Archive for February, 2009

Winter Fire Safety

Posted on: February 26th, 2009 By: Paul Purcell | 2 Comments

According to national fire stats about 84% of all fires are residential fires, and most of these occur in the winter months due to the use of alternative heating devices such as space heaters and fireplaces.

Many of these fire safety sources repeat the logical suggestions that each home should have a working smoke detector and families should practice fire drills.

To this, 1800Prepare adds the following suggestions which are excerpted from the book “Disaster Prep 101″ (found on our books page).

1.  Smoke detectors are great to have and they’re inexpensive, so have at least 2 per floor, and have one that only comes out in winter.  This extra one is meant to be used near your alternate heating devices during the winter when they’re in use.

2.  Some of these extra smoke detectors might be located far away from your bedrooms.  Since the worst time for a fire to occur is when the family is asleep, use this simple trick.  Go get a “baby monitor.”  They’re inexpensive new, and you might find some deals at yard sales or thrift stores.  Put the monitor’s transmitter near your farthest smoke detector and the receiver in your bedroom.  If the smoke alarm goes off in the middle of the night, you’ll be sure to hear it.

3.  When you practice your family fire drills, take turns to allow each family member to be “it,” the one who discovers the fire and warns the others.  Also, be sure to have some realistic practice by performing your fire drill while blindfolded and crawling on hands and knees (IF all family members are physically capable and you’re not doing anything dangerous like trying to crawl down the stairs.  Safety first, even in drills!)

4.  Make sure you have a working fire extinguisher in each area a fire may occur such as the kitchen, garage, and near your clothes dryer.

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A Survivor of Flight 1549

Posted on: February 25th, 2009 By: Paul Faust | No Comments

A dear friend of mine, Matt Kane, was a survivor of Flight 1549.  I asked him to give me his thoughts on his experience.

As a survivor of flight 1549 I believe preparation and emotional control were the key to our survival. It starts with the crew, especially Capt Sully. Their ability to make critical/correct decisions throughout the experience was key to the final outcome. The first thing he and the crew did was face their reality. They were not immune to their fear, but they did not allow it to control them. It was all about the question what is next.  They were able to control the panic and tap into their emotional benchmark.

Both the crew and the survivors of flight 1549 were prepared for the situation. The crews years of experience allowed them to make critical decisions and execution. The passengers were not overcome by fear and panic, but were prepared by inflating lift vests, opening exit doors and existing in an orderly controlled fashion.

I can make these comments with the upmost confidence based on the fact that I  experience this from seat 24 A with water up to my waist before the exit doors were open. We were prepared for the situation, we did not panic and survived.

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