Store food & water–or secure your furniture? Maybe do both…

Table of Contents

NPRNational Public Radio’s Lucy Craft has a number of interesting posts about life in Japan post last year’s tsunami and earthquake. Today’s post, “After The Quake, Japanese Shop For Survival”, notes that local stores are selling lots of all-in-one emergency flashlights-radios-etc. – but concludes with the observation from one survivor of the 1995 Kobe earthquake, “city dwellers should focus on how to keep their furniture from crushing them alive” – not storing food as that will quickly arrive.

While less true for isolated Vashon, it still makes me wonder if we’re doing enough to promote anti-skid mats (a tip from Tim Walsh’s recent talk), straps and other simple steps to secure our homes from flying debris. Reducing likely sources of injury should be part of everyone’s short list of spring projects!

comments powered by Disqus

Related Posts

Sound Shake Facilitating Earthquake Preparedness-- A Workplace Guide

Sound Shake Earthquake Preparedness Guide for Businesses 2011Click the following link to download a guide for facilitating earthquake preparedness at your workplace. Identify your organizational risks and hazards and develop an emergency plan.

Read More

Vashon ARES Updates their Interface to the Sky

eoc-ant.800x1206The local ARES team worked on the antenna candelabra at VIFR Station 55 last spring as noted in this post:

Read More

ShakeOut Finally Reaches Washington State

Logo for the Great Washington ShakeoutThe ShakeOut™ moniker started a couple years back in California I believe – which perhaps accounts for it’s subsequent adoption thought the galaxy, and soon in Washington too! I’m a bit jaded about such marketing obviously, but it has generated LOTS of publicity and made many aware that otherwise wouldn’t have a clue.

Read More