Author Topic: Inadvertent Dress Rehearsal (Tsunami 2010) ... Revisited in 2011  (Read 807 times)

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Offline teamnelson

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Inadvertent Dress Rehearsal (Tsunami 2010) ... Revisited in 2011
« on: February 27, 2010, 02:15:21 PM »
Woke up this morning and checked e-mail. Top of the queue was from a buddy I was going to grab breakfast with and he said he couldn't make it, he was gonna ride out the Tsunami on his rooftop ... TSUNAMI?!? Sure enough, the solar panels on the Civil Defense sirens in our area weren't serviced so the sirens didn't go off for us. Needless to say, we went into gear fast ... I can't tell you how thankful I am that it turned out to be a lot of nothing by the time it hit our island, like a 1m swell that a few knuckleheads caught on longboards. But it was sure a wake up call for me, and learned alot about how the family rolls in a crisis.

My wife got scared, my daughter got sullen, and my son was "Aye Aye sir!" So turned my wife loose on things to keep her busy - she did a few loads of laundry, load of dishes, packed up some food and stuff for the car, filled a tub, anything that came to her hand she did to keep her mind going. She did pack a good BOB, but literally stuffed it, not well thought placement of gear for future use. My son operated well on little to no instruction, but there's a lot he just didn't know. My daughter packed her gear, helped her mom, responded to direct orders, but basically stayed quiet. I figure she was scared, but didn't want to be, so threw up a facade personality she thought appropriate.

And I had a brain freeze. I had a lot of the right gear, just not in the right place to get at it. Spent way too much time put all the extra guns in place that they'd be secure and hopefully above a water line. Way too much time trying to figure out how to load up the go-to guns and ammo in a way that wouldn't draw attention. Lingered too long on "which gun, really." Discovered I don't have a good holster for my primary handgun (how did that happen?). Finally got the suv packed with food, water, some basic tools, cash & passports, 4 BOBs, appropriate armament. Totally forgot the field surgical kit under the downstairs sink, but did manage some basic meds. Turns out we stayed in place, but we were ready.

But I did discover a great piece of gear: Eton microlink FR160. I had a freeplay summit before this that was always squirrely. This little unit dialed straight to the tsunami station, kept going on a light crank and a little sun. Used it to charge up an ipod and a phone. Weighs under a pound, and about the size of a can of soda.

But now I'm doing an afteraction on myself and realizing I put a few things off I need to fix before the next one where we might not be so lucky.
held fast

Offline Graybeard

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Re: Inadvertent Dress Rehearsal
« Reply #1 on: February 27, 2010, 05:42:25 PM »
I thought about you today when I read a tsunami was headed your way. Seems like we have a few other members on the islands as well. Was it that light on all the islands are just the one you were on?

I think what I read was they were expecting 10' to 12' waves which didn't sound all that serious to me but then I don't know that much about the islands so wasn't sure how serious that might be.


Bill aka the Graybeard
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I am not a lawyer and do not give legal advice.

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Offline teamnelson

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Re: Inadvertent Dress Rehearsal
« Reply #2 on: February 27, 2010, 08:01:25 PM »
Initially thought it was going to be much bigger, 10-12' wouldve affected alot of folks. When we heard it hit Tahiti at 6' we relaxed a bit. I live on a peninsula out on pearl harbor, pretty flat but I don't think it did more than wash the beach anywhere on the islands.
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Offline Bigeasy

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Re: Inadvertent Dress Rehearsal
« Reply #3 on: February 27, 2010, 10:48:58 PM »
Sounds like you lucked out.  The news stations were predicting a bad time for the islands.

Everyone's needs and circumstances are different, but I try to keep a "bug out bag / survival bag" ready in my truck.  My bag is geared towards wilderness survival in a wooded setting, as I spend a lot of time on old logging / fire trails up in northern Maine.  Such a bag should be fine tuned based upon terrain, number of people, weather, expected use, etc.

Larry
Personal opinion is a good thing, and everyone is entitled to one.  The hard part is separating informed opinion from someone who is just blowing hot air....

Offline bilmac

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Re: Inadvertent Dress Rehearsal
« Reply #4 on: April 29, 2010, 02:00:39 AM »
Excellent exercise. You and I are great ones for preaching to be prepared and then when something unexpected actually does hit we find out that maybe we ourselves aren't. I am sure I would find myself in exactly the same condition. I have survival kits that I keep in the vehicles in the winter and they would get us by for awhile, but I guess I need to think about a real all weather BOB.

Offline teamnelson

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Re: Inadvertent Dress Rehearsal
« Reply #5 on: April 29, 2010, 04:06:53 PM »
bilmax, since that day I've done a complete JOB (junk on the bunk) inspection of everything, inventoried, reevaluated, acquired, maintained. 5 gal buckets with lids are my new friend. By packing stuff in those, if I have to load up and roll, I have all the makings for rain cachement, filtrations, and even a "pickle bucket." I also have stuff organized so I don't have to root through the entire pile to get to something particular. I'm glad I had that exercise.

If you're not familiar with a pickle bucket, at the Mountain Warfare Training Center (USMC) in the Sierra Nevadas we had to tote human waste off the top of the mountain due to California Laws. I went there for Arctic Survival and Infantry Operations which meant a long time at high altitude in the cold. One of the instructors made up some 5 gal buckets with two lids, one that was cut out like a toilet seat sort of. The other lid covered that lid and sealed it for transportation.
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Offline Gun Runner

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Re: Inadvertent Dress Rehearsal
« Reply #6 on: April 29, 2010, 10:52:27 PM »
Speaking of a "pickle bbl", I got one of the "lugable loo seats" for mine plus the regular top for the bucket. Also keep a bunch of small garbarge  bags rolled up in the bucket.
The MRS. said we WOULD have the seat for the bucket. Son in law got one that hooks to a trailer hitch, grand daughter said no way was she using that (she was 8 at the time). Said she wasant gonna be sitting on that when somebody decided to move the truck.  ;D

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