Category: Logistics

The Preparedness Podcast – Episode #104 – Update Your Prep Plan

With the recent series of extreme disasters that we’ve been seeing around the world, now is a good time to update your preparedness plan and make sure you have a plan for even those events that aren’t likely to happen. Case in point, the earthquake/tsunami/nuclear disaster that’s still happening in Japan and the “worst case scenario” tornado that hit Joplin, MO.

While some seem to ignore this basic fact, the earth has a history of cycles. Sometimes things are calm and sometimes things are chaotic. To me, it’s fairly obvious that we entered into a chaos period several years ago. The earth and sun go through cycles and these cycles manifest in ways we typically associate with everyday weather and sometimes as disasters: earthquakes, hurricanes, tornadoes, etc. and, of course, climate.

In the past few years, we have seen more major disasters. Ten years ago, having a 9.0+ earthquake was extremely rare. Currently, four of “The Ten Largest Earthquakes Since 1900“ occurred in the past 7 years.  We’re also seeing weather extremes that haven’t appeared since the first half of last century.

Looking at the list above, the four most recent earthquakes on the list above occurred, in reverse chronological order, in 2011, 2010, 2005 and 2004.  The fifth oldest earthquake on this list occurred in 1965. The period from 1966 to 2003 was a calm period, as far as major earthquakes go.

When looking at these patterns, my concern is that it’s not just earthquakes that is changing, but other earth phenomenon, like tornadoes, hurricanes, flooding, drought, etc..  A I write this, two tornadoes have hit Springfield, MA causing many injuries and extensive damage, according to initial reports.

It’s been mentioned in several recent podcasts, but it’s worth mentioning again. You should review your plans or thinking on what’s possible to occur where you live. If you’re not in an earthquake area, you should start thinking of what happens if an earthquake hits your town. If you live in an area that doesn’t normally get tornadoes or hurricanes, perhaps you live in a fringe area, you may want to brush up on what you’re going to do if one suddenly appears.

(Listen to The Preparedness Podcast on any of your favorite audio players.  Find us in iTunes here: Preparedness Podcast iTunes Link or go to PrepCast.info for direct links to the audio files.)

The Preparedness Podcast – Episode #103 – Repacking for Food Storage part 3

This is the third installment of the mini-series about repacking food for your long-term food storage program.

I started this project looking for a way to repack food for long-term storage that was better than using the typical Mylar in bucket. I was looking for something that offered more flexibility and was more space efficient in storage. After trying several different methods, I determined that, while it wasn’t perfect, the Mylar in bucket method of storing was superior in some very important aspects.

If you’re storing for only a short period of time, other methods would probably work just as good, but when working with a large amount of food, for the amount of work needed to actually get the food to a point where it will be stable in long-term storage, storing in large buckets is the better option. Even with the sometimes hit-or-miss nature of sealing the Mylar bags, I still find it a better option.

Listen to The Preparedness Podcast on any of your favorite audio players.  Find us in iTunes here: Preparedness Podcast iTunes Link or go to PrepCast.info for direct links to the audio files.

 

The Preparedness Podcast – Episode 101 – Repacking for Food Storage, Part 1

Up until recently, most of my food storage has been of the “pantry” storage type.  Meaning, most of the foods that we eat on a regular basis bought from the grocery store. We have some long term storage foods in our storage plan, but recently, and for obvious reasons, I’ve started to increase these. I had some specific ideas on how I wanted to repack some of this food, but it didn’t go the way I had hoped.

Up to now, all of the long term food items that I had were packed in cans, most of them factory sealed. This time, I’ve decided to buy bulk food and repackage it myself in order to take advantage of lower costs and stretch my food budget. While I started my plan of increasing what I had, the first step was really to take an inventory of what I had. During this inventory, I opened a couple of cans and was surprised on what I found. Let’s just say that you should plan on storing more than you think you need.

Anyway, this is part one of the three part series on Repacking for Food Storage.

(Listen to The Preparedness Podcast on any of your favorite audio players.  Find us in iTunes here: Preparedness Podcast iTunes Link or go to PrepCast.info for direct links to the audio files.)

Making Decisions When the Media are Too Ignorant to Ask the Right Questions

With the threat of a nuclear meltdown in Japan, many of us preppers were frustrated with the media and the lack of information they were giving out. It’s bad enough that today’s journalists know next to nothing about how to properly create and type a story. I mean, the lack of punctuation alone is laughable, but mainly, they seemed to have forgotten how to answer the basic questions of Who, What, Where, When, Why and How.

For most articles today, even in the most revered of news sources, you can often go through the entire article and still not really know what’s happening or why. When the Fukushima reactors started to have thermal runaway, they (US “journalists”) should have been finding out and relating to the US audiences what the potential danger was and what we need to be on the lookout for, in detail. For example, I wanted to know:

  • How much radiation was being leaked into the upper air currents, in real numbers that we could use,
  • What the composition of isotopes we were likely to see,
  • What the path of this radioactive cloud was likely to take, given upper air current,
  • When and Where it was going to likely arrive, and
  • What the levels were likely to be when they reached the west coast of the US.

If there was a “journalist” that tracked down this information and reported on it, I didn’t see it.

It would be easy to discount this lack of information simply as “journalists” thinking that we Americans can’t handle the truth or the real hard facts, but I think it’s more likely that today’s journalists and reporters are just ignorant. I don’t mean to say they’re stupid, rather simply too ignorant about what they’re writing about to know what information to dig deep for.

Here’s a small example, take this local news story: “Radiation Detectors Triggered In Arizona.”

They simply took an excerpt from the Arizona Radiation Regulatory Agency (ARRA) and ran with it:

“The average background radiation can range from 100-300 millirems per year,” according to Aubrey Godwin, director of the ARRA. “The amount of additional radiation we are seeing in Arizona is less than 0.1 millirem. Such low concentrations of iodine-131 do not pose a public health threat to Arizonans.”

They didn’t bother to run the numbers themselves. Whatever happen to researching to make sure the facts are correct?

Here’s what I’m talking about. If you go to the ARRA news release of how much radiation that they are detecting, the largest amount of radiation detected is 0.69 pCi/M3 of Iodine-131. Actually, my first issue with this is that the use of Curies and Becquerels is difficult for the non-geek population (which is just about everyone) to convert into something that can be related to, like Grays, Sieverts or even the old standby of REMs. Granted, 99% of the population doesn’t know what those terms mean either, but for those of us preparedness-minded enough to learn about this sort of thing, it makes it easier to deal with.

In fact, I can make a case that it would be much better if they would use terms that even a few of us (preppers, survivalists, etc.) can understand, because in this case, it was clear that the danger was too low to be concerned with, and we could have easily related that information to our friends and family. But I digress…

Because I wanted to know exactly how much absorbed radiation 0.69 pCi would be, I searched the Internet and my books and notes for how to convert Curies into an absorbed dose measurement. I couldn’t find one, not until a friend suggested WolframAlpha (which is a really cool website in itself). If you click on that link, you’ll see at the bottom, that it actually has a corresponding quantity in milliGrays, 7.7×10^-14 mGy/hr (milligrays per hour) for a given isotope at 1 meter. When you type into the WolframAlpha search bar: 7.7×10^-14, you find it’s a really small number.

I have a conversion utility on my iPhone that will convert from the various radiation units (Grays, Sieverts, Rads, REM, etc.) that’s really handy for quick calculations. Ignoring the 10^-14 portion of the number, mainly because the conversion app can’t handle numbers that long, if we convert 7.7 mGy, we find that this equates to 0.77 rads. Then you can calculate 0.77×10^-14 and find that it’s 0.0000000000000077 Rads, which is pretty much the same as 0.0000000000000077 REM, or 0.0000000000077 millirems.

Now, look back to the article, “The amount of additional radiation we are seeing in Arizona is less than 0.1 millirem.” I’d say that was an understatement, as the real amount was far less than the figure given. Even if you didn’t know anything about radiation, seeing a number like 0.0000000000077, you instinctively know that it’s a very low amount.

Another issue that really peeved me was that no one was making the distinction that radiation on the inside of your body is much more damaging than when outside your body. Or the fact that even small amounts of Iodine-131 in children is really bad for them. Where was the investigative report that dug into “What You Need To Know” about radiation and children? I didn’t see it, did you?

So, this brings me to the point about this post. How are you to make decisions when you can’t get the information you need from the authorities? Are you simply going to trust them to be forthwith at the appropriate time? I don’t know about you, but I’m not putting the safety of my family in the hands of a bureaucrat.

The first thing you should do is educate yourself. Learn everything that you need to know about a subject and create an informational database that you can reference when you need to. When I first got interested in survival and getting prepared back in the 1980s, my big concern was surviving the Russian nukes (wasn’t everyone’s?). I read everything I could get my hands on, which back then, mainly meant borrowing books from the local library and reading and rereading. Computers weren’t readily available or affordable, so building your database meant either handwriting notes or photocopying.

Today, it’s easier than ever to compile a list of information and store it for offline, online and mobile use, but you still need to have the fundamental understanding of a topic to know how to filter the information that is put out. At the least, you need to know what the missing information is and extrapolate from what’s available.

Equally useful as having a personal offline database is the multitudes of online resources immediately available, assuming you have an Internet connection. However, the sheer volume of sites that provide information is also part of the problem, in that you need a way to quickly assimilate information. My preferred method is using an RSS aggregator. I use NetNewsWire, which is a Mac-only application, but there are many others for both PC and Mac. There’s also Google Reader, if you’re looking for an online RSS reader.

An RSS Aggregator will take the RSS feed of the websites that you normally visit and compile all the articles and posts into one location. You can then quickly scroll through a large number of articles without having to go to each and every website. What used to take me two to three hours of checking out my daily sites, I can now do in an hour or less, depending on how many articles are there since the last time I looked. Most readers have a search feature, so you can search for specific keywords, making it even faster to zero in on information. When you find a new website that you want to monitor, simply add it to your aggregator.

You can even sign up for a service like Instapaper and store any articles there for later reading. This comes in really handy when you want to save articles so you can read them when you have more time. This is what I do while I’m at work. When I get a few minutes free, I will go through the aggregated RSS feeds to keep on top of what’s happening in the world. When I come to an article that I want to read, but don’t have the time right then, I send it to Instapaper and go back to it later.

When a disaster or crisis event happens, you’ll have to make decision based on the information available. As we’ve seen, though, the distinct lack of accurate information can cause you to over-react or under-react. By learning what you can now, developing an offline informational database and creating a system that allows you to parse vast amounts of online information, you will be better able to make decisions for an appropriate response to the situation.

When it comes down to is that you are the only person you can trust to make the best decision for you and your family.

The Preparedness Podcast – Episode 98 – Avoid Being Too Narrow-Focused

Like me, I’m sure a lot of people who are preparing that take advantage of current events to focus on certain aspects of their preparedness planning.  For example, the nuclear crisis we’re witnessing in Japan is a good reminder that we need to have radiation detection gear and potassium iodide.  Some of you may be scrambling to buy these things now, in a sudden realization that you have a void area in your prep plan.

While omissions in your preparedness plan need to be taken care of, don’t get so caught up in a single event that you get blindsided by something else.  There are a lot of things happening right now, make sure you’re keeping tabs on all of it. Don’t get too narrow focused.

You may have noticed that there has been a run on the purchasing of radiation meters and potassium iodide tablets. If these are things that you haven’t already thought of getting these before a radiation crisis, now isn’t the time to start looking.  Hopefully, this crisis will pass without the need for them and you’ll be able to fill the hole in your preps in a couple of weeks or so.  However, you should be looking into alternatives, just in case you do need them.

Take the opportunity to learn from this event, re-evaluate your preparedness plan and the gear and supplies you have on hand.  Make plans to take care of getting the things you need as soon as you can, but don’t let yourself forget to keep an eye on the other issues that we’re facing.

(Listen to The Preparedness Podcast on any of your favorite audio players.  Find us in iTunes here: Preparedness Podcast iTunes Link or go to PrepCast.info for direct links to the audio files.)

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