Prep Monday – Power Outage 2013


This coming week, Wednesday and Thursday, the DHS is conducting a drill a la American Blackout. Several government sites have put up notices about this, although the information is not widely known. I actually first heard about it from a poster here on my blog – the definitive info, not just the rumors and brief comments that have been around for a few weeks. Quite a few companies are participating in this as well.

Of course, if something can be FUBAR, this might be it . . .

But here’s what I’m thinking:

What if we all “participated?” Now, I realize that these are weekdays and we all have “work” to do that’s non-negotiable. For instance, I have to open the store, I have to take my son to and from school. But what if we actually went about the rest of those days as though the grid had indeed gone down?

Could you do it?

This is how my day would go:

My clock is battery operated, so the alarm would ring. Probably be cold in the house, but maybe not too much more so than usual since the thermostat is set on 65 at night. Guess I’d start with turning that off so it doesn’t kick on at 6:30. My kid is gonna love that! Ha.

No lights, but the sun will be coming up; no microwave for coffee, so I’ll have to use my little camp stove with sterno. Since it’s Day 1, I could probably flush and still have water. Cold water. That shower is going to be a real bite. Or I could heat some water on my gas stove – also good for coffee, of course – but I’ll have to light the pilot manually.

Crud, no checking Facebook or doing marketing – or does that constitute “work?” I’m going to call it “work,” not only because it is, but because this is a simulation and doesn’t include “work.” So, yeah, I’ll see you around . . .

And I’m going to cheat a little too, because before I go open the store I’ll have to turn on the heat for the critters. They already told me that NO WAY are they going to practice this stuff . . . J

So – I won’t be able to use a debit or credit card; good thing I have cash. And yes, I know the gas stations, stores, etc. will be open and using electricity, but work with me here, folks! I’m about out of cigarettes – bad prepper – okay, okay, bad habit, whatever – but I AM going to stop for some. If I’m freezing and doing everything else, I get this one pass, okay??

None of this stuff during the day will be too bad. But in the evening, when my workday ends? Oh, and about that – ONLY work is allowed on the computer. With the lights on. After that, well, um. It’s gonna be hard. I won’t lie. But it might teach me a thing or two . . .

Dinner, of course, could be done on the stove with the manual lighting, etc. And then? What about after dark, which is like 5:00? Hmmm. I typically stop working around 8:00 on Wednesday and Thursday, which leaves a couple hours before 10:00 and bedtime. Candles and blankets for everyone! And no TV, which won’t particularly bother me, but my husband will be a wreck. And our son, the gamer? Uh oh!

So, we’ll talk. Huh? Or play cards by lantern light. Or something. Go to bed at 8:00? J

This could be very, very interesting.

Prep Monday – American Blackout


Anyone see this on the National Geographic channel? We DVR’d it and watched a few nights after it aired. Just when we got to the part where transformers started blowing, I got a text from someone telling me had blown in our area. Creepy, and not even Halloween.

The basic premise was that the US was under a cyber-attack, which took down the entire US grid – east coast, to Texas, to west. The story followed several groups/families/individuals and how they dealt with the situation. One person in each group documented everything with a video camera.

The first family, Mom, Dad, 8-year-old daughter, and about-to-be-born baby brother, were typical suburbanites. They weren’t clueless, but they weren’t prepared either. And of course, as if the drama of impending labor wasn’t enough, there was also a house fire which broke out when Dad was gone to find supplies. Happy ending, though.

What I found laughable was that the neighborhood threw a big barbeque, to cook and eat all the food in their freezers before it went bad. Guess they already knew the situation was only going to last eight days? SMH.

Then we had a tech/gamer, a loner, who kept going out in the streets to see what was going on. He had batteries, a solar charger, etc., but he was a teen whose mom, a nurse, had gone into work – and since communications had gone down, he had no way to reach her. He wasn’t unsafe, exactly, but he probably should have stayed home.

A few college students were trapped in an elevator. They finally managed to climb out through the top and reach an unfinished floor and the roof itself. They rigged up tarps and buckets to catch rainwater, and had an injured student to care for too. Didn’t too badly, considering how little they had to work with.

And finally, two groups who represented opposite ends of the spectrum: one fully prepared, food, weapons, plans, BOV, BOBs, and a place to go, and the other, well, woefully inept. Woefully.

Let’s talk about the first one, those who were ready. Then, yes, I’m going to make fun of the other one.

Mom, dad, son about age 10 or 12, teenage daughter. And her boyfriend. The weak link. Dad heard the news, gave the order to grab their BOBs, daughter whined about the boyfriend. His parents may have been out of town, I think, so dad said sure, bring him along. Of course, he had no BOB, and when Dad gave him the tour of their bug-out place, the kid asked what about emergency supplies for him? Sorry, kid. You got a bonus just coming with us.

Things would have been fine until a neighbor showed up, asking for food for his wife and kids. Dad held him on the other side of the fence and said sorry, dude, you should have been ready. Then the boyfriend opens his mouth. “We have plenty, can’t we give them something?”

I thought Dad was going to shoot him.

He didn’t, but the damage was done. Later that night, in spite of Dad’s explanations of WHY this was a bad idea, the kid snuck out and met the neighbor, bringing him food. The son got it all on video. Dad had a major fit.

Naturally, the next day, the neighbor returned with MORE neighbors, got the jump on Dad and held a knife to his throat. Teenage boyfriend pulled out a shotgun and promised to blow off the neighbor’s head.

And then – drama – the kid’s cellphone rang. It was all over.

Now, I’ve talked about “who do you bring” and touched on “do you wait for someone,” but what about an unexpected person? Someone who happens to be at your house when SHTF?

What if it’s a small child?

Or a teenager?

Or an adult?

All of these, of course, are different and will affect your decision in different ways. And there could be variables, too, among these. Food for thought, certainly, but it’s up to each one of you to make the right decision for your group.

So, as promised, the last group. A couple, actually, living on the 46th floor of a ritzy apartment building in NYC. If that doesn’t provide comedic relief, read on:

She, wearing ridiculous high heels, locked herself out of her apartment – because the electronic key card didn’t work and she had no idea where the actual key was kept. She “couldn’t” walk down 46 floors in those shoes, so she sat down and waited. Had no idea what had happened. Apparently unable to remove said shoes.

He spent most of his on-camera time whining about how everything in the building was electronic and there were no “fail-safes” and that was UNACCEPTABLE based on the price he’d paid for the apartment. Oh, and he moaned a lot about the $17 per ounce swordfish that was going bad in the freezer.

But then – he tried to open a can with a knife. A kitchen knife. He missed the can. But didn’t miss his hand. Seems like it rendered him nearly unconscious for the last half of the show. So he also missed his dingy wife/girlfriend/whoever hearing noises and opening the door and walking down a couple flights – guess she got those shoes off eventually – only to see looters. They raced up the stairs after her and dragged her off somewhere. I guess. We never saw her again. Or him, either.

So, what could they have done differently? To survive? NOT live on the 46th floor? Let’s start with those damn shoes. TAKE THEM OFF. Duh. Keep your key on you when you go out – did they think the power was a magical thing that NEVER fails? I mean, let alone during SHTF, sometimes stuff just happens, right?

And doesn’t almost everyone have a backup, non-electric can opener lying around? An old one, maybe from before you made your first million or whatever? At any rate, there are ways and there are ways – and a basic safe way is to NOT STAB at the can! No basic first aid supplies either, as I recall, they wrapped his hand in a t-shirt.

And for the love of heaven, stay put. Don’t investigate noises – you don’t know who they are, as she discovered rather quickly.

This post is getting long, so I’ll wrap up quickly. The show itself did provide several different scenarios, dos and don’ts, good ideas and bad. Gave a decent approximation of what could go wrong. But here’s the kicker – it took the president (yes, the one we have now) the entire EIGHT DAYS before he asked for assistance from other countries. There were fires, and looting, and murder and rape; there were people dying left and right. EIGHT DAYS.

The motto of the story is this: get ready. Now. Today. Have a plan. And stick to it. Don’t count on anyone else to bail you out – that used to be our motto. Anymore, not so much.