National Preparedness Month Tips
Make An Emergency Plan
Having a plan in place before disaster strikes can help you keep your family safe. Your emergency plan should include:
- Evacuation routes if normal exits are blocked
- Where to meet if your group is separated
- Where to find stored emergency supplies
- A list of emergency contacts
- Who will be responsible for specific duties (For example: shutting off utilities, getting pets)
Learn CPR and First Aid
Knowing some basic first aid skills and CPR can go a long way in a crisis. Many local community organizations offer classes where you can learn these skills. Visit the American Red Cross website to search for a CPR class in your area.
Anchor Heavy Furniture and Appliances
Make sure heavy items are secured to prevent injuries and property damage during earthquakes, hurricanes and tornadoes. Anchoring your furniture also keeps your kids and pets safer even when there isn’t a natural disaster or emergency.
Put Together an Emergency Kit for Evacuations and For Home
Some emergencies require evacuation while others can leave you stranded at home. Make sure you have the right supplies for either situation.
Emergency Evacuation Supplies
- First aid kit (Visit the Red Cross for tips on what to include)
- Essential medications, inhalers, Epi-Pen, etc.
- Nonperishable food
- Water
- Plates, cups, and utensils
- Hand sanitizer
- Garbage bags
- Emergency blanket or sleeping bag
- Comfortable shoes
- Change of clothing for each family member
- Multi-tool
- Flashlight
- Radio
- Cash
- Charging cables for personal devices
- Jumper cables
- Pet food/carrier/leashes
- Portable power station or power bank to charge phones, laptops, and radios
At Home Emergency Kit Supplies
- Water
- Nonperishable food
- Lanterns and flashlights
- TP/personal hygiene items
- Hand sanitizer
- Duct tape
- Small tool kit
- Radio
- Home backup system or power station
How Much Can a Power Station Run?
A portable power station can run all sorts of devices and appliances. And unlike a gas-powered generator, Goal Zero power stations are safe to use indoors.
Here are a few examples of what our power stations can run:
Yeti 1000X | Yeti 1500X | Yeti 3000X | |
---|---|---|---|
Wi-Fi Router (25 W) | 40 hours | 61 hours | 122 hours |
Full Size Refrigerator (71 W) | 14 hours | 21 hours | 43 hours |
Light Bulb (11 W) | 90 hours | 138 hours | 276 hours |
Smart Phone (12 Wh) | 82 recharges | 127 recharges | 253 recharges |
Laptop (50 Wh) | 20 recharges | 31 recharges | 61 recharges |
Want to power even more for longer? Add solar panels to your set up to turn your power station into a solar generator!
We hope you never have to experience a natural disaster or crisis, but the good news is that many of these supplies also come in handy even if there isn’t an emergency. First-aid kits, flashlights, power stations, power banks and other supplies are useful when you’re traveling and camping, when you accidentally cut yourself, or if there’s a short-term power outage at home. Take some time to prepare now so you and your loved ones can worry less if you are ever impacted by an emergency.