NOV
23
Hurricane Sandy, Five Days Without Power, Three Weeks Later, and the Gear That Made My Life Easier
By:

This is my (Sub­ur­ban’s)  slight­ly over­due post­mortem of Hur­ri­cane Sandy.  It’s Thanks­giv­ing day as I write this, and I want to say thank you again to all of you, my read­ers, as well as a Hap­py Thanks­giv­ing to you and your fam­i­lies.  My thoughts this hol­i­day week­end are with those who’s homes and lives have been for­ev­er changed by the hur­ri­cane a few weeks ago.

It’s no secret that many are still with­out pow­er, heat, etc. from Hur­ri­cane Sandy and the Nor’east­er that just came bar­rel­ing through the North­east­ern Unit­ed States.  For what it is worth, I was affect­ed much less than oth­ers in the NY and NJ areas that were dev­as­tat­ed by the storm. In fact, I am almost embar­rassed to dis­cuss it , but think  it is impor­tant to con­vey what worked for me, and what I lacked that could have been more help­ful. How­ev­er, I was with­out pow­er for almost five days, and I found that I had more than a few prod­ucts that help make my life eas­i­er over the week, and I want­ed to share them with you.  There were more than a cou­ple…

You will prob­a­bly notice sev­er­al pieces of gear ded­i­cat­ed to light­ing.  I do not under­es­ti­mate the require­ment for light.  Since much of what we do is done dur­ing dusk or when it is dark out light­ing is both a con­ve­nience and a psy­cho­log­i­cal asset dur­ing an emer­gency, that I liken to hav­ing a camp­fire.

  • Dura­cell DPP-600HD Pow­er­pack 600 Jump Starter & Emer­gency Pow­er Source with Radio :  This peice of gear was “almost” invalu­able in help­ing me keep many of my low volt­age devices charged, such as my phone and the ASCELLA Emer­gency Light Bulb .  It offered me some peice of mind that I would be able to charge my devices with no pow­er at all for an unde­ter­mined length of time.  I did­n’t real­ly use the flash­light or the radio, but it felt good to know, I had three out­lets of pow­er to use if I need­ed to, even if I had to ration pow­er.  Speak­ing of rationing pow­er, I did turn my mobile phone off and on at defined points in the day to con­serve pow­er as well.  I dod­n’t want to be an ener­gy hog, and glad I did it in order to ration the bat­tery.
  • Etón FR160B Microlink Self-Pow­ered AM/FM/NOAA Weath­er Radio with Flash­light, Solar Pow­er and Cell Phone Charg­er :  This was prob­a­bly one of the most valu­able assets I had dur­ing the pow­er out­age. It offered news, enter­tain­ment, emer­gency updates, a way to trick­le charge my phone, etc.  I charged it in the win­dow dur­ing the day, and kept the vol­ume at a lev­el where the bat­tery would last almost the whole evening.  When the bat­tery went dead after a few hours, I would sim­ply wind it up by the han­dle for a cou­ple min­utes and turn it back on to lis­ten to some music or the news.   Those that say “radio is dead” because of Inter­net ser­vices are sad­ly mis­tak­en.  In an emer­gency sit­u­a­tion the radio was the only com­mu­ni­ca­tion method I relied on to get my emer­gency news and enter­tain­ment. Do not under­es­ti­mate this device and buy two of them so you have them…
  • Hybrid HL40 Solar / Bat­tery Pow­ered Flash­light :  Anoth­er tool that used the sun as a renew­able resource, I kept it at my side most of the week I was iwthout pow­er.  Again, charg­ing it in the sun dur­ing the day, and using it in the evening for light duty work, helped make the dark­ness bet­ter.  Best part, no bat­ter­ies burned up because they were rechar­gable.  Going to pick up a cou­ple more of these for the Bug Out Bag as well as the apart­ment.  Use them as a pri­ma­ry or back­up flash­light.  The choice is yours…
  • The ASCELLA 5 Watt Emer­gency Light Bulb / Flash­light :  I wrote about this  Light Bulb , and did­n’t real­ize how use­ful it actu­al­ly would become until the pow­er went out.   I had it screwed into my desk lamp in my home office.  Upon the pow­er going out, I moved the whole lamp to the kitchen so that I could use it to cook over the stove since the stove light was not work­ing.  I sim­ply turned it on and off and did­n’t have to have some­one hold a lantern or flash­light for me.  It was invalu­able to me dur­ing pow­er out­age.  The best part, the light went on auto­mat­i­cal­ly when the pow­er went out.  It allowed me to find it with­out fum­bling and turn it on and off so the bat­tery would not die.  Loved this device and as men­tioned will be buy­ing sev­er­al for gifts and for myself.  At 29.00 you may think it is a bit expen­sive, and maybe it is, but when the pow­er went out, I did­n’t think about the pric­ing, I thought about the con­ve­nience.  Great device that can help any­one any­time.
  • Mr. Heater Big Bud­dy Heater :  As the tem­per­a­tures dipped into the high 30’s in the evening, I bun­dled up, and was rel­a­tive­ly warm, but when that chill hits, you just want heat and to be warm.  With­out the abil­i­ty to start a camp­fire, and hon­est­ly want­ed to do, I fired up my Mr. Heater .  It took the 45 degree liv­ing room of my apart­ment, and heat­ed it up to a steady 65 degrees.   I would turn it on high, and then back it down to low, and this thing worked like a champ.  It allowed me to relax a bit more and stay warmer.  My next pur­chase as a heater back­up is going to be a free stand­ing kerosene heater  that will heat 1000 square feet of space.  That should heat my apart­ment nice­ly.  There is a gen­er­a­tor in the works as well, as I already spoke to the house own­er about it.
  • 15 Watt Solar Pan­el :  I used this to trick­le charge my  Dura­cell DPP-600HD Pow­er­pack  every day.  I put the pan­el in the win­dow and let it go.  Sad­ly, I do not know how well it did or did not work as the meter on the Dura­cell is dig­i­tal and rounds to the near­est 10 per­cent.  It seemed to slow­ly do the job how­ev­er.  45 Watt input would prob­a­bly been a much bet­ter load, how­ev­er.  Some­thing that I may look at in the future…
  • Sanyo Enloop Recharge­able Bat­ter­ies :  Rechar­gables I used in my small LED tac­ti­cal flash­lights that I had lay­ing around the house…  Mak­ing sure they were charged pri­or to the out­age, they last­ed all week with­out recharge or replace­ment.  They say Enloop are cur­rent­ly the best re, and I have to agree cur­rent­ly…
  • The Water­Bob :  As a safe­ty mea­sure, not know­ing whether or not the water was going to be affect­ed in my area, I not only had my 35 gal­lons of stored water, I filled up the Water­bob in my tub with about anoth­er 50 gal­lons of water.  While I did­n’t require the use of it, it was good to get it out of the box and have to have a prac­ti­cal use for it.  It seemes pret­ty durable, was super easy to use, and there is no rea­son every­one should not have one of these sit­ting in the bath­room clos­et in the event they need one in an emer­gency.  I was glad I had it and real­ly did­n’t need it.  Had I need­ed to, I would have been very thank­ful for hav­ing it…
  • Kerosene Lanterns :  Let me just say, a fan­tas­tic tool to have, for two rea­sons.  First, just to have the light, and a nat­ur­al glow.  Sec­ond, heat.  When your hands got a lit­tle chilly, you just sim­ply cup them a few inch­es from the top of the lantern and the heat of the flame heats you right up.  Nice incre­men­tal heat source and light­ing source.  I used them every day the pow­er was out.  Loved them.
  • Cole­man LED Lantern : This got some pret­ty heavy use.  With 4 D bat­ter­ies, I thought for sure by the end of the week they would be dead.  Not to men­tion that the bat­ter­ies had been in ther for over a year at this point… Not even close to dead.  Why?  The D bat­ter­ies charge small rechar­gables in either side of the remov­able pan­els, and then allow you to use the bat­ter­ies in the pan­els, vs. the 4D bat­tery pack locat­ed in the bot­tom of the lantern.  Great tool, a bit expen­sive, but the ver­sa­til­i­ty of the device itself made it a great peice of gear.
  • Cof­fee Per­cu­u­la­tor and Cof­fee Press :  Com­fort foods, is all I can say.  When the pow­er is out and you can­not use the drip cof­fee mak­er, these were my tools of choice for boil­ing water for cof­fee and tea .  I did­n’t have to skip a beat with my morn­ing cof­fee or my evening tea.  Made life MUCH more bear­able under the cir­cum­stances…
  • Portable Camp­ing Toi­let :  Yes, I have one of these in my apart­ment in a cor­ner hid­den away… It’s there because I acci­den­tal­ly ordered it one day on Amazon.com.  It was about 45.00 — 50.00 when I bought it, and thought about send­ing it back, but with all the camp­ing I do, I am sure it will come in handy in the future.  Until then, if there is an emer­gency where I have to shel­ter in, and the sewage sys­tem is down for a short peri­od of time, I think that this will come in pret­ty handy.  While I did not “need” to use it this time around, I was glad it was in the cor­ner in the event I need­ed to…
Over­all, I thought I was pret­ty pre­pared for shel­ter­ing in.  With the nat­ur­al gas not down, I did­n’t have to wor­ry about using my grill (although I did), and could con­tin­ue to use my stove to cook.  I took it upon myself to play with some Ban­nok recipes  and fry up some Ban­nock Bread with my eggs.  Oh man was it good.
Areas that were chal­lenges, were procur­ing gaso­line for my car.  I was not pre­pared for a gaso­line short­age.  That is chang­ing as we speak.  Procur­ing ice for my cool­ers was also a chal­lenge.  That is where the gen­er­a­tor is going to come in.  Keep­ing the refrigerator/freezer up and run­ning a lit­tle longer and peri­od­i­cal­ly run­ning the gen­er­a­tor would have been very help­ful… I lost a lot of fish in the freez­er, and a bunch of stuff in the refrig­er­a­tor.  With win­ter com­ing, and a frag­ile grid infra­struc­ture already, those are preps that will be accel­er­at­ed…
I hope this helps some of you that are prepar­ing for what­ev­er it is that you are prepar­ing for.  I did not expect to be shel­ter­ing in myself, because most of my plans are (were) to bug out , in the event of an “event” of sorts.  I real­ize now that I can­not nor would it always be prac­ti­cal to bug out.  What are your thoughts on all of this…
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10
COMMENTS
By: suburban
aug
18

In reply to Bill .

Thanks, and appreciate the comment!

By: Bill
By:
Bill
jul
24

Dear Sir,
Long story short, on the Generator. I used to be an Electrician I was injured on the Job. So, I can’t do as I used to. But, I still prep. In California the Inclement weather danger is low but we have Earthquakes… so… As for a Generator. Get a Multi-fuel type. (Shop used) ie Propane, diesel etc Get one that has on site storage. (If you have on-site fuel like a propane tank) Then the better. And get on that is very quiet. Don’t want bad guys hearing yours and come a calling… Another option for gen-a-rating Electricity is a re-up-cycled car alternator. Can give you DC with an inverter A/C… Search the Web. found many cool ideas using a car (Truck) Alternator… Good Luck
Bill

By: suburban
jan
2

In reply to Harry .

Thanks for the advice Harry. I was going to go with a Kero heater and get the additive that takes the smell away…

By: Harry
dec
8

Nice post!

I live in Northern Wisconsin and have a few outages every winter. I like your “water bob” idea! I have a hand pump but when it’s ‑20F who wants to use it if they don’t have to??? LOL!

A note on kerosene heaters…don’t do it! The STINK and are a fire hazard! I use the Mr.Buddy for winter camping trips and at the cabin. Works great! Lanturns.…use the Coleman LP units. Great light/heat…no fuel that can spill!

Just a few tips and my 2 cents from the woods! Keep up the good work!

By: Harry
dec
8

In reply to Prepography .

I use a Mr.Buddy heater ALOT here in Northern Wisconsin. I set it up with a 20lb tank and hose. I can heat an ice shack for a few days on one tank of fuel.…

By: prepare13
nov
27

Great post. I first used all my personalsupplies when the hurricane knocked out my power and then donated mostof it to others when my power came back. I am a volunteer firefighterso it was important for me to make sure my family was good to go before Ileft. My lanterns, campers candles, crank radios, ascella bulbs, etccame in very handy. I also used it as a learning opportunity for myselfand my family. We got more familiar  with the items in our kits, triedsome of our emergency food and also practiced going to a safe room. Allin all…my kids thought it was fun (in other words…it made thesituation much better and they weren’t scared).I can tell youfrom the numerous relief supply runs we made into hard hitareas.…having basic supplies  handy is critical. I came across dozenson families with no flashlights, no food, no water, etc. There may belittle we can do when such a large disaster happens but even the mostbasic supplies can help.  Also having a plan in place BEFORE somethinglike this happens in critical. Know where you are going, how you can getthere and have back up plans in case you can’t get to one spot.Icould comment all night about this storm and basic preparedness but Iam sure most of your readers are very knowledgeable on the subject.
Be safe all,
Paul
http://www.1800prepare.com

By: prepare13
nov
27

Great post. I first used all my personal supplies when the hurricane knocked out my power and then donated most of it to others when my power came back. I am a volunteer firefighter  so it was important for me to make sure my family was good to go before I left. My lanterns, campers candles, crank radios, ascella bulbs, etc came in very handy. I also used it as a learning opportunity for myself and my family. We got more familiar  with the items in our kits, tried some of our emergency food and also practiced going to a safe room. All in all…my kids thought it was fun (in other words…it made the situation much better and they weren’t scared).
I can tell you from the numerous relief supply runs we made into hard hit areas.…having basic supplies  handy is critical. I came across dozens on families with no flashlights, no food, no water, etc. There may be little we can do when such a large disaster happens but even the most basic supplies can help.  Also having a plan in place BEFORE something like this happens in critical. Know where you are going, how you can get there and have back up plans in case you can’t get to one spot.
I could comment all night about this storm and basic preparedness but I am sure most of your readers are very knowledgeable on the subject.
Be safe all,
Paul
http://www.1800prepare.com

By: Prepography
nov
25

In reply to suburban .

suburban Prepography Thanks for the reply.  I’ll have to check this little heater out!

By: suburban
nov
25

In reply to Prepography .

Prepography Unfortunately, I don’t know how long it will last with a 20 gallon tank.  I can tell you that the one pound propane containers last quite a while.  I should run a couple through it completely to see the timeframe in which they will last.

By: Prepography
nov
25

Sorry Mother Nature pushed you into a ‘wet run’ of your preparedness efforts.  I wasn’t familiar with the Mr. Heater…any idea how long you can run it on a 20 GAL tank…in real life, not the marketing hype?
Andrew J. Jackson, http://www.prepography.com

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