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Store Sports Balls Upright with Bungee Cords



 

  Store Sports Balls Upright with Bungee Cords

 

If you have a garage, odds are it's filled with random sports balls scattered amongst the shelves and on the ground. If you'd like to keep them more accessible and organized, it's surprisingly easy to add a supermarket-style bungee cord organizer to your wall.

 

You've probably seen something like this at the store to hold various balls in place, but the concept works just as well at home. Wendy at Designed To Dwell shows how her husband nailed a few pieces of wood into their garage's exposed studs, and then attached a few off-the-shelf bungee cords to keep the balls from falling out. Obviously, this tip is easier if you don't have drywall installed in your garage, but you could still do it with a little reworking. The cords make it easy to reach in and get the ball you need without having to dig around looking for it, and you can add more cords if necessary to hold smaller items as well. For more garage organization ideas, be sure to hit up the source link.

 

 Making Use of Some Studs | Designed To Dwell via  LIFE.hackaday

Monitor your world with $39 Motes sensors | Crave - CNET

home monitors, $39 sensor monitored with mobile phone


Monitor your world with $39 Motes sensors

Wimoto's Motes Indiegogo project wants to put small environmental sensors into the hands of anyone with a smartphone.

| June 7, 2013 1:51 PM PDT
Growmote

This Growmote monitors your plants for water, light, and cold.

(Credit: Wimoto)

You're sitting in the living room. You're wondering if the Mother-in-Law's Tongue growing in a pot in the back room needs to be watered. You could get up and stick your finger in the dirt, or you could check your smartphone and see what the plant's personal sensor says.

The Motes Indiegogo project offers several different flavors of remote sensors that work with iOS devices (Android and Surface coming soon). Each sensor costs $39. That price point and the variety of sensors available has attracted plenty of interest. The Motes project has already doubled its $22,000 goal with 35 days of fundraising left.

Here's a rundown of the Bluetooth-equipped Motes. The Climote measures temperature, humidity, and light. The Gromote checks plants for watering needs, light levels, and potential frosts. The Thermote noncontact thermometer can be pointed at anything you like and will measure the temperature. The Securimote has both an infrared motion detector and an accelerometer.

Each Mote can get up to a year of life out of the battery. The sensor data works with an app that offers a lot of flexibility. You can get alerts if a room gets too hot, a plant needs watering, or if the humidity level around your expensive guitars is dropping. You can also just check in on your sensors to see what's going on. The app can handle 128 Motes.

The Motes don't have to be sending data all the time. You can leave them alone and let the internal memory collect information over preset intervals or whenever an alert condition happens. All-in-all, the Motes are simple devices with a clean interface at a decent price. That's why they're doing so well on Indiegogo. It's another step in making sensors more accessible to all.

Freelance writer Amanda C. Kooser covers gadgets and tech news with a twist for CNET's Crave blog. When not wallowing in weird gadgets and iPad apps for cats, she can be found tinkering with her 1956 DeSoto.

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Watch later: Home Prepping System

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HOME PREPPING SYSTEM (Project Proposal) "Prepping for the Rest of Us"

Fearful Times Success Blueprint

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The Most Often Forgotten Survival Preparations Submitted by Brandon Smith from Alt-Market

Submitted by Brandon Smith from Alt-Market

The Most Often Forgotten Survival Preparations

I think it’s safe to say with some conviction that in the year of 2012 the concept of survival prepping is NOT an alien one to most Americans. When National Geographic decides there is a viable market for a prepper TV show (no matter how misrepresentative of true preppers it may be), when Walmart starts stocking shelves with long term emergency food storage kits, when survivalism in general becomes one of the few growing business markets in the midst of an otherwise disintegrating economy; you know that the methodology has gone “mainstream". There is a noticeable and expanding concern amongst Americans that we are, indeed, on the verge of something new and unfortunate.

Is it the big bad hoodoo of the soon to expire Mayan Calendar? For a few, maybe, but for the majority of us, no. That jazz is a carnival sideshow designed to make the prepping culture appear ridiculous. We don’t need to believe in magical prophecies to know that there is a catastrophic road ahead; all we have to do is look at the stark realities of our current circumstances. It does not take much awareness anymore to notice looming fiscal volatility, social unrest, the potential for unrestrained war, and the totalitarian boldness of our government. I’ll take the wrath of Quetzalcoatl any day over the manure storm that is approaching us currently.

With some estimating a count of 3 million prepper families and growing in the U.S., the motto of “beans, bullets, and band-aids" is finding a home amongst legions. However, being closely involved in the survivalist movement during the past six years and speaking with literally thousands of preppers, it has become clear to me that we still have a long journey ahead of us before we can claim true efficiency and mastery.

Sadly, having a stockpile of food, weapons, and some slick tactical gear is not enough to ensure a high likelihood of survival, at least not in any of the social collapses that have occurred in the past century around the world. It’s a start, but only just…

There are a number of detrimental weakness to the survivalist movement and considerable holes in prepper knowledge that must be addressed now while we have the time and relative safety to do so. The greatest threat to the common survivalist is not economic collapse, roving bandits, Blackwater mercenaries, or predator drones; those dangers are a piece of cake compared to the threat of an overblown ego, which will get a man killed faster than the most sophisticated smart bomb. If we cannot accept that there is always more to learn, and room to improve, we have been defeated before we have begun.

The following is just a short list of the many areas in which there is obvious and acute inadequacy in the movement overall…

Secondary Retreat Locations

Never put all your eggs in one basket. I hear a lot of tough talk from some survivalists who claim they would rather die than leave their property. Of course, I suspect they will see the error in this brand of bravado when the legitimate chance of death actually arises. There is no harm whatsoever in having a backup plan. I’m not sure any survivalist who doesn’t is really a survivalist. Stand your ground when necessary, but don’t let pure pride and stupidity prevent you from living to fight again another day.

Physical Fitness And Health

You may be the Tom Berenger-like master sniper of your particular county, but if you can’t run a hundred yards with your rifle rig without going into coronary thrombosis, then you aren’t going to live long during a collapse scenario. Even those preppers who have age as an excuse…don’t really have an excuse. I personally know survivalists and homesteaders in their 60’s and 70’s who could physically outmatch numerous other preppers of the same age or younger without much effort. The difference? They make a concerted effort to take care of their health.

Sometimes certain wise-cracks made by the insipid yuppies of our modern era against suvivalists are true, and we should take serious note when this occurs. The primary insult being that many of us are far too fat to outrun or outfight a paper sack, let alone a determined opponent. I have, to be honest, seen chest beating antics from more than a few clinically obese “preppers" that were truly embarrassing. On the bright side, this does not have to be a permanent hindrance to our success.

The solution is simple: Eat less. Eat healthier. Exercise more.

A person who has attained a high level of physical fitness has done more than prove his prowess. He has also proven he has the will and the passion to pursue a directed goal and achieve it, regardless of difficulty. This is where the adults are separated from the children in this world. Are you willing to endure extreme difficulty to win something of legitimate value? Do you have the self discipline to forgo certain luxuries and comforts to gain long term advantages? Or, would you rather take the path of least resistance and certain doom? Personal health is no joke for the survivalist.

Community Building And Networking

Organization is not the strongest suite of the survivalist movement for a number of reasons. The first being that our paranoia completely impedes our ability to work with others. Now, to be clear, it is not paranoia if they are really out to get you, and with multiple leaked documents like the MIAC Report, the Virginia Fusion Center Report, and the DHS reports on “right wing extremism", it is not as if our concerns are unfounded. However, the movement needs to realize that the primary object of labeling us as “extremists" and categorizing us as potential threats to national security is to create crippling fear. Their main goal is to condition preppers to censor themselves, and to stifle their own organizational efforts.

Solid community, even open formation of community, is necessary for countless reasons. The more we isolate ourselves from one another now, the more alone and vulnerable we will be tomorrow. Calls for “OPSEC" should be embraced to a point, but they can also become an excuse for laziness and inaction. No prepper who goes it alone during crisis is going to come out unscathed, if they come out alive at all. This is the great forgotten lesson of survival, from the Depression and Weimar Germany, to Argentina and Bosnia; those persons and families who were isolated simply did not make it. The wide spectrum of skill sets and supplies needed to establish a survival foundation are far too many for any single prepper to attain.

The logical fallacy that usually prevents survival networking is the argument that if you are a bigger group, you are a bigger target. This thinking shows a lack of prioritization. During a social or economic collapse, EVERYONE is a target. National chaos does not make distinctions between those who never shared their survivalist tendencies and those who did. The DHS might, but they are not the biggest threat to the common prepper. The most dangerous environment for the prepper, no matter what the circumstances may be, is one in which he has no support.

If you do not have ample neighbors and friends on board with the prepper lifestyle, and who can be counted on in an emergency, then you are not ready, nor are your chances very good. Period.

Barter Markets And Trade Skills

At Alt-Market we relentlessly promote the idea of decentralized trade markets because, to be frank, they are going to spring up one day soon whether the IRS, the DOJ, or the Federal Reserve likes it or not. The crisis in the EU has proven my position on the inevitability of the barter dynamic conclusively. These private trade networks are becoming the new foundation for countries like Greece, Italy, and Spain, and it should be noted that the financial instabilities in America far outweigh any of the problem in those places. If we know that economic danger is on the horizon, and we know that barter markets will be the immediate result, then why not build them now, instead of waiting and scrambling after disaster strikes?

Any survivalist that does not know who he will be trading for essential supplies, and who does not know what skills he will use to garner those supplies, is in for a world of hurt.

Overlooked But Vital Items

There is a saying in the survival movement: You’re never done prepping. I absolutely agree. Unless you are a millionaire with a highly organized brain, there will always be some other piece of equipment that you’ll discover you need down the line. That said, there are some things every prepper should have, but many, from my observations, do not. I have also heard every excuse imaginable and some unimaginable when such people are presented with the recommendation that they obtain these items, lack of money being the usual suspect.

Yes, many of us are broke, or feel broke, these days Invariably, though, when most survivalists examine their financial situation carefully, they will discover a host of peripheral expenses that are unnecessary or outright extravagant. I once had a would-be survivalist make the argument that he could not afford a year’s supply of food, then admit that he had just went on a Carnival Cruise to the Caribbean. This is an extreme example, but it illustrates a common hang up. Now is not the time for people to live beyond their means, or to shrug off their preps so that they can have a new La-Z-Boy, cable TV, an internet gaming account, a high priced vacation, a six day a week stockpile of beer (hey, cut back a day, guys! Try it out and see how it fits) etc. Times are changing, and they will definitely change without us if we are not careful.

There is always a way to get the preps you need, if you are motivated enough to make it happen. Here are a few items that seem to escape from people’s lists:

Extra Survival Clothing:
Clothing is a real pain for a lot of survivalists because it is one prep that they must absolutely purchase doubles and triples of. Good durable shoes, pants, even socks, can get expensive. Base layer clothing like Smart Wool sometimes costs in the range of $100 or more for a single set. Take the pain, bite the bullet, and get the absolute best clothing you can find in multiples. It may have to last you quite a long time without replacement, especially the artificial fabrics. Imagine having to wear the same vapor producing sweat drenched crusty duds day in and day out while sharing a retreat location with some less than amused buddies. They may end up coming after you before the looters do.

Body Armor: This stuff is going to be at a premium in the near future. I have already seen price spikes in good body armor in the days after the Aurora Theater shootings. Why? Because the fear is that the establishment will move to try to ban said gear in response, causing a rush to purchase. That fear is not misplaced. Plus, I would imagine a bullet to the gut, whether accidental or intentional, is not an event to celebrate with a rootbeer float. Believe it or not, body armor rigs that include rifle plates are extremely sparse amongst preppers right now, and this simply can’t continue.

Gas Masks And Filters: Not long ago I wrote about the revolutions and rebellions that took place in Russia after the formation of the Soviet Union against the abuses of communism. At that time, the more successful the rebellion, the more apt the Soviets were to dump chemical weapons over entire towns, mountains, and valleys, to erase the problem. Never expect that a tyrannical government is going to fight fair. In fact, expect that they won’t. Even if you don’t foresee such an event taking place in the U.S., it is imperative that every person owns not just a gas mask, but extra filters as well. Plan on dealing with multiple incidences in which your air will be unsafe to breath.

NBC Alert Items: How many preppers do you know with a Geiger Counter? I know three, out of the hundreds I speak with regularly. This is not a good sign. If the Fukushima disaster has taught us anything, it is that radiological threats are not just relegated to the realm of nuclear bombs. Every community should have several Geiger Counter devices handy, along with chemical warfare strips which change color when exposed to an offending airborne agent. Remember the panic buying that ensued in Japan for these kinds of goods after the reactor meltdown? Don’t overlook radioactivity. Knowing what has been hit by concentrated fallout and what hasn’t is a tremendous advantage.

Thermal Countermeasures: A box of road flares, IR flashlights, and IR floodlights, should be in every survivalists home. With the advent of predator drones armed with night vision and thermal vision, as well as numerous other nasty weapons platforms, the need for countermeasures that create false thermal signatures to confuse an attacker with this kind of technology is a must.

Extra First Aid Supplies: During a collapse, you become the hospital, and no amount of Obamacare is going to help you. Almost every prepper has a first aid kit, but few have one that will really last through a prolonged crisis. Collapse brings with it all kinds of injuries and sicknesses we never think of facing in our current atmosphere, with more frequency than I believe many would like to admit possible. A sterile bandage may be as sought after and as rare as a warm shower in the near future, so stock an ample supply.

Solar Panels: I am astonished at how many preppers still do not have any solar power capability today. It’s FREE off grid power, for god’s sake! Pay the initial costs, and at at least buy a system that is capable of charging and running batteries and essential electronics that will aid you in your survival.

Greenhouse: When discussing the idea of relocation, I sometimes hear the assertion that places like Montana are terrible for growing food (usually from people who have never lived in Montana). In fact, a survival garden could be grown almost anywhere, regardless of region or climate, if you use the right methods. One of the best methods is the use of a greenhouse, which many preppers do not have. Set aside your preconceptions of what gardening is, and do what works. Even in winter, some plants can be grown in a greenhouse environment to provide you and your family with precious vitamin rich food. Just build it.

Raw Building Materials: Do you have a stockpile of lumber and nails? What about raw iron and steel? Sealants to repel pests and maintain your home? Bags of concrete to reinforce a new addition? Think about how much you will need to build after the final shoe drops. Probably a lot more than you have ever built in your life…

No Room For Error

Time is running short, and if we are to succeed as a movement, we must be ready to hold a candle to ourselves, admit where we are lacking, and fix the problem while we have the luxury to do so. Ultimately, the most important and most ignored aspect of prepping is our own mindset. Do we have the correct sense of urgency, and are we acting on it? Have we prepared ourselves psychologically for the difficulties ahead? Are we ready to make sacrifices for survival and victory? Will we have what it takes at our core to see this thing through? At this very moment, many do not. But, they have the potential to rise to the occasion. The decision is theirs to make…

Preparedness Binder



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Author Topic: Preparedness Binder  (Read 3279 times)

Offline viper08

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Preparedness Binder
« on: December 21, 2011, 11:58:32 AM »
I have came up with an idea to make a preparedness binder for my wife. She is ok with my preparedness but far from on board. My main worry is that something will happen while I am away and she will not know how to handle it.
Here is what I am thinking of including:

Instructions on what to do in case of:
Power Outage
Water Outage
Local Disaster

How to's for:
Cooking without electric
Operating wood stove
Operating gas heater


Just stuff like that. Does anyone have anything similar and what did you include in it?
Also any additional ideas would be appreciated.
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Re: Preparedness Binder
« Reply #1 on: December 21, 2011, 12:05:55 PM »
We have exactly what you just described. We have both the electronic versions on the iphones and the laptop, and we have two printed versions, one with our preps in her BOB and one on our bookshelf. She is on board, but doesn't know exactly what to do in every situation. Eases my mind about things when I am away.

Offline Adam B.

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Re: Preparedness Binder
« Reply #2 on: December 21, 2011, 12:30:07 PM »
Not a bad idea. I already know it would help out at my house. Just trying to have a clean, organized house with 2 kids is impossible, let alone having them prepared.

LMFAO — I had to listen to my teenage daughter run her mouth about how she is starving and there is no food in the house when 10 minutes later I am serving her (and myself) nachos with cheese sauce and 2 choices of salsa (mild, or black bean & corn)... Which took me all of 5 minutes to prepare. I had to tell her "just because we don't have anything you can just toss in the microwave and eat 4 minutes later doesn't mean we have no food. AND you STILL got to eat total JUNK in the same amount of time it would have taken you to microwave some JUNK."

So, dealing with that mindset — a Jr. Paris Hilton who can't even figure out how to cook a pop tart, it would probably be a good idea to have some "what to do if the power goes out" kind of information for her sake, and for my girlfriend who always ends up calling me if something like that happens.
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Offline fred.greek

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Re: Preparedness Binder
« Reply #3 on: December 21, 2011, 06:22:38 PM »
Add to it your will, living will, health and general powers of attorney, etc.

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A relatively "up to date" online version of my treatise, "Sustainable Civilization:  From the Grass Roots Up" many of the appendices linked, such as the basics of the food production appendix is available online at:
http://sca21.wikia.com/wiki/Sustainable_Civilization

Offline excaliber

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Re: Preparedness Binder
« Reply #4 on: December 21, 2011, 06:38:34 PM »
I have a binder with printed off things of interest, like how much bleach to put in water to purify it,
what plants are edible, how honey is an antiseptic etc.

and its not just for me, it will help when I try to convince someone that you can put bleach in water and drink it.
or put honey on an open cut if you have no other antiseptic.

this way I have printed detailed references I can show them. and info to fall back on if I forget.
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Re: Preparedness Binder
« Reply #5 on: December 28, 2011, 09:44:14 AM »
I have also been putting a binder together as well. It is a working document; updated as regularly as needed.

In it, I have the same sort of "how-to" instructions for common, every day emergencies, but I also include medical information, maps, inventories, contacts, etc. as part of my Bug-Out Plan. Basically, it is everything I have on my computer, and partially in my mind, as hard-copies -- I call it my "smart-book."
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Living is simple; life is complicated.

Offline Shaunypoo

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Re: Preparedness Binder
« Reply #6 on: December 28, 2011, 09:49:47 AM »
Jeez, I have so much to do.
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“A human being should be able to change a diaper, plan an invasion, butcher a hog, conn a ship, design a building, write a sonnet, balance accounts, build a wall, set a bone, comfort the dying, take orders, give orders, cooperate, act alone, solve equations, analyze a new problem, pitch manure, program a computer, cook a tasty meal, fight efficiently, die gallantly. Specialization is for insects."  Robert Heinlein

"There's this new thing called Situational Awareness!"  Sterling Archer

Offline endurance

Re: Preparedness Binder
« Reply #7 on: December 28, 2011, 10:28:01 AM »
I like the idea and I need to take it a step further.  Our 90 year old house is quirky with separate septic systems, city and well water sources, and a mixture of plumbing from galvanized steel to copper, pvc and PEX.  I really need to create a guide book for shutting things down in the fall and starting things up in the spring, how to shut off the water, how to run the pumps, where various clogs can be cleared, etc.  If I died the wife would spend a small fortune on plumbers and handimen just keeping the ol' place running. 
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"There are things that you don't question when your home always smells like baking bread."  From The Hunger Games

Offline Cedar

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Re: Preparedness Binder
« Reply #8 on: December 28, 2011, 10:31:10 AM »
who can't even figure out how to cook a pop tart...

Ummmm.. you cook poptarts?

Cedar
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"Do not breathe simply to exist."


Offline Cedar

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Re: Preparedness Binder
« Reply #9 on: December 28, 2011, 11:41:51 AM »
Jeez, I have so much to do.

Don't get overwhelmed about it. Just do one-step-at-a-time. AND keep it fun, not a chore.

Cedar
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Offline Shaunypoo

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Re: Preparedness Binder
« Reply #10 on: December 28, 2011, 11:52:51 AM »
Don't get overwhelmed about it. Just do one-step-at-a-time. AND keep it fun, not a chore.

Cedar

I have a to-do list and my goal is to do something towards progress on the list every day.  Not cross something off, just make progress.  But that list keeps growing.  I guess it is part of the inevitable process of learning all of the things that can be done to make yourself more self sufficient.  This thread is awesome because I just had a bullet point that said "Make a Preparedness Binder".  At least I now have a bunch of smaller bullet points to put under the big bullet point that I can cross off. 

Yay crossing stuff off. :happydance:
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“A human being should be able to change a diaper, plan an invasion, butcher a hog, conn a ship, design a building, write a sonnet, balance accounts, build a wall, set a bone, comfort the dying, take orders, give orders, cooperate, act alone, solve equations, analyze a new problem, pitch manure, program a computer, cook a tasty meal, fight efficiently, die gallantly. Specialization is for insects."  Robert Heinlein

"There's this new thing called Situational Awareness!"  Sterling Archer

Offline ShannonB

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Re: Preparedness Binder
« Reply #11 on: December 28, 2011, 02:05:34 PM »
I like the idea and I need to take it a step further.  Our 90 year old house is quirky with separate septic systems, city and well water sources, and a mixture of plumbing from galvanized steel to copper, pvc and PEX.  I really need to create a guide book for shutting things down in the fall and starting things up in the spring, how to shut off the water, how to run the pumps, where various clogs can be cleared, etc.  If I died the wife would spend a small fortune on plumbers and handimen just keeping the ol' place running.
I also did this. With added steps for turning off the gas to the house, to the furnace and to the hot water heater. I copied those pages and put them in a small clear tote with the water key and the tools needed to turn everything off including an extra fire place key.
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Having nearly a year's worth of stored food I sent my picture in to several government agencies in hopes of making the "Most Wanted Walls" and to be declared a supervillain.


Re: Preparedness Binder
« Reply #12 on: December 28, 2011, 02:48:32 PM »
You might want to add a brief section on protecting the house.

She doesn't have to be a marksman, but ask this question to some random people... What is the most recognizable sound in the world?

Answer: Actuating a Pump Shotgun

You don't have to even have ammunition... if someone is breaking into your house and they hear a shotgun pump in the next room, chances are good that they are going to leave quickly.
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Re: Preparedness Binder
« Reply #13 on: December 29, 2011, 03:14:41 PM »
Check: Adding this to the other list of things to do.

Funny how the list building is ongoing but somedays I look at what I have already done and smile. One step at a time...
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I tell ye true, liberty is the best of all things; never live beneath the noose of a servile halter.²
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Offline TLBones

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Re: Preparedness Binder
« Reply #14 on: December 29, 2011, 07:01:58 PM »
I think a binder is a great idea.    I'm going to sound like I'm picking on my wife, but if I ever get around to creating a binder like this it would have to be a heavily illustrated with pictures so she'd understand.    For instance:  I'd include a picture of the main water shutoff valve and it's location and put an arrow showing the direction to turn the valve.  That might sound rediculously obvious but in a stressful situation it could make life much easier for a family member that is not of the "handyman/survival" mindset.  Keep it simple... My 0.02...
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Offline TwoBluesMama

Re: Preparedness Binder
« Reply #15 on: December 30, 2011, 10:07:06 AM »
I think a binder is a great idea.    I'm going to sound like I'm picking on my wife, but if I ever get around to creating a binder like this it would have to be a heavily illustrated with pictures so she'd understand.    For instance:  I'd include a picture of the main water shutoff valve and it's location and put an arrow showing the direction to turn the valve.  That might sound rediculously obvious but in a stressful situation it could make life much easier for a family member that is not of the "handyman/survival" mindset.  Keep it simple... My 0.02...
TLBones I like what you wrote. Some of us ladies usually aren't taught this stuff (well except Cedar and SisterWolf who probably can build their own houses  ;D) and if no one ever shows you - how will you know? I think every person should have something like this showing how to shut off the water, water heater, electricity, gas etc.

In a stressful situation ie water flooding your house this is perfect - just make sure the binder is absolutely accessible and everyone knows where it is. And the simpler the better cuz when it's panic time simple is best.

I had this situation once as a fairly new bride and I had no freaking idea what to do (hey what can I say I moved out on my own when I was barely 17 and didn't know squat). I had to track my dh down at work and he had to talk me through it (I think yelled me through it is a better description - he wasn't too happy because he was rebuilding a coal mill at the time). But I learned and in the many years since when he does repairs or such I follow him around and ask questions because it helps both of us for me to know this stuff.

And if you have older kids who are left home alone they need to know some of this too.
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My goal in life is to be as good of a person my dog already thinks I am.  ~Author Unknown

America will never be destroyed from outside.
If we falter and lose our freedoms, it will be because we destroyed ourselves." Abraham  Lincoln

DEV being nice... sorta goes along with dogs howling, babies bursting into tears, birds suddenly becoming silent, and an ominous greenish lighting spreading across the landscape...
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Offline Cedar

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Re: Preparedness Binder
« Reply #16 on: December 30, 2011, 11:29:40 AM »
TLBones I like what you wrote. Some of us ladies usually aren't taught this stuff (well except Cedar and SisterWolf who probably can build their own houses 

Taught? More like error and trial for me. This button works.. this one doesn't. Pressure tank frozen? OK.. lets try the blowdryer/chick heat lamp on it and hope the pipes don't crack...

And no.. I have not built a house all by myself, but I have helped out. I probably know enough to build a small cabin alone.

Cedar
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"Do not breathe simply to exist."


Offline TwoBluesMama

Re: Preparedness Binder
« Reply #17 on: December 30, 2011, 11:53:20 AM »

And no.. I have not built a house all by myself, but I have helped out. I probably know enough to build a small cabin alone.

Cedar

See! I knew that! That's why we love you! ;)
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My goal in life is to be as good of a person my dog already thinks I am.  ~Author Unknown

America will never be destroyed from outside.
If we falter and lose our freedoms, it will be because we destroyed ourselves." Abraham  Lincoln

DEV being nice... sorta goes along with dogs howling, babies bursting into tears, birds suddenly becoming silent, and an ominous greenish lighting spreading across the landscape...
[/center

Offline Archer

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Re: Preparedness Binder
« Reply #18 on: December 30, 2011, 12:12:31 PM »
Taught? More like error and trial for me. This button works.. this one doesn't. Pressure tank frozen? OK.. lets try the blowdryer/chick heat lamp on it and hope the pipes don't crack...

And no.. I have not built a house all by myself, but I have helped out. I probably know enough to build a small cabin alone.

Cedar
and you could scavenge 98% of the materials off of CL...
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From a friend: Benjamin Franklin once said that beer is proof that God loves us.
I'm of the opinion that Redheads are proof that, contrary to popular belief, Satan also loves us.

Offline ShannonB

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Re: Preparedness Binder
« Reply #19 on: December 30, 2011, 05:17:13 PM »
Some of us ladies usually aren't taught this stuff....
I giggle at all my girlfriends who have to call repair men or wait till their husbands get home to fix stuff, I won't lie about it. One of the perks of being the oldest in a house full of girls, Daddy never got a boy to teach all the stuff to and I am thankful everyday for my Daddy!

He taught me basic home repair, electrical, plumbing and just about anything to do with a furance, condensor or thermostat (he's been a HVC guy for 40 years) basic car stuff (I can change lights, brakes, fuses, oil & tires) and how to reload.

I have taken it upon my self to follow the hubby around as well and there is some stuff I can teach him (rarely) and we make sure we include the kids (both girls) in all repairs.
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I'll keep my guns, freedom and money. You can keep your "Change".

Sometimes I sits and thinks, sometimes I just sits. My Pop

I have checked my list of favorite people, you're not on it. Lincoln Lawyer

Having nearly a year's worth of stored food I sent my picture in to several government agencies in hopes of making the "Most Wanted Walls" and to be declared a supervillain.


Offline Cedar

  • I know Cedar can, she can take a rainy day and turn it into an apple pie.
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Re: Preparedness Binder
« Reply #20 on: December 30, 2011, 05:22:03 PM »
and you could scavenge 98% of the materials off of CL...

That is more than probably true...  I have the propane hot water heater and new vinyl windows already

Cedar
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Re: Preparedness Binder
« Reply #21 on: December 31, 2011, 12:45:30 AM »
I probably know enough to build a small cabin alone.

Bull...I'd bet half my paycheck you could build a house  :P

Offline Archer

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Re: Preparedness Binder
« Reply #22 on: December 31, 2011, 12:12:42 PM »
Bull...I'd bet half my paycheck you could build a house  :P
take the bet! take the bet!
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From a friend: Benjamin Franklin once said that beer is proof that God loves us.
I'm of the opinion that Redheads are proof that, contrary to popular belief, Satan also loves us.

Re: Preparedness Binder
« Reply #23 on: January 02, 2012, 12:29:18 AM »
This is a really good idea, thanks. We have a list of things that we would pack if we had to evacuate, but having a binder with how to deal with various things, etc is a great idea.
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Offline Cedar

  • I know Cedar can, she can take a rainy day and turn it into an apple pie.
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  • Dont wait for the storm to pass, dance in the rain
Re: Preparedness Binder
« Reply #24 on: January 02, 2012, 02:18:45 PM »
Bull...I'd bet half my paycheck you could build a house  :P

How big?  ;)

Cedar
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Offline viper08

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Re: Preparedness Binder
« Reply #25 on: January 02, 2012, 05:51:51 PM »
It sounds like I'm getting good suggestions. So I'm going to start on this little (lol) project this week. I have good news for all of you that want this for yourself. I want to share my copy as I make it. I just have to figure out just how to do this and everyone on here will be able to use it.
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Offline Shaunypoo

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Re: Preparedness Binder
« Reply #26 on: January 03, 2012, 07:50:49 AM »
It sounds like I'm getting good suggestions. So I'm going to start on this little (lol) project this week. I have good news for all of you that want this for yourself. I want to share my copy as I make it. I just have to figure out just how to do this and everyone on here will be able to use it.

Awesome.  Sounds like a new sticky.
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“A human being should be able to change a diaper, plan an invasion, butcher a hog, conn a ship, design a building, write a sonnet, balance accounts, build a wall, set a bone, comfort the dying, take orders, give orders, cooperate, act alone, solve equations, analyze a new problem, pitch manure, program a computer, cook a tasty meal, fight efficiently, die gallantly. Specialization is for insects."  Robert Heinlein

"There's this new thing called Situational Awareness!"  Sterling Archer

Offline Adam B.

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Re: Preparedness Binder
« Reply #27 on: January 03, 2012, 11:05:19 AM »
Quote
Ummmm.. you cook poptarts?

Exactly... LOL... I meant — "put them in a toaster and push the button" LOL...
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Re: Preparedness Binder
« Reply #28 on: January 03, 2012, 11:14:46 AM »
Exactly... LOL... I meant — "put them in a toaster and push the button" LOL...

Or you just open the package and eat it as is.  I actually prefer them non-toasted.  Haven't had pop-tarts in a while though... mmmmm
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Offline Cedar

  • I know Cedar can, she can take a rainy day and turn it into an apple pie.
  • Survival Demonstrator
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  • Posts: 3420
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  • Dont wait for the storm to pass, dance in the rain
Re: Preparedness Binder
« Reply #29 on: January 03, 2012, 05:55:33 PM »
Or you just open the package and eat it as is.  I actually prefer them non-toasted.  Haven't had pop-tarts in a while though... mmmmm

And here I usually always ate them frozen out on the trail. Wonders of all wonders... you can cook them... Go figure ???

Cedar
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Emergency Management Institute - FEMA Independent Study Program

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ISP Courses

 
Course CodeCourse TitleCEUsCollege Credits
IS-1Emergency Manager: An Orientation to the Position11.0
IS-3Radiological Emergency Management11.0
IS-5.aAn Introduction to Hazardous Materials11.0
IS-7A Citizen's Guide to Disaster Assistance11.0
IS-8.aBuilding for the Earthquakes of Tomorrow: Complying with Executive Order 1269911.0
IS-10.aAnimals in Disasters: Awareness and Preparedness -(8/9/2010)0.41.0
IS-11.aAnimals in Disasters: Community Planning -(10/13/2010)0.51.0
IS-15.bSpecial Events Contingency Planning for Public Safety Agencies -(7/22/2010)0.4
1.0
Details
1.0 (When combined with IS-660)
IS-18.12FEMA EEO Employee Course 2012 -(1/24/2012)0.1
1.0
Details
1.0 (When combined with IS-19, IS-20, IS-21, IS-33, IS-106, IS-107 and IS-101.b)
IS-19.12FEMA EEO Supervisor Course 2012 -(1/26/2012)0.1
1.0
Details
1.0 (When combined with IS-18, IS-20, IS-21, IS-33, IS-106, IS-107 and IS-101.b)
IS-20.12Diversity Awareness -(1/30/2012)0.1
1.0
Details
1.0 (When combined with IS-18, IS-19, IS-21, IS-33, IS-106, IS-107 and IS-101.b)
IS-21.12Civil Rights and FEMA Disaster Assistance -(1/30/2012)0.1
1.0
Details
1.0 (When combined with IS-18, IS-19, IS-20, IS-33, IS-106, IS-107 and IS-101.b)
IS-22Are You Ready? An In-depth Guide to Citizen Preparedness1
1.0
Details
1.0 (When combined with IS 55)
IS-26Guide to Points of Distribution -(5/11/2010)0.4
1.0
Details
1.0 (When combined with IS 102.b, IS 293, IS 634)
IS-27Orientation to FEMA Logistics -(2/8/2011)0.4
1.0
Details
1.0 (When combined with IS-245.a and IS-246)

 

Last Updated: April 17, 2012

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