Emergency kits for the holiday gift season
My annualish post below on home and car emergency kits, something that
makes an excellent gift. Even if you and yours are all set, there's
always maintaining and updating your kits. Most of this post is a
retread; the one upgrade is an inexpensive, solar-powered lantern.
I've found that
emergency kits make highly-appreciated gifts for friends and relatives,
one of those things that are on everyone's to-do list but often don't
get done. If the entire kit's too expensive, you can just give a car
kit, or get a part (I suggest water and water purification) and upgrade
over time.
If people have had kits for a few years then
it's also time to consider replacing out the food. If you or someone
you know uses camping food, you might switch out the old with the new a
year or two before expiration, so you can use the food before it
expires. Freeze-dried food will probably last longer than the expiration
date, so you might replace the older stuff but hold on to it in case
the emergency lasts longer than expected.
My emphases
were making them easy for me to put together, easy for people with no
camping experience to use, and ones that would last as many years as
possible without needing replacement or maintenance. In return I was
willing to pay more, be more bulky than the minimum possible, and have
limited control over food selection.
- Water in plastic jugs, 3 gallons/person
- Chlorine dioxide water-purification pills (purifies 7 gallons) in case water goes bad (after 6 months, assume the water's bad), in case it's leaked away, or in case you need more water.
- Mountain House Just In Case Food Bucket, 1 per person or 2 for 3 people
- Hydroheat Flameless Heat 10 pack, 1 per person. Note that I'm unfamiliar with this product - the one I know, Mountain Oven Flameless Heating Kit, is currently available. I'll revise this as I learn more.
- Plastic silverware
- Emergency phone numbers/contact list
- MPOWERD Inflatable Solar Lantern, 1 per person. Maybe a cheap flashlight/headlamp too.
- Spare batteries in clear plastic bag so you can see if they've become corroded over time
- Plastic tarp and cord as a rain shelter
- Swiss Army knife
- Emergency shelter, 1 per adult
- Cheap or expensive first aid kit (I went with cheap kits from the local drugstore)
- Cheap rain gear, spare shoes and clothes
- Toilet paper (in plastic bag to prevent dampness) and trowel
- Hand-crank radio/flashlight combination (can also charge cell phones)
- Liter water bottle per person (enough to keep you hydrated for a few hours until you can find a water source)
- Water purification tablets (can disinfect murky water from ditches, and you might need to)
- Emergency shelter
- Small amount of long-lasting food (I found tins of honey-roasted peanuts that were good for four years)
- Cheap rain poncho
- Emergency contact list
- Shoes you can walk many miles in, if that's not what you normally wear
- MPOWERD Inflatable Solar Lantern, and maybe a cheap, tiny flashlight
- wool blanket (additional warmth, or traction under a spinning wheel in the mud or snow). Cheap space blanket is an alternative, but it won't give you traction.
Lots of great comments when I did this post in 2013 here, and a resource link at Making Light.
11 comments:
Good post. I am thinking to have some ideas for gifts for Christmas day. Can you share some ideas please? dissertation writing services
I have taken survival courses for jungle, Arctic, desert, and emergency medical treatment, because I used to travel in pretty weird places which sometimes had non existent or possibly hostile natives. In those days we were given a kit, which of course included the Swiss Army knife, another knife, a whistle, a mirror, a can opener, flashlight, bandages, etc. But over the years I learned to pack my own goodies, and I pack according to the specific needs.
Your list is fine, but I would put the hand crank flashlight ahead of a solar powered flashlight. I use a small iodine bottle instead of chlorine pills because it works for disinfecting water as well as wounds. A small saw with a sharp point comes in handy, it can be used to get firewood, and to cut a hole in the ice to get water out of a frozen pond.
I figured out an iron ration that became really popular with my buddies, a small cylindrical plastic bag with a mix of powdered milk, sugar, and instant oat meal. That goes over very well if you can heat water.
There are also these Mylar type blankets you can pack really small, they come in handy to stop the rain, wind, and make a small shelter. And I would add a box of rubbers. Those can be used to keep matches, as tourniquets, and to keep your clips dry if you carry a gun. I wouldn't say a gun is a priority, a good knife, twine or fishing nylon and a lesson on how to set a bird trap are much handier.
I think the key is to prepare a car kit suited for the specific trip, and to have in the house things you need for whatever you expect can happen. For example, I would expect a large earthquake in California, and that means keeping your goodies where they won't be covered by a ton of rubble. And evidently if you are getting ready for a helicopter crash in the Arctic you had better have stuff to survive low temperatures and be ready to patch up a compound fracture.
> Spare batteries in clear plastic bag
> so you can see if they've become corroded over time
Stock up with Energizer Lithium primary cells (AAA and AA) -- silver and blue wrapper --- they work in freezing temperatures and last for years in storage. And they don't corrode and leak like alkaline cells do.
> keeping your goodies where they won't be
> covered by a ton of rubble
We took down our chimney before it falls down:
Most of the chimneys fell to the south after the big Hayward quake.
http://www.berkeleydailyplanet.com/issue/2012-10-05/article/40287?headline=The-Time-To-Learn-From-The-1868-Hayward-Fault-Earthquake-Is-NOW--By-Richard-Schwartz-2012
We can't have wood fires on the cold damp foggy "clear the air alert" high pressure nights anyhow.
Stewart Band was a first responder at the Marina collapse and fire, and did a memorable review of that, well worth reading before you're on the spot:
http://sb.longnow.org/SB_homepage/Earthquake_Lessons.html
Here is a useful price guide for more traditional gift-giving .
Large sheet of tent fabric or plastic to catch rain with.
Esp flood areas where drinking water can become very scarce.
4.5 square metres = a gallon for every mm of precip.
"Padhma" appears to be a spambot. Doesn't Blogger have a way of nuking such?
Yep, but either the spambots are getting better or Blogger lazier. More are getting through these days.
Eli
Self-warming food pouches:
http://heatermeals.com/how-self-heating-works/
Post a Comment