Hi guys,
Well....we here in the midwest have been tested, we got a severe ice storm here in the Missouri/Iowa/Kansas area starting Monday and Continuing through Tuesday and when all was said and done we ended up with about 3 inches of ice on EVERYTHING, tree limbs, whole trees, power lines, cable tv lines and power poles snapped off by the tens of thousands. Our power went off at 5 a.m. Tuesday and was just restored fully today. Let me tell you, you will NEVER appreciate the obsession we all share with lights until you go through several days of severe conditions with no power to your home. Thankfully for myself and my family I was able to pull out several old cheap multi-LED flashlights and my one decent light (a RoV Sportsman Extreme 2aa) and use a mini-mag with the magled conversion (which until this storm I thought was useless) as a candle.
We (thankfully) have a freestanding propane furnace with the good old fashioned pilot light and a propane cooktop so we weren't without heat but many many people in the area were/are and we took in several family members who were having problems.
In survival mode my minimag in candle form and 2 OLD oil lamps provided all of our area lighting for 3 days. Just rambling on here but I wanted to let you all know that you never know just how good you have it until something like this happens to you and I'd like to encourage you all to take a minute and think about what you would do in similar circumstances. Thankfully I'm sort of a preparedness nut and we had lots of canned soups and the like on hand and our family survived very well and it was even sort of an adventure but there are TENS of THOUSANDS of people here in America's heartland who are still without power and a large percentage of those will be without power for 5-10 days and I have to wonder and worry about those people because I know that most of them never took the time to prepare any at all and are in dire straits.
I would also like to pass on the fact that entire towns (including my own until today) in a 100 mile radius still have no power and we are/have seen almost no help from FEMA and the State Emergency Management Agency, the only help has been from the RED CROSS who delivered 2 hot meals to people in my town. I would encourage you to get active with your local community govt. and federal govt. where possible to ensure that there is help for people in your area when disasters like this occur, also, as I said above, the RED CROSS is a great organization who (in most cases) is on the scene of these events even before govt. assistance and I would encourage anyone who is contemplating charity giving to consider the RED CROSS (the True EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AGENCY). Thanks for reading, I just wanted to vent and you guys seemed a likely target...We now return you to our regularly scheduled Flashaholic programming. :thumbsup:
Well....we here in the midwest have been tested, we got a severe ice storm here in the Missouri/Iowa/Kansas area starting Monday and Continuing through Tuesday and when all was said and done we ended up with about 3 inches of ice on EVERYTHING, tree limbs, whole trees, power lines, cable tv lines and power poles snapped off by the tens of thousands. Our power went off at 5 a.m. Tuesday and was just restored fully today. Let me tell you, you will NEVER appreciate the obsession we all share with lights until you go through several days of severe conditions with no power to your home. Thankfully for myself and my family I was able to pull out several old cheap multi-LED flashlights and my one decent light (a RoV Sportsman Extreme 2aa) and use a mini-mag with the magled conversion (which until this storm I thought was useless) as a candle.
We (thankfully) have a freestanding propane furnace with the good old fashioned pilot light and a propane cooktop so we weren't without heat but many many people in the area were/are and we took in several family members who were having problems.
In survival mode my minimag in candle form and 2 OLD oil lamps provided all of our area lighting for 3 days. Just rambling on here but I wanted to let you all know that you never know just how good you have it until something like this happens to you and I'd like to encourage you all to take a minute and think about what you would do in similar circumstances. Thankfully I'm sort of a preparedness nut and we had lots of canned soups and the like on hand and our family survived very well and it was even sort of an adventure but there are TENS of THOUSANDS of people here in America's heartland who are still without power and a large percentage of those will be without power for 5-10 days and I have to wonder and worry about those people because I know that most of them never took the time to prepare any at all and are in dire straits.
I would also like to pass on the fact that entire towns (including my own until today) in a 100 mile radius still have no power and we are/have seen almost no help from FEMA and the State Emergency Management Agency, the only help has been from the RED CROSS who delivered 2 hot meals to people in my town. I would encourage you to get active with your local community govt. and federal govt. where possible to ensure that there is help for people in your area when disasters like this occur, also, as I said above, the RED CROSS is a great organization who (in most cases) is on the scene of these events even before govt. assistance and I would encourage anyone who is contemplating charity giving to consider the RED CROSS (the True EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AGENCY). Thanks for reading, I just wanted to vent and you guys seemed a likely target...We now return you to our regularly scheduled Flashaholic programming. :thumbsup: