If you had one hour to leave your house, knowing that when you return it might not be there, what would you take with you?
Growing up in Florida, we never had more than minor damage to our home from a hurricane, but we had multiple friends and close family who literally lost everything but what they evacuated with in Hurricane Ivan in 2004. They came home to unsalvageable houses after the storm, when authorities finally let them back into their neighborhoods. What little was left from the flooding was covered in mold and severely water damaged after sitting under water for days. One relative lost every picture, scrapbook and memento she had of her entire life, none of it saved to CD after she neglected to take it when she evacuated. In her panic, she couldn’t think straight about what was most important to take with her. She only had a few minutes and all of the items were stored on the bottom two shelves of a bookcase and on the floor of a closet on the first floor of her house. Her entire neighborhood was a total loss. No one expected the area would flood and all of their neighbors were in shock, thinking they were safe since they were not in a one-hundred year flood plain and the state did not require them to purchase flood insurance. Other friends came home to nothing but a concrete slab on the ground, their house swept away in the floodwater.
Make a list now in order of importance, so that if it ever happens that you have to quickly evacuate due to a wildfire, flooding or hurricane, you won’t accidentally leave precious things behind because you panicked and forgot something in the short time you had available. Items to consider include:
As you leave, disconnect the natural gas, power, and water to your house in case of damage. You don’t want to come home to find out your house blew up, burnt down or flooded while you were gone and disconnecting the utilities could have prevented the damage.
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January 25, 2010 at 11:21
Where I live also got hit hard by Ivan. There was huge devastation, and I live no where near the coast. I actually live near in southwestern PA. Ivan came up and sat on us and dumped so much rain that the Allegheny River and the bridges over it (which are high enough for tugboats to pass under) met.