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Thursday, December 30, 2010

Could you do without electricity for awhile?

What if a disaster took away our electricity, for a short or a long time?  Would you be able to function?  And if you have a generator, do you have gasoline for it?

We all need to collect non-electrical alternatives for the following:

1. lighting (flashlights, lanterns, candles, etc.)

2. heating (fireplace, kerosene heaters, propane heaters)

3. cooking and heating water (propane grill, fireplace, solar oven, etc.)

4. laundry (laundry detergent and a bucket, clothesline and clothespins)

5. actually there are a lot more but you get the idea.  And remember, with no electricity, stores can't do business.  So you would be living off your food storage.

There was an article today about the coming cycle of solar activity, which warned about the ways the sun can cause electrical grid failure on earth:

http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=CNG.bdf9ddce1297325e1b97e06696026e73.111&show_article=1


"At its angriest, the Sun can vomit forth tides of electromagnetic radiation and charged matter known as coronal mass ejections, or CMEs......"


"On Earth, power lines, data connections and even oil and gas pipelines are potentially vulnerable.
An early warning of the risk came in 1859, when the biggest CME ever observed unleashed red, purple and green auroras even in tropical latitudes.

The new-fangled technology of the telegraph went crazy. Geomagnetically-induced currents in the wires shocked telegraph operators and even set the telegraph paper on fire.

In 1989, a far smaller flare knocked out power from Canada's Hydro Quebec generator, inflicting a nine-hour blackout for six million people.

A workshop in 2008 by US space weather experts, hosted by the National Academy of Sciences, heard that a major geomagnetic storm would dwarf the 2005 Hurricane Katrina for costs."

I definitely hope this type of thing doesn't happen again.  But it is always good to be prepared.

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