The Bug Out Bag Book - Create a Personalized Emergency Gear Kit was a free kindle book when this post was written.
Disasters happen everywhere, and can strike without notice. Don’t wait
until you have to act to get your supplies together. Give it some
thought now, take precautions, and build a kit.
The Bug Out Bag
Book is a guide to help you build a personalized disaster gear kit. The
thing about a crisis is that it happens without notice. Though
surprised, you won’t have to worry about little details, because you’ll
have emergency gear ready to go.
This book is a short, practical
guide, so you can read it and get started building your gear kit right
away. If you don’t think you need to prepare at all, look at what’s
happened the past few years.
The quake and radiation leaks in Japan.
Tornadoes that ripped towns apart in Missouri, Alabama, and Arkansas.
Chile and Haiti being rocked by devastating earthquakes.
What
about war and large-scale riots? I could go on, but I don’t have to.
This stuff happens. I’m not trying to scare you... I’m just trying to
show you it’s important to think about it and prepare some supplies.
You
lock your house or apartment when you leave, right? You lock your car
at the store? You keep track of kids and elderly when out in a crowded
amusement park or zoo, right? When you need to, you take a moment to pay
attention and be prepared. Building an emergency gear kit should be no
different.
Wednesday, February 12, 2014
Monday, February 10, 2014
How to Keep Your Home Safe - 131 Great Ideas for Keeping Your House Safe
How to Keep Your Home Safe - 131 Great Ideas for Keeping Your House Safe was a free kindle book at the time of this post.
Your house is a lot more than wood and plaster. It’s your family’s retreat from the world. You’ve worked hard to make your house a home. And there’s more to do. It’s time to get the facts on how to keep your family safe at home.
This guide will provide you with dozens of essential tips on home safety for you and your family.
This book covers the following areas:
* Flooring and Stairs
* Preventing Accidents in the Home
* Keeping the Home Safe for Children
* Preventing Fires
* Electrical and Storm Safety
* Handling Insecticides
* Guarding Against Burglars and Intruders
Here's just a small sample of the tips included:
Keep baking powder on hand for extinguishing a kitchen fire in an emergency.
Don't put hot tea, coffee, or other hot liquids on a table cloth that hangs way over the side of the table. Someone could trip on the cloth and spill the scalding liquid.
Keep the gas cooktop away from open windows where curtains could blow into the flames or where wind could extinguish the cooking flames.
When handing a knife to someone else, always hold the point turned away from the other person.
Keep the handles of pots and frying pans turned inward on the kitchen range so that they cannot be knocked or tipped over by accident.
This is especially important if there are young children in the household.
Check all your child's toys to be sure any eyes, noses, knobs, or other parts will not come off when pulled or chewed.
Never leave a small child unattended in the bathtub.
In the bathtub! face your child toward the hot water faucet so he won't accidentally bump into the hot metal.
Don't hold a child on your lap while you drink or pass a hot beverage, or while you smoke.
Tie a bell around all bottles and containers that hold poisonous materials in the house to alert you to your child getting into something dangerous.
Store all your poisonous materials on high shelves, out of the reach of children. And remember to label the containers.
Some poison control centers supply stickers to put on dangerous chemicals so that a child understands tha t they are harmful. Ask if these are available in your locality.
It's best never to place pillows in an infant's crib and. to keep the crib completely away from the cord of a Venetian blind.
Never place a plastic bag or thin plastic covering within reach of an infant or small child, or near the child's bed.
Don't run extension cords under the rugs.
The cords wear easily and may short out, causing a fire.
Keep combustibles away from the furnace, which can give off flames or sparks at times.
For basic protection at minimum expense, locate one smoke detector in the hallway near each separate sleeping area. (More complete protection calls for a detector on every level of a home.
Don't mount a smoke detector in areas where the alarm can be triggered inappropriately such as by smoke from cooking, steam from the shower, or in the garage where combustion products from the car's engine can set it off.
Remember that smoke detectors are unreliable below 40° F.
Some fire departments supply stickers that can be placed in a window to alert firefighters to the presence of a child or an elderly or handicapped person. Inquire if such stickers are available in your locality.
If you live or work in a high-rise building, locate the fire exits on your floor. If an alarm sounds, remember that you should always use the fire stairs, not the elevator.
Learn to distinguish the sound of a fire alarm in your building from the sound of an elevator alarm bell. If you think someone' s trapped in the elevator when, in fact, the building is starting to go up in flames, you could be in serious trouble.
Your house is a lot more than wood and plaster. It’s your family’s retreat from the world. You’ve worked hard to make your house a home. And there’s more to do. It’s time to get the facts on how to keep your family safe at home.
This guide will provide you with dozens of essential tips on home safety for you and your family.
This book covers the following areas:
* Flooring and Stairs
* Preventing Accidents in the Home
* Keeping the Home Safe for Children
* Preventing Fires
* Electrical and Storm Safety
* Handling Insecticides
* Guarding Against Burglars and Intruders
Here's just a small sample of the tips included:
Keep baking powder on hand for extinguishing a kitchen fire in an emergency.
Don't put hot tea, coffee, or other hot liquids on a table cloth that hangs way over the side of the table. Someone could trip on the cloth and spill the scalding liquid.
Keep the gas cooktop away from open windows where curtains could blow into the flames or where wind could extinguish the cooking flames.
When handing a knife to someone else, always hold the point turned away from the other person.
Keep the handles of pots and frying pans turned inward on the kitchen range so that they cannot be knocked or tipped over by accident.
This is especially important if there are young children in the household.
Check all your child's toys to be sure any eyes, noses, knobs, or other parts will not come off when pulled or chewed.
Never leave a small child unattended in the bathtub.
In the bathtub! face your child toward the hot water faucet so he won't accidentally bump into the hot metal.
Don't hold a child on your lap while you drink or pass a hot beverage, or while you smoke.
Tie a bell around all bottles and containers that hold poisonous materials in the house to alert you to your child getting into something dangerous.
Store all your poisonous materials on high shelves, out of the reach of children. And remember to label the containers.
Some poison control centers supply stickers to put on dangerous chemicals so that a child understands tha t they are harmful. Ask if these are available in your locality.
It's best never to place pillows in an infant's crib and. to keep the crib completely away from the cord of a Venetian blind.
Never place a plastic bag or thin plastic covering within reach of an infant or small child, or near the child's bed.
Don't run extension cords under the rugs.
The cords wear easily and may short out, causing a fire.
Keep combustibles away from the furnace, which can give off flames or sparks at times.
For basic protection at minimum expense, locate one smoke detector in the hallway near each separate sleeping area. (More complete protection calls for a detector on every level of a home.
Don't mount a smoke detector in areas where the alarm can be triggered inappropriately such as by smoke from cooking, steam from the shower, or in the garage where combustion products from the car's engine can set it off.
Remember that smoke detectors are unreliable below 40° F.
Some fire departments supply stickers that can be placed in a window to alert firefighters to the presence of a child or an elderly or handicapped person. Inquire if such stickers are available in your locality.
If you live or work in a high-rise building, locate the fire exits on your floor. If an alarm sounds, remember that you should always use the fire stairs, not the elevator.
Learn to distinguish the sound of a fire alarm in your building from the sound of an elevator alarm bell. If you think someone' s trapped in the elevator when, in fact, the building is starting to go up in flames, you could be in serious trouble.
I Survived!: 5 Bible Characters Who Survived Disasters
I Survived!: 5 Bible Characters Who Survived Disasters was a free kindle book when this post was written.
Unfair circumstances can shake our lives and even our faith. The situations themselves are hard enough to deal with, but then we wonder why God allowed them. If he’s in control, why are our lives such a mess? This study looks at the lives of Jeremiah, Jonah, Joseph, Paul and Job and how they survived their personal disasters. It challenges you to think through the “why?” questions and see God in a fresh way. You’ll take another look at failure and refine your definition of it. You’ll catch a glimpse of the invisible when you view ordinary events from God’s perspective. Thinking through these issues can give you fresh purpose in life, hope for the future, and a roadmap to moving past unfairness. This Bible study is designed to be a companion book to Edges of Truth: The Mary Weaver Story, the true story of an innocent woman accused of murdering a baby she cared for. It helps to answer the questions that Mary’s story raises. This 10-week study is designed for group Bible studies or personal reflection. Each chapter gives 5 daily readings from the Bible with comments and questions that can be used as personal devotions.
Unfair circumstances can shake our lives and even our faith. The situations themselves are hard enough to deal with, but then we wonder why God allowed them. If he’s in control, why are our lives such a mess? This study looks at the lives of Jeremiah, Jonah, Joseph, Paul and Job and how they survived their personal disasters. It challenges you to think through the “why?” questions and see God in a fresh way. You’ll take another look at failure and refine your definition of it. You’ll catch a glimpse of the invisible when you view ordinary events from God’s perspective. Thinking through these issues can give you fresh purpose in life, hope for the future, and a roadmap to moving past unfairness. This Bible study is designed to be a companion book to Edges of Truth: The Mary Weaver Story, the true story of an innocent woman accused of murdering a baby she cared for. It helps to answer the questions that Mary’s story raises. This 10-week study is designed for group Bible studies or personal reflection. Each chapter gives 5 daily readings from the Bible with comments and questions that can be used as personal devotions.
Sunday, February 9, 2014
Off Grid Living
Here’s what we cover in this brand new DVD that is sold exclusively here:
- How I set up my solar power system using this "simple little trick" for maximum efficiency
- How we wired our affordable and easy-to-use solar panels, and how you can do this too...
- We go over the inverter, the controller and the batteries and what they do to maximize your power output.
- Our backup system in case the weather doesn’t cooperate!
- Our affordable but powerful wind power system and how it works – it’s so simple you’ll laugh when you see it…
- I go through every room of the house and show you our power efficiency tricks so that we need a small, easy-on-the-wallet power system!
- I’ll show you how we use the sun to heat AND COOL our house for FREE
- I’ll go through all the little tricks and tips you can do that can slash your power bill BEFORE you ever spend a dime on solar!
- Why anyone can do this with a little bit of elbow grease and desire for independence.
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Affiliate Disclosure: I am grateful to be of service and bring you content free of charge. In order to do this, please note that when you click links and purchase items, in most (not all) cases I will receive a referral commission. Your support in purchasing through these links enables me to share more information and get closer to getting my family totally off-grid and on our own piece of land. This will let me share more and more information to allow , hopefully, for you to become more self-sufficient and able to become more prepared by reading my blog and purchasing items that I share with you that will help you. Thank you! :)