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Your Hurricane Preparation - what worked, what could be improved and any tips

Posted on 9/4/12 at 3:24 pm
Posted by Methuselah
On da Riva
Member since Jan 2005
23350 posts
Posted on 9/4/12 at 3:24 pm
Since we're on the downside of this thing now, I guess it would be a good time for everyone to chime in on how their prep held up. And of course any special things you do to prepare that may not be widely done. Here's a brief rundown of my prep.

- Boarding: worked well but I think I'm going to go with all functioning shutters. (For some reason my house has about 1/2 real shutters and about 1/2 faux which requires me to haul boards out. I'm getting kinda old for that but luckily my son is now old enough to help with the heavy stuff.

- Water - held up well. Had 3 cases of 16 ounce bottles and about another 5 one gallon jugs. Also had a 5 and a 10 gallon container I filled with tap for flushing if I needed. Water never went out though.

- Generator. Worked very well. I have a fairly small one (5500 I think) but it did what I needed it to. Ran 2 refrigerator/freezers, enough to keep things frozen/cold, enough lights for at night, small window AC that I put in my living room window and the washer (I'd unplug one of the fridges when I washed just to be on the safe side) and a couple of small fans. Lot of my neighbors have gone with the back feeding from the generator through the dryer but I've been hesitant so far.

- that's enough for now - might chime in with the other stuff later in the thread.
Posted by rmc
Truth or Consequences
Member since Sep 2004
26489 posts
Posted on 9/4/12 at 3:35 pm to
We always have water, and usually stock up an extra case or two of 16 oz bottle, but its not something we worry about like we probably should.

On generators -- we do one of two things right after power comes back that saves us some trouble later. Either (1) drain all of the gas out or (2) put sta-bil or some other product in. It is just easier for us to drain it and use it for the lawn mower or whatever. Before the hurricane we change the oil in all of them (we have 4 that are stored in my shed).

We also took some small rebar bent like a candy cane and used it to fasten my kids swing set and trampoline to the earth.
Posted by Shankopotomus
Social Distanced
Member since Feb 2009
21057 posts
Posted on 9/4/12 at 4:04 pm to
just curious, how do you drain your generator?
Posted by gmrkr5
NC
Member since Jul 2009
14886 posts
Posted on 9/4/12 at 4:46 pm to
the generator leaking gas out of the shutoff valve was not cool... didnt do it when i changed the oil the week before the storm. went to give it a quick once over Tuesday night before things got ugly and it started leaking. turned it off and on a few times and it stopped but something is still weird. had to fiddle with the choke to get it to even out while running.
Posted by 4LSU2
Member since Dec 2009
37316 posts
Posted on 9/4/12 at 4:59 pm to
I loaded the family up Monday evening around 6 PM and drove to the in-laws in Shreveport. I-10 was a parking lot around BR. Here is what worked...

I took Hwy 25 from Covington to the state line where it became MS Hwy 27. I stayed on 27 to Monticello, MS where I caught Hwy 84. I took 84 West all the way to Alexandria where I picked up I-49. The entire trip took me 5 1/2 hours with a 30 minute stop to eat and gas up. The ride usually is 4 1/2 to 5 hours taking the normal route through BR, depending on traffic. The roads to Alexandria were vacant as could be, and much better than fighting interstate parking lot traffic.
Posted by tracytiger
Baton Rouge
Member since May 2009
3631 posts
Posted on 9/4/12 at 5:16 pm to
I left and had a really long vacation. Monday before the storm until Labor Day.

I'm still scratching my head that I ran away from a tropical storm. When I was younger, we laughed at tropical storms. I looked at the worst storms to hit Baton Rouge, Betsy and Audrey happened before I was born, Andrew was the worst one I had experienced and then wham, bam we get Gustav and Isaac.
Posted by 4LSU2
Member since Dec 2009
37316 posts
Posted on 9/4/12 at 5:20 pm to
I know what you mean. My wife is expecting and we lost power in BR for 4 weeks after Gustav. I wasn't going through that shite again. I drank beer in a pool all day Tuesday and Wednesday up there.
Posted by MoreOrLes
Member since Nov 2008
19472 posts
Posted on 9/4/12 at 5:31 pm to
No Boarding

Plenty of Kentwood

2 Generators

4 window AC's from sears

AX,Prybar and cordless saw in attic





Never even lost power for more than 5 minutes

PURE LUCK

This post was edited on 9/4/12 at 5:32 pm
Posted by Dorothy
Munchkinland
Member since Oct 2008
18153 posts
Posted on 9/4/12 at 6:26 pm to
I bought extra cases of water (16 oz bottles), even though we've never needed it in BR for any storm I remember. I figured we could always use it later, especially since we drink bottled water at our camp.

Cleaned out old/nasty stuff from all our freezers before the storm to make room in the freezer, then froze a bunch of the water bottles so they would be small chunks of ice to help keep things cold in case our generator failed. We never lost power, but I offered my "ice stash" to a couple of friends who were in search of ice to keep their food cold after the storm.
Posted by Napoleon
Kenna
Member since Dec 2007
69048 posts
Posted on 9/4/12 at 7:33 pm to
I either want to convert my generators to natural gas, buy a whole home unit, or buy bulk gas. The hardest thing was the struggle to fill the cans those first few days. Usually we go with two generators. One to power the a/c and one to power the house. This year we only had one. So we had a window unit, then every 115v circuit in the house. We have a 40 amp input for the generator, then cut the breaker for the A/C compressor and fan and then hook to that as well with a dedicated unit.
Though I want a 11kw whole home.

Water and food we did well on, I will get dry ice for next time as well.

Never boarded windows.

Posted by d6k
New Orleans
Member since Dec 2005
1484 posts
Posted on 9/4/12 at 8:32 pm to
quote:

- Generator. Worked very well. I have a fairly small one (5500 I think) but it did what I needed it to. Ran 2 refrigerator/freezers, enough to keep things frozen/cold, enough lights for at night, small window AC that I put in my living room window and the washer (I'd unplug one of the fridges when I washed just to be on the safe side) and a couple of small fans.


Same size as we had (although it was my neighbor that lent it to us) but we ran the same two fridges and one A/C unit and several fans...at certain times I would turn on my TV and directv and watch for a bit...also took some Christmas lights out the attic and plugged in three or four strands to give light in the kitchen and living room (worked well and used up very little energy)
Posted by BottomlandBrew
Member since Aug 2010
27062 posts
Posted on 9/4/12 at 8:46 pm to
What didn't work: I'm never evacuating to my MIL's house again. I'd rather put a bullet in my head. Next time I will go to my sister's. At least there I get to hang out with my nephew.

Posted by NorthEndZone
Member since Dec 2008
11271 posts
Posted on 9/4/12 at 9:17 pm to
Worked:

Turned A/C, freezer, and fridge colder several hours before I expected to lose power.

Cooked as much of the seafood and meat in freezer as possible before losing power.

Got extra ice as late as possible just before first squalls hit.

Kept doors closed as much as possible to keep indoor humidity much lower than outdoor and did not open windows. Slept reasonably well for 4 nights without a generator. Having 9 foot ceilings and a well-insulated house helps. 65% humidity and 81-82 degrees is bearable.

Used outdoor gas grill to cook defrosted meat that was not cooked earlier. Can also cook some seafood this way.

Most importantly, stuffed towels at bottom of outside doors to keep water driven by wind from wetting floors.
Posted by TigerTatorTots
The Safeshore
Member since Jul 2009
80760 posts
Posted on 9/4/12 at 9:47 pm to
<---Getting a whole home natural gas generator
Posted by Ziggy
Member since Oct 2007
21508 posts
Posted on 9/4/12 at 9:54 pm to
Same here.
Posted by Spock's Eyebrow
Member since May 2012
12300 posts
Posted on 9/4/12 at 10:57 pm to
Filled a 5 day ice chest with 80 lbs of ice Monday and stored 50 more lbs in the freezers to replenish as necessary. This was so much better than being caught without ice and trying to find some the day after. However, we got lucky for once and only lost power for a couple of hours. The ice in the chest did last until Saturday, but that was with the house at 70-74F. Now I've turned off the icemaker and am loading the bin with the remaining bagged ice to use it up.

We only had one radio, and it was impossible to find a decent little radio locally the day before the storm. The one I bought at Best Buy Tuesday is a real POS (Insignia Armband Radio) and going back. I ordered another for next time off Amazon (Sony SRF-M37W), and it works good.
Posted by LSU2001
Cut Off, La.
Member since Nov 2007
2388 posts
Posted on 9/5/12 at 7:43 am to
20 kw whole home natural gas generator with 200 amp transfer switch installed 2 years ago when I built my house worked really well. Was able to keep everything running with no problem. I did only run it at night because I didn't want to have a huge gas bill.
I didn't board/shutter anything and I should have. During the storm my east facing front door was pushed open at the top and wind driven rain was forced into the house. Shutters are definitely budgeted before next season. Water was no problem because I had plenty of bottled and I have a 600 gallon spa to use for flushing if necessary. However, water service never had an issue. Biggest thing I didn't think about was how to watch TV and didn't have a digital antenna That was fixed as soon as stores opened. Overall, I was well prepared and did fine. We were without power for 7 days.
Posted by LSURussian
Member since Feb 2005
126957 posts
Posted on 9/5/12 at 8:52 am to
I need to start my portable generator a few times a year if it hasn't been used for a hurricane.
Posted by jmarto1
Houma, LA/ Las Vegas, NV
Member since Mar 2008
33851 posts
Posted on 9/5/12 at 9:41 am to
Stayed with my parents in Slidell. The biggest thing that worked? My mom had a separate electric pole put in on her property just for her and buried as much of the lines as she could. Never lost electricity. We did forget to get a camping toilet since we new that the toilets wouldn't flush.
Posted by Crawdaddy
Slidell. The jewel of Louisiana
Member since Sep 2006
18364 posts
Posted on 9/5/12 at 11:34 am to
My house in Slidell never lost power or tv.
I had plenty of water, beer, ice, and food. I had access to a local store for more suplies if needed.
I will never board up.
If I lost power and could not deal with it after a few days, I would have ran up to my Dad's place.

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