Showing posts with label emergency preparedness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label emergency preparedness. Show all posts

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Food Storage, wow, someone in harlem actually turned their basement back into a root cellar

I stumbled across a NY Times article earlier today about root cellars. I was a little surprised, and then a little in awe when I realized that someone in Harlem not only had a basement, but had reverted it back into a root cellar.

How cool is that? Bravo.

The article "Food Storage as Grandma Knew It", by Michael Tortorello, spoke about a trend that happens during difficult economic times, people begin to buy in bulk, grow, and store their own food.

Surprisingly there were a couple hints and tips, for those of us not blessed with the square footage to store root vegetables, for the savvy reader. I just might try a few. But otherwise, I'll just continue to dream of the day when I own a basement, and in the mean time buy "The Food Axis: Cooking, Eating, and the Architecture of American Houses" by Elizabeth Cromley, when it comes out in 2010.

-Bitter

Tuesday, June 12, 2007

Hurricanes, and what to do about them


Photo courtesy of NASA, Visible Earth.

I read this article from MSN today and it got me thinking. You’d never know it, but NYC is a prime target for Hurricanes. We just don’t get them very often.

Great articles about the history of hurricanes in the NYC area can be found here and here. The History Channel produced a show on the history of hurricanes in the NYC area, and showed what the impact would be if a Category 3 hurricane hit the City, you can buy the DVD or wait for it to be shown on cable again. I watched it last winter, it was a little redundant before commercial breaks and sensational, but had some good information in it. For instance, not being from NYC, I never would have thought to look out for falling water towers or air conditioners. And wouldn't have thought to avoid the subway and tunnels even though they become underground rivers during storm surges.

The coast line along New Jersey and Long Island form a right angle, forcing storms that travel up the eastern seaboard onto land. Hence NYC being a prime spot for Hurricanes. They come every 90 years or so. Did I mention the last one came in 1938?


Waves striking a seawall in Queens, 1938 (NWS Historic Collection)
Photo hacked from NYC OEM.

Today’s post is a down and dirty guide to a topic near and dear to my heart. Emergency Preparedness.


  • NYC Office of Emergency Management: Download the Ready NY Hurricane Guide and the Evacuation Zones map. If you're in a flood zone, make plans on how you're going to get out of the area.

  • Pack two "Go Bags" keep one at work and one at home. Don't forget to plan for critical medications that you need like an inhaler or insulin shots, etc., and more general things like asprin and hand sanitizer.

  • Store enough water at home to last you at least three days. 1 gallon of water per person, per day. Why for three days? Because historically disaster recovery agencies have said it takes them three days to set-up. (Yes they gave out this advice Pre-Katrina, it's nothing new.) Ever heard of a "72 hour kit"? They're called that for a reason.

  • Maintain a small food storage, so in the event that food can't be shipped into the city, or you run out of money until the end of the month, you won't starve.

  • Carry $40 in emergency cash on you and keep another stash at home. If the power's out, the ATM's will not be working...

  • Keep a pair of old sneakers at work, so if public transit is down you won't have to walk home in those darling pointy toed shoes with the kitten heal.

  • Make a copy of all your important documents and seal them in a plastic bag, i.e. passports, birth certificates, drivers liscense, insurance policy, social security card, etc. then put it in your Go Bag. Life will be so much simpler, if you happen to have to re-establish your life, if you can quickly prove who you are.

  • And the nifty-est item on the list, courtesy of the 21st Century, pack a flash-drive with your Go Bag. Keep pdf's of important documents, back-ups of your personal finances, investments, bank account data, photos of your dog. Password protected of course. In the aftermath of a disaster, all you'll have to do is gain access to a computer, and bingo, you're good to go.

And there you have it, a down and dirty quick guide of things you should be doing right now. Because you know, it doesn't have to be a Hurricane, it could be a Transit Strike, or a Flu Pandemic, or roaches driving you out. If you have to flee quickly or hunker down at home, you might as well be prepared.

-Bitter