JAN
07
The Importance of Being Prepared
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There is more snow com­ing this week­end.  Accord­ing to how the weath­er looks there might be quite a bit of snow over the next cou­ple of weeks.  Snow does not make me hap­py.  Espe­cial­ly now because the towns around me have NOT cleaned up the snow on the side of the road lim­it­ing the amount of park­ing avail­able for those with street park­ing only.  Nor­mal­ly, the towns have buck­et load­ers full of snow haul­ing it away.  Not this time.  Sort of piss­es me off, but I will get into why anoth­er time.  My point, was to tran­si­tion into the impor­tance of being pre­pared here in the north­east, because if the last minute fren­zy I wrote about here .  

Not only was there a fren­zy at the gro­cery store, but depend­ing on where you lived in NJ, you got between 24″ and 34″ of snow in a 24 hour peri­od.  NYC was par­a­lyzed, as was NJ.  A state of emer­gency was called, and peo­ple were ordered to stay off the road.  My truck was lit­er­al­ly buried under plowed snow that was more than waist high.  That was fun dig­ging out (sar­casm implied).  Some areas lost pow­er, and some did not.  So, to my point…

Are you ready?  Are you ready for the snow over the next cou­ple of weeks?  Are you ready to get dumped on (poten­tial­ly) again mul­ti­ple times?  Are you ready for the elec­tric or gas to go out?  are you ready to cook if this hap­pens?  Are you ready for the heat not to work in your home for the next six to 36 hours?  Are you ready to shel­ter in if a water main breaks, there is snow on the ground, you can­not read­i­ly get out, and the water is not work­ing in your home?  If you are not ready, then you are putting your­self and your fam­i­ly in dan­ger because you may not have the basics at hand.

Here is a list of essen­tials you should have on hand before this week­end if you live in the new snow belt:

  1. Water — Fill up any con­tain­ers you may have, and should be a pri­or­i­ty, pri­mar­i­ly because every­one needs water, and sec­ond because it is essen­tial­ly free while the water is flow­ing out of your faucet.  When it’s not flow­ing, it’s not free…
  2. Food — When you go to the gro­cery store, try to buy some addi­tion­al food that will go a longer way than just chick­en, steak, etc.  Buy some rice, beans, legumes, some frozen veg­eta­bles, etc.  Make a pot of soup before the week­end so that you can keep it in the refrig­er­a­tor.  This way all you have to do is heat it up for the fam­i­ly.
  3. Light Gear — Can­dles, bat­ter­ies, radio, lanterns, flash­lights, blan­kets, books, avail­able for use at arms length if some­thing were to hap­pen.
  4. First Aid — make sure you know where all your pain killers, ban­dages, etc are in the event you need them if you must shov­el or remove ice from your dri­ve­way, side­walk, etc.
  5. Com­fort Foods — Noth­ing can calm you or the kids like a snack, cup of hot choco­late, cup of tea , cof­fee , etc.

My sug­ges­tion, get to the gro­cery store before the end of the work­day Fri­day.  I am con­vinced that those that were there run­ning around like crazy peo­ple will be there again on Fri­day right after the first snowflake flies.  Plan some fam­i­ly activ­i­ties for the down­time at home as well…

Just my two cents today, know­ing there is more of the white stuff on the way…

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2
COMMENTS
By: Car Lock Guy
jan
21

A very good list of what we should have. The weather today can sometimes be unpredictable so it is better to stock things we will be needing rather than rushing or panic buying. Thanks.

By: Nobody
jan
7

Snow. Pppppppt!

While I have candles, I’m moving to battery-powered LED thingies and glow-sticks for lights out situations. No fire hazard and can be left unattended while I’m barricading the doors! 🙂

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