Fall Back Tonight!

November 3, 2012

Like folks in most of the United States, in Alaska we end Daylight Savings Time tonight, setting our clocks back an hour.  I’ll be getting an extra hour of sleep!!

Now is also a good time to changed the batteries in your home smoke detectors and carbon monoxide detectors (even those that are hard-wired).   The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission recommends that batteries be changed twice a year.  May as well do it at the beginning and end of Daylight Savings Time.

A working smoke alarm will double your chances of surviving a home fire by giving you the critical time needed to escape.  More than 90 percent of all homes in the U.S. have smoke alarms, but as many as one-third of them don’t work because of old or missing batteries.  And two-thirds of fire deaths occur in homes where there are no smoke alarms or no working smoke alarms.

For more tips on preventing and surviving a home-fire, see my March post, Spring Forward & Change Your Batteries. ‎

 


Cool Tip – Garage Doors

June 28, 2012

How do you unlock your house when you return home?  Many families rarely put a key in their front door lock.  Instead they push a button on their garage door opener, drive in, then walk through the garage-house door.  Reversing the process to go out into the world.  The garage door is often the main entrance to a home.

If you use this slick way to get vehicles, family members, groceries, and other car contents past the locked perimeter, then I’d suggest that you do the following:

  •  Learn how to manually release your garage door.  Garage door openers manufactured and installed in the U.S.since 1982 must have quick-release mechanisms on the trolley that allows the garage door to be disconnected from the garage door opener in the event of entrapment.  This site might help you:  http://www.ehow.com/how_5576113_unlock-automatic-garage-door.html
  • Have an alternative way to get into the house, could be as simple as making sure that you have keys to the front door.  Otherwise, you could be stuck out in the cold (or heat) if the power goes out or you lose your remote control or it malfunctions or . . . . . .

By the way, June is Garage Door Safety Month.   Read this blog for 10 garage door safety an security tips:  http://garagedoors.wordpress.com/2012/06/21/june-is-garage-door-safety-month-3/


STOP!

April 7, 2012

Pay attention to the emergency stop buttons and call-for-help options around you.  Once you become aware of them, you’ll start seeing them everywhere.  Everywhere there is moving equipment or moving fluids, there will be a way to stop it in a hurry.

Gas Stations.  Next time you fill your gas tank, look around for the big red, well-labeled emergency stop button.  If there were a fire or chance of a fire or a car hits a fuel pump or something else bad happens, anyone can hit the emergency stop button and the gas pumps will shut off.

Elevators.  While riding the elevator next time, take a look at the emergency phone or alarm button.  Read the instructions posted.  If you ride a particular set of elevators frequently, like at your apartment, place of work, take the time to get very familiar with it.  Maybe invite the landlord or building security or elevator supplier to come to an office safety meeting to explain just how it all works.  If you’re ever trapped in a stuck dark elevator, you’ll be glad you did.

Escalators.  At the top and bottom of the escalator, you’ll find a large red button.  Typically, there’s an alarmed transparent plastic guardplate over the button.  If someone falls on the elevator or gets caught in it, immediately lift the plastic guardplate and press the button.  Don’t try to free the the person while the elevator is moving.  That could lead to you and maybe others getting hurt, too.  Alarms will likely call building security or maintenance.  Once the situation has been resolved, restarting the elevator requires them turning a key.


How Many Flashlights Do You Have?

March 31, 2012

In our house, we have too many flashlights to count.  Long flashlights with a stack of C batteries in each, tiny flashlights on key rings, a flashlight magneted to the fridge, flashlights with strobe settings, a crank-powered flashlight, black flashlights, silver flashlights, colorful flashlights, and of course my super hero flashlight.  The list goes on and on.

We may have gotten a bit carried away, but how many might someone actually need?  I’d like to offer a simple equation that you can use to determine the minimum number of flashlights that I’d recommend for your household.

FL = P + C + T + D, where

  • FL = the minimum number of flashlights
  • P = the number of people in the household, and so the number of bedsides for a flashlight.  Who wants to wake up in the the middle of a storm with no electricity and have to track down a flashlight?  Not me.
  • C = the number of cars.  Put a flashlight in each car, probably a reasonably heavy duty one, maybe with a strobe option.
  • T = number  of travellers in the household.  Those trips might be around the world or simply to school.  Having a small flashlight in each person’s purse, briefcase, or backpack could be very helpful if the power goes out in the hotel, office, or school.
  • D = the number of doors in your home through which family members generally enter.  Put a flashlight close to the main family entrances.  Then, if someone who doesn’t have a flashlight in their purse, briefcase, or car comes home to a power-deprived house, a flashlight will be within easy reach.  They won’t have to stumble through a dark house looking for one.

If your collection of flashlights doesn’t add up to your household’s FL, you might want to purchase more.  Having a safe, dependable source of light in any situation can be a very reassuring thing, helping you keep your cool in an emergency and helping you to avoid any hazards that may be lurking in the dark.

Where else might you like to have a flashlight stashed?


Seek a Helpful Stranger

March 29, 2012

The hotel elevator opened on the 11th floor and a 4-year-old boy walked out.  Surprisingly, no one else was on the elevator.  A family of four boarded the elevator like nothing unusual had just happened. 

A man on his way to the gym and I stopped, watched the little guy go confidently down the hall, looked at each other, and chose not to board the elevator. “I’ll keep an eye on him,” I said.  “I’ll call the front desk,” said the gym guy. 

As I chatted with little Ryan in the hallway for a few minutes, a couple of security guards reached the 11th floor, followed quickly by Ryan’s panic-stricken dad.  It all ended well.

True story.  That really happened to me in LA two weeks ago. 

The quick resolution to Ryan’s challenge was aided by a couple of helpful strangers.  Teach your child that certain strangers can be helpful.  They can be in the form of police officers, security officers, moms with children, and store clerks.  And sometimes they take other forms, like the gym guy and me.

Teach your children what to do if they become separated from  you in a crowd or a store or in any public place. Teach them to look for a helpful stranger.  They’ll be there.


Cool Tip – Lighting

March 25, 2012

From a Facebook post of an Oregon friend of mine:

“I have a friend who used her Solar Lights inside the house at night when the electric power went off during a hurricane. She stuck them in jars and bottles and said they gave off plenty of ‘free light’ in each room. She put them outside in the daytime and brought them back inside at night for several days while the power was off. They are safe to use and cheaper than batteries.”

I’m going to get some solar-powered path lights and try this out, especially given the fire hazard of using candles.  Cool tip.


Spring Forward & Change Your Batteries

March 25, 2012

Just a couple of weeks ago, in most of the U.S. we moved the clocks forward an hour to begin Daylight Savings Time. You know – Spring forward!  Lots of people were late for church that Sunday.

Lots of people also changed the batteries in their home smoke detectors and carbon monoxide detectors (even those that are hard-wired).   The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission recommends that you change them twice a year.  That way you’re assured of having fresh batteries should your family’s lives depend upon those devices.  The beginning and end of Daylight Savings Time is simply a convenient time to jog your memory.

A working smoke alarm will double your chances of surviving a home fire by giving you the critical time needed to escape.  More than 90 percent of all homes in the U.S. have smoke alarms, but as many as one-third of them don’t work because of old or missing batteries.  And two-thirds of fire deaths occur in homes where there are no smoke alarms or no working smoke alarms.

Here are a few more home-fire related tips:

  • Put a smoke alarms inside and outside every room where someone sleeps and at least one on each floor.
  • All residents should know how the alarm sounds and what it means.
  • Clean and maintain smoke alarms according to the manufacturer’s instructions.
  • Have a fire escape plan with two ways out of every room.  Teach it to everyone in the home, especially children.
  • When the smoke alarm sounds, get out of the home immediately and go to a pre-planned meeting place.

While you’re at it, go ahead and change the batteries in your emergency radio and flashlights.  That small pile of used batteries probably still has enough life left to power less life-critical devices for awhile.

U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission press release:  http://www.cpsc.gov/cpscpub/prerel/prhtml12/12127.html


My Philosophy

March 24, 2012

Getting your family prepared for a big emergency situation like a hurricane or an earthquake or a tornado or an ice storm or . . . . . . can feel quite overwhelming.

Where do we begin?  And how can we possibly get ready for it?  There are so many possible scenarios.  There’s so much information out there.  Where should we start?  Lots of people get immobilized by the perceived magnitude of the effort.  It’s just too daunting to think about.  Others feel like it’s hopeless, that the odds are so stacked against us, there’s no reason to even try.

I hope to take the overwhelmedness out of it for you by providing an action plan that is tailored to your specific family.  And I hope to inspire you to start picking away at those actions by showing you how it can help your family be more comfortable, less stressed, and more self-sufficient in any emergency situation.

My preparedness philosophy is based on three basic principles:
1.  You will never be completely ready, but you can be much better prepared. (Hence, More Ready Today.)
2. Preparing for most any emergency situation helps you be better prepared for just about any other emergency, too.
3.  It’s important to start now. (Hence, More Ready Today.)

You won’t ever really be ready. No matter how much water, food, and supplies you put away.  No matter how many skills you learn.  No matter how many redundancies upon redundancies you have, there likely will be some aspect of the emergency situation that seems to trump your preparedness.  This is due to the unpredictable nature of such situations, and sometimes their sheer magnitude.

Just start.  With each small step that you take, you’ll make your life a whole lot easier and less stressful than if you do nothing.  I suggest that all families take the first two steps immediately.  Now.  Today.  Then pick away at other preparedness steps that you’ll read about in this blog and elsewhere.  You might be surprised how much of the plan you already have accomplished and didn’t even realize it.

This is Important – DO THIS TODAY!

I recommend that if you haven’t yet taken these first two steps, do them today.  These two actions cost little to no money and take very little time to implement.   What are those first two all-important steps?

  1. Store at least 3 gallons of water per person in unbreakable containers.  (And don’t forget water for your pets, too.)
  2. Develop a simple communication plan for your family.

No excuses.  Do it!  I don’t want to hear about the snow in your yard that can be melted or the lake a block away or the water in your toilet tanks.  Buy packaged water, or find or buy containers and fill them with water.  Fill them now.  Don’t wait until you find out how much chlorine to put in them in a future post.  Fill them now.

Your family communication plan should include:

  • A list (on paper, not just electronically) of all the important phone numbers for your family; with a copy for each family member
  • The phone number of an out-of-the-area person that everyone in the family agrees to call first in an emergency; this person will act as an information hub for you
  • A meet-up location outside your house in case you have to evacuate quickly
  • A meet-up location not in your neighborhood in case you can’t get home.

In future posts, I’ll share more on the why’s and how’s of these two steps, as well as loads of information on other actions and useful tips that will help your family to be more ready for the next big one.