Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:After evacuating several times, I've learned to grab the file with all my insurance policies in it. And other files with important info such as copies of wills, POAs and medical directives.
How on earth do you not have all this stuff electronically stored at this point?!?
Anonymous wrote:After evacuating several times, I've learned to grab the file with all my insurance policies in it. And other files with important info such as copies of wills, POAs and medical directives.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is the best way to scan old pictures to put them in the cloud? My parents have shelves of old photo albums and it would be great to scan these to have digital copies.
Anonymous wrote:The Palisades fires, like every fire, have me thinking—
When I was a very young child, my elementary school caught on fire. The K-2 building was annexed, and as the fire ravaged the main building, the 4-8 students piled into the our building while we waited for our parents to pick us up. It was chaos and it really traumatized me. I went home that night and strangely packed a bag full of my most important things, just in case my house ever caught fire. As an adult, I still keep things well organized, just in case.
I know everyone says they’d grab pictures. I’d grab pictures, memory cards, important documents, bins with keepsakes, important meds, as many clothes as I could, and honestly, that’s probably it.
I’m curious if you have a plan. It doesn’t even have to be for a fire. What would you grab in an emergency if you had to flee in five minutes?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids and dogs. Well, and husband, of course. Presumably he'd have the five minutes, too!
After that, I'd grab my documents bag with passports and birth certificates, but if I didn't have the wherewithall to do that so be it.
I guess we'd take two cars to try to save them? [/quote
No, you do not take the two cars at a time like this. You put EVERYONE in the more reliable car or the car with more gas in it.
Why not take two cars? Because you'll get separated?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"It doesn’t even have to be for a fire."
I think if we are truly talking 5 minutes then most people would agree priorities are loved ones and pets.
But if it was something other than a fire and you had more than 5 minutes, it can get more complicated. Depending on the scenario.
Let's say someone sets off a dirty bomb in DC. Roads are all clogged and you can't use your car. Then what do you do? What should you have with you?
If it's a hurricane you have time to prep. If it's a tornado you don't. If it's freezing cold and all the power goes out for days at a time, that's a different scenario.
I agree that the nature of the emergency necessitating the evacuation might play a role in what got grabbed.
For sure, people first, then pets if there are any (we don’t have any). My work bag is always ready to-go, is a backpack (so easily carried), and has so many necessities (cash, meds, chargers, flash drives, etc) so it’d be a quick grab. DH is somewhat of a “prepper” so he’s got some form of a go-bag/container ready for all of us. LOL, I insisted on a rolling Igloo cooler cause I couldn’t “carry” a filled tote. Best “items”? A fair amount of cash in small denominations and a 6-pack of vodka minis (to drink, sell/trade, or sterilize).
But, sadly, as I age, I’ve gotten less sentimental so little of my “stuff” (including photos) matter.
In the end though, we’d try to keep it to 4 minutes instead of 5….to try to beat the rest of the panicked and crazies out of Dodge.
Anonymous wrote:Kids and dogs. Well, and husband, of course. Presumably he'd have the five minutes, too!
After that, I'd grab my documents bag with passports and birth certificates, but if I didn't have the wherewithall to do that so be it.
I guess we'd take two cars to try to save them? [/quote
No, you do not take the two cars at a time like this. You put EVERYONE in the more reliable car or the car with more gas in it.