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Ask Slashdot: How Prepared Are You For a Major Emergency?

The northern US has been buried under snow several times this winter, and flooding has struck quite a few places in the southwest. Those pale, though, beside the recent disasters in Haiti, New Zealand, and Japan, and the seemingly inevitable arrival of a serious earthquake on the West Coast of the US. All of which has me thinking about my (meager) preparedness for a major disaster. Despite plans to stock up in case of a major storm or other emergency, right now I'd be down mostly to canned beans, sardines and Nutella. How prepared are you to do deal with a disaster affecting your region? Is your data safe? What about your family? Do you have escape, regrouping, or survival plans in the event of an earthquake, tsunami, hurricane, industrial accident, or whatever hazards are most relevant where you live? It would be helpful if in comments you disclose your region and environment (urban? rural? exurbs?) and the emergencies you consider worth preparing for, as well as talking about any steps you've taken or plan to take.

9 of 562 comments (clear)

  1. Preparation is in the mind by Okian+Warrior · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The best preparations are knowledge and experience.

    Learn to camp. Join the Boy Scouts or similar when growing up. Learn to fish. Learn to hunt. Go on hikes. Take a first aid course.

    Learn to be calm in the face of a completely unfamiliar situation.

    You can't really plan for an unexpected event, but you can train yourself to react rationally in unfamiliar circumstances. Having a tendency to improvise a solution will get you much further in an emergency than any preparation for a specific circumstance.

  2. Re:Are you armed? by Ynot_82 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Bit of a silly response, don't you think?

    OP talks about preparing for a natural disaster
    What you going to do, shoot the water as it swirls round your feet

  3. Re:Are you armed? by mcrbids · · Score: 5, Insightful

    How many ducks and deer do you think there *are*? If there was an actual disaster, the deer, duck, quail, and lizard populations would plummet as a teaming horde of well-armed people suddenly ravage the landscape.

    We moved to an agricultural society so that we wouldn't have to try to eke out our existence on the little tidbits provided by nature. Wanna prepare? Fine. But don't think for a minute that there will be lots of game waiting for your bullets.

    Guns are for self-defense.

    --
    I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
  4. Re:Are you armed? by penix1 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If you are waiting until the tragedy happens to be getting out of dodge, then you are a victim waiting to happen. Ever see a full scale evacuation of an urbanized area? Gridlock is an outcome of panicked people trying to leave an area. Good luck with that strategy.

    I work emergency management and can tell you from personal experience, the US will be rode hard and put away wet if a catastrophic incident happens today. We don't have the financial capabilities to deal with it and the "something for nothing" crowd we got for politicians these days will cut it even further.

    --
    This is a sig. This is only a sig. Had this been an actual sig you would have been informed where to tune for more sigs.
  5. Re:Are you armed? by digitalhermit · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Ever cleaned game? Wildlife around urban areas tend to be freaking nasty. Mangy, diseased, bony... Not a lot of deer around my city. Not a lot of wild boar either. So you may end up eating rats and bugs. Make sure that you don't puncture the rat intestine and spill rat feces all over that delectable rat meat when you're cleaning that rat. And rats, though they may grow to be large, are still rats and not much more meat than a single drumstick.

    Say all you want about a can of pork and beans or tuna, but I'd much rather eat that than a squirrel. And yes, I've eaten rabbit, deer, wild hog, and snake before... I've never eaten rat though.

  6. Re:Ah. Survival. by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Arguably, the hardocre apocalyptic gun-toters know that they don't really need survival kits: All they need is a list of nearby people who have survival kits, and their existing supplies of guns and ammunition...

  7. Re:Squid! by ilikejam · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Cthulhu waits.
    In the cans.
    In your cupboard.

    --
    C-x C-s C-x k
  8. Re:Ah. Survival. by camperdave · · Score: 4, Insightful

    My strategy is to live in Toronto. We never get any snow (according to my standards) or hurricanes. It's geologically stable, so no quakes. No major dams to burst, or rivers to flood. It's bland and boring. The worst disaster to hit these parts was the blackout of 2003, and even that was more or less over in about 8 hours.

    --
    When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
  9. Re:Ah. Survival. by Per+Wigren · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If such a huge disaster happens you'll probably just die anyway, and if you don't, what's left of it is probably going to suck. It's such a waste of a good life to live it in fear of what *might* happen. Lighten up and increase the quality of your current life instead.

    --
    My other account has a 3-digit UID.