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I don't understand people who live in hurricane areas
Every time there is a hurricane they always show stores with empty shelves.... Don't these people prepare for these kinds of events?
If you told me there was going to be a hurricane and I would unable to leave my house, and we would have no power, we would be fine. We have enough water and power for the three of us for a week. We even have these "Everyready" laterns and tons of batteries to run them. These people know it's gong to happen to them - why don't they prepare for it? |
Says the guy who lives in earthquake and forest fire areas
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Maybe the lettuce they stored last year spoiled and they needed some more.
:1orglaugh |
With a hurricane it's not an instant thing. One afternoon it doesn't just suddenly appear. Having some extra supplies on hand is always a good idea, but if a hurricane is coming, you have plenty of time to prepare. Personally, instead of having a full pantry, I would make sure to have a "get the fuck out" kit. I would save enough money and have it and some basic things set aside so if a hurricane headed my way I could grab my kit, get in the car and not stop driving for until I was well out of its path.
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Stunning. |
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:1orglaugh |
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I know eventually a big volcano is coming at Yellowstone, so I stocked my house with MauiFrost(tm) Lava Coolers and Pompeii brand air de-bad-gasinators. I also hooked my house to the center of the earth to minimize earthquake effects and bought two Civilization Platinum Re-starter Packs with 16 stasis frozen breeders each.
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A lot of my friends were worried because they didn't have much food on hand. Not me. I was ready. |
most of your population lives on a coastline somewhere. Almost every square inch is subject to severe weather.
What magical "safeland" are you even referring to here? You live in an area that is susceptible to massive earthquakes, catastrophic forest fires and one major power outage from losing access to water. I think your safety bubble is entirely imaginary in your case... |
Richard, aren't you surrounded by the Sacramento River valley levee system? I hope your preparedness plans and supplies accounts for flooding, like hurricane level flooding, because thoae levees will fail.
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I just updated it too. My kid is leaving for college and will be in Southern California, about six hours drive time away. In the event of an emergency - such as my kid being in an accident or rushed to the hospital - I am ready to go at a moment's notice. I even have charging cords for my cell and my laptop ready. |
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Fires are a constant danger. |
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With that said... We did have a problem last year with the Oroville Dam and they expected it to fail, and 180k people were evacuated. It was a mess. All of the freeways were bumper to bumper. We were about twenty miles outside of the evacuation zone. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oroville_Dam_crisis |
As soon as I read, "I don't understand" I knew who posted it.
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water for 3 people 5 days......... |
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You also have the additional risks of: LANDSLIDES, LIQUEFACTION, & LEVEE FAILURE https://www.earthquakeauthority.com/...ults-By-County seriously. |
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Even if we do, we are prepared. |
sounds like it.
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But I won't be running to the store last minute to buy stuff. My point is.... People need to be more prepared. No matter where you live something can happen. Hurricane, earthquake, a dam you never heard of failing, a propane train fire... Eventually some day you might need to be required to shelter in place or evacuate. My household is prepared for both. These people who live in hurricane zones know it's coming - if not this year, then next year, or the year after that. My lord.... Make a list of what you might need and start stocking up. People are just lazy. |
Carbon filter, freeze dried food, lighters and toilet paper. Take a lesson from boater trash: that's really all you ever need as far as a bugout kit goes. A suture kit is nice, but as long as you're not bleeding out, isn't technically a requirement.
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Bread and milk only lasts so long dipshit
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I keep enough crack on hand to get through anything. Except for taking baths. Never do that on crack.
Miss you, Whitney! |
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Something unique we were advised to have is an earthquake pry bar/gas shut off tool. Door thresholds will get torqued up and the pry bar is for opening those doors. good idea. |
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I am really happy that the only natural disaster we have in our country is our prime minister :1orglaugh
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Donald J. Trump
We got A Pluses for our recent hurricane work in Texas and Florida (and did an unappreciated great job in Puerto Rico, even though an inaccessible island with very poor electricity and a totally incompetent Mayor of San Juan). We are ready for the big one that is coming! "We are ready for the big one that is coming!" be afraid, be very afraid. |
Make sure you have money to live on motels if needed
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I grew up on top of a little mountain in NJ and every winter we knew we would be snowed in for a few days, usually with no power. Every time it snowed, my parents didn't run out and buy supplies. We spent our summers collecting wood and always had a huge stock pile. We had a pantry crammed with food. We could go a week without anything without worry. When you live in a hurricane zone, shouldn't you at least store some plywood somewhere so that when the storm comes you don't have to rush out to the hardware store to buy plywood? Shouldn't you also store some food? Water? Flashlights and batteries? Isn't this just common sense. If I couldn't leave my house for a week and had no power.... I would be fine. Doesn't everyone plan ahead for such things? |
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many are born and raised there and family is important. you can't ask your whole family to move because you wet your underoos
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Its really not a complicated concept. Food is perishable...people wait till the last minute to buy perishable items. Plywood also rots and takes up a ton of room so people dont keep it around. Batteries...again an item that is used throughout the year and replenished when needed. Its not really all that scary either if youre not right on the coast. I'm about 7-8 miles inland and its fine.
And to touch on your winter storm prep (since I lived in NJ and now in FL)...when its cold out your food doesnt go bad lol. Put it outside. Funny thing is we got grazed by Sandy in NJ and it got absolutely decimated. The prep and buildings here in FL are built for this. My house is concrete and bulletproof glass practically. |
the only person richard is bullshitting his himself while he finger points at others.
when I told him he's fully unprepared for a flood from the levee system he surrounded by, his response to being prepared for a flood was: Quote:
:1orglaugh:1orglaugh:1orglaugh |
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his judging people's hurricane preparedness based on what he sees on tv is beyond retarded. Combined with revealing his own preparedness is absolute nonsense- raid the fridge and have a bbq, we don't live in an earthquake zone/i'm not aware we live in a levee flood zone either but I'm fully prepared. :1orglaugh |
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:1orglaugh:1orglaugh:1orglaugh |
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I'm not laughing at those caught in the path btw. just the fact that richard (who lives in the middle of a desert in shithole central california on top of a fault line) can't figure out why people live on the entire east coast. |
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