"Be Prepared." - the Boy Scout Motto
Ah,
beautiful Cincinnati--all
the benefits of a Category 1 hurricane
with none of the ocean front property. Where gas,
ice, food,
and Duke Energy repair trucks
were rare and valuable commodities.
Fortunately, my power is
back on after about 2.5 days of darkness (my office is still running on
generators, though). I can't believe how dependent I am/we are on
electricity--that's an interesting, but scary dependency to consider.
Some things I need to think about when planning for the next power
outage/apocalypse:
1. D batteries are essential
2. I need to
get that battery backup for my sump pump (fortunately, we had no rain
during the outage, but you can never be too careful)
3. Wouldn't it
be great to have a generator?
I wonder how long it would take my Homeowner's Association to write me
an angry letter/take legal action?
4. Does no one make cheap
transistor radios anymore--particularly those capable of running off of
batteries? Forget those clock radios with the "battery backup." That
feature won't power a radio when the power's out--it only saves you the
time of resetting the time when the power comes back on again. The
standard radios I have take an average of 43.7 D batteries. What sort
of conspiracy is this from Portable Power cartel?
5. Generate my
own power? Solar paneled ridge vents (a roofer I spoke to mentioned
the existence of such things but I can't seem to find them)?
Opportunity or hype? Discuss amongst yourselves.
6. Ample
battery-powered lighting is good as well as alternative ways to cook
food--like the grill I've never used with the propane tank I've never
replaced.
7. Real men take cold showers. Good thing there was still some luke-warm water left over in my water heater tank.
8.
Are my bills getting paid? Am I receiving important emails I need to
answer? I pay most of my bills online and I maintain a variety of
accounts to do so. Many of these account credentials I manage from a
centralized, encrypted file...on my hard drive...which I can't get to
because of the power outage. I back this stuff up to a local
independent storage device and do offsite backup in the form of DVDs
kept in my safe deposit box, but I wonder if I need to rethink this
strategy and include something like Amazon S3 (perhaps via Jungle Disk; Steve Gibson's take on Jungle Disk). Some time ago, Scott
Hanselman shared his interesting
backup strategy.
Maybe I should borrow some/all of that.
9. While I sat in the dark
smelling my food rot, apparently, my life savings were rotting away,
as well. Note to self: convert as much of my monopoly money as is reasonable to gold. Oh,
and make sure I read Murray Rothbard's What Has Government Done to our
Money?
10. Fortunately, the people in
my neighborhood remained civil, even helpful. We were lucky that this
situation didn't merit an invasion by FEMA or any other government
henchmen. However, I'm always thinking about the safety and protection
of my family, friends, and property (in that order). One interesting
book I've read recently (well, partially read) that addresses this
topic is Boston T. Party's Gun Bible.
And, no, I'm not some nutjob alone in a cabin writing my manifesto.
I'm just trying to be prepared--for all situations.