| Medicines, passports,wallets, devices, coats and gloves, cash. If i lived in a place like that there would be a go bag with that same as on a dive boat lob. . |
| Family, pets, diaries, photos, passports. |
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In just five minutes? The humans and the pets.
This fire reminds me I need to photograph our furniture and other belongings for insurance purposes . |
In my case, the fireproof box has passports, SSN cards, birth certificates, marriage certificate, titles to cars, deed, will, and some cash. If I grab that box, I can re-establish our lives pretty easily. It's probably easier for me to grab that box than to find my wallet in an emergency. |
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| Isn’t the point of the fireproof box that you don’t have to grab it? |
| I have a fire box filled with the important items (documents and jewelry) that’s easily accessible. Our work bags are also right in the living room and have things like phones, chargers, and computers. If I had a bit more time/ability to carry things, I’d also grab some photo albums of pics that are not stored in the cloud and a few other sentimental things. |
| Photo albums, my safe that holds all personal items (e.g., birth certificates, SS cards, passports, etc.), my purse, my kids' baby books, and my deceased dad's dog tags. |
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Photos that are not scanned. I have a folder of them that I'd grab.
Passports, birth certificates, also in a folder. My digitized photos and backups to my computers. My laptop, phone, and my purse, with credit cards, keys, a good pair of shoes and a warm coat. As much water as I could carry. Snacks. Oh, and my dogs and my DH. |
They’re fireproof up to a certain point. They might not survive that kind of fire…yes, you can replace a passport, but the easiest way to do that is to provide your old one, otherwise you need original birth certificates, SSN cards etc. It’s a pain. |
I'm glad someone else is wondering this. We have a fireproof safe and I've always assumed its purpose was to protect our documents in the event of a fire. It is bolted down so I can't take it with me. Do I need a portable firebox? |
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My mom lived in LA and had to be evacuated twice in the past few years. I was shocked when I found out she didn't have a go bag, so I helped her make one. In it was several changes of underwear and clothes; week of medication; toiletries (including eye drops, face masks and other things that might help in smoke); cash; her passport. We also stocked gallons of water around the house.
If she had time to pack more, there would have been pictures, jewelry and some more papers, but the go bag is for the "run, go, now' I am trying to think about this now. We have some important things in a safe. I think its fireproof but honestly not sure. I do have passports and social security cards and birth certificates in one big folder. Most pictures are on the cloud. I would probably take medication, documents, change of clothes, some water bottles, masks, medications, cash, portable chargers. |
That’s a really big list and it would take a lot more than 5 minutes. As many clothes as you could??? You can buy more clothes. If you only have five minutes, your life is in imminent danger and you need to just go. How would you actually know you can spare those extra minutes? I would grab my kids and leave without taking anything that isn’t needed for our immediate safety (e.g. phone to call for help and navigate smoky streets, shoes to flee on foot if necessary). Documents can be replaced, even birth certificates and passports. Old family photos would be no comfort if my kids were injured or dead. |
That sounds more like 15-20 min. I’d grab my passport and cash that sits in a drawer in my bedroom, my phone, my kid. |
They usually have an hour or two rating. Enough time for a typical response from a fire department. The wildfire was hot enough and prolonged enough to melt aluminum wheels. No fireproof safe is going to survive that. |