sandam1
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Apr 19, 2016
- Messages
- 2,122
I know that a lot of people are talking about the weather and generators, but there are a few things to think about. I live in Buffalo, NY (hi, firefly_ris!) and a number of years ago, we were without power for nine days due to a freak early October snowstorm that took down a lot of trees/power lines. We wound up getting a generator and learned a lot of these things the hard way.
- What do you think that the generator will be powering? Where are these things located? Do you have enough extension cords to reach from the generator to the appliances?
- Super important - where is the generator going to be set up? The 1000% WRONG answer is in your house or attached garage. Carbon monoxide KILLS! But the generator should be in a covered yet open-air area. Where is that at your house? Also, is that area secure? Theft is a concern in an emergency situation.
- Do you have enough fuel to run the generator? For a widespread emergency like this might be, I would plan on being without power for at least 48-72 hours. If you need more fuel, where can you get it? Keep in mind that gas stations may not have power either. Also, you should have a stash of cash as internet/credit card machines may not be working at stores.
- Unless you have a specific set-up, the generator is probably NOT going help you with your furnace which, even if it is run by natural gas, still has an electric starter. So what are you going to use for heat? Be very, VERY careful if the answer is space heaters. Read all of the warnings and recommendations and follow them.
Side note - After our experience with the extended power outage, we invested in a whole house, natural gas generator. It was very expensive, but the peace of mind is worth it.
A couple of other suggestions:
- Have a "go bag" ready for every person/creature in your house with everything that you would need for 3 days. That way if you need to go to a friend's house or a warming shelter, you're not trying to pack things up in the dark.
- Have a full tank in all of your household's cars. If you need to drive somewhere, you should have hats, gloves, boots, a change of clothes, food and water, battery back-ups, and blankets for every person/creature in the vehicle. It's going to be well below zero where I am so I also have emergency mylar blankets, hand-warmers, a shovel and kitty litter (for traction) in my car.
I've done a lot of reading about emergency planning for my job and the other thing that everyone reiterates is the time to think things through is before an emergency. Go through all of the "what ifs" in your plan and make those decisions now. Oh, and on the debt dumping theme, do you have any bills due in the next week? Set up those auto-payments now, just in case.
- What do you think that the generator will be powering? Where are these things located? Do you have enough extension cords to reach from the generator to the appliances?
- Super important - where is the generator going to be set up? The 1000% WRONG answer is in your house or attached garage. Carbon monoxide KILLS! But the generator should be in a covered yet open-air area. Where is that at your house? Also, is that area secure? Theft is a concern in an emergency situation.
- Do you have enough fuel to run the generator? For a widespread emergency like this might be, I would plan on being without power for at least 48-72 hours. If you need more fuel, where can you get it? Keep in mind that gas stations may not have power either. Also, you should have a stash of cash as internet/credit card machines may not be working at stores.
- Unless you have a specific set-up, the generator is probably NOT going help you with your furnace which, even if it is run by natural gas, still has an electric starter. So what are you going to use for heat? Be very, VERY careful if the answer is space heaters. Read all of the warnings and recommendations and follow them.
Side note - After our experience with the extended power outage, we invested in a whole house, natural gas generator. It was very expensive, but the peace of mind is worth it.
A couple of other suggestions:
- Have a "go bag" ready for every person/creature in your house with everything that you would need for 3 days. That way if you need to go to a friend's house or a warming shelter, you're not trying to pack things up in the dark.
- Have a full tank in all of your household's cars. If you need to drive somewhere, you should have hats, gloves, boots, a change of clothes, food and water, battery back-ups, and blankets for every person/creature in the vehicle. It's going to be well below zero where I am so I also have emergency mylar blankets, hand-warmers, a shovel and kitty litter (for traction) in my car.
I've done a lot of reading about emergency planning for my job and the other thing that everyone reiterates is the time to think things through is before an emergency. Go through all of the "what ifs" in your plan and make those decisions now. Oh, and on the debt dumping theme, do you have any bills due in the next week? Set up those auto-payments now, just in case.
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