it. When her birthday came around this year, she told me she wanted a toolbox (with Sears Craftsman tools) and a 72-hour Go-Pak.

Now before you think that this is a set-up, you must realize that I am the author of “The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Disaster Preparedness” (www.TheCompleteIdiotsGuide2DisasterPrep.com) and my youngest child has had a 72-hour Go-Pak since he was 5 years old. My daughter’s interest was not in just any Go-Pak, but in the best one that I had reviewed while I wrote the book. As an author and researcher, I also never write product endorsements, only factual reports.

As soon as my daughter opened her gifts, the Go-Pak had everyone’s attention. The backpack was opened and everything in the Go-Pak passed around by her firefighter colleagues. The Go-Pak she received was the 1800Prepare/Guardian adult 3-day disaster kit. This kit comes in a substantial bright red backpack. The Go-Pak comes “out of the box” with everything except your important documents, prescription medications and spare clothing. I do recommend adding 2 additional chem-lite sticks and a USB data drive for photos and medical records. The 1800Prepare website (www.1800prepare.com) has a complete inventory of the items in this Go-Pak. For me, the coolest item in the kit was the “Tube Tent.” This tent does not require poles and can be used as a tarp, tent or even a rain poncho should the poncho included in the Go-Pak be lost or damaged.

My daughter got her toolbox (with tools) too. Although she loves to tinker and her firefighter friends plan to borrow her tools often (at least so they said at her party), the best gift of the evening was her 72 hour Go-Pak. Every firefighter at the party asked me where they could get one like it and plan on giving them for gifts this year.

For years, I have encouraged everyone to give 72 hour Go-Paks to every family member as a gift. I am proud to say that as the result of this one gift, one major city’s fire/rescue service will begin giving this most important gift of preparedness.

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General Preparedness Personal Stories Preparedness Planning

A Survivor of Flight 1549

A dear friend of mine, Matt Kane, was a survivor of Flight 1549.  I asked him to give me his thoughts on his experience.

As a survivor of flight 1549 I believe preparation and emotional control were the key to our survival. It starts with the crew, especially Capt Sully. Their ability to make critical/correct decisions throughout the experience was key to the final outcome. The first thing he and the crew did was face their reality. They were not immune to their fear, but they did not allow it to control them. It was all about the question what is next.  They were able to control the panic and tap into their emotional benchmark.

Both the crew and the survivors of flight 1549 were prepared for the situation. The crews years of experience allowed them to make critical decisions and execution. The passengers were not overcome by fear and panic, but were prepared by inflating lift vests, opening exit doors and existing in an orderly controlled fashion.

I can make these comments with the upmost confidence based on the fact that I  experience this from seat 24 A with water up to my waist before the exit doors were open. We were prepared for the situation, we did not panic and survived.