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It didn’t take long for the “blame game” to reach critical mass after Hurricane Wilma tore through South Florida. Emergency water and ice distribution centers ran out of supplies, even though the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) had delivered more than 300 truckloads of water, ice and meals three days before Wilma came ashore, according to the Miami Herald. Failure to maintain adequate supplies of food and water in a disaster can cause inconvenient situations, or worse, threaten your survival.
Posted in
florida,hurricane survival,storm survival,survival water,survival food,survival supplies
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America’s top disaster preparedness agencies have consistently offered the following advice: Maintain the equivalent of 3 gallons of water for every family member in your home. This covers drinking and sanitation needs over the critical 72-hour period when you may be on your own (1 gallon per person, per day), as rescuers tend to those most in need of assistance. After seeing footage of a ravaged New Orleans following Hurricane Katrina, should we keep more than the recommended amount of safe drinking water on hand to increase our chances of survival?
Posted in
survival supplies,survival food,survival water,hurricane survival
It didn’t take long for the “blame game” to reach critical mass after Hurricane Wilma tore through South Florida. Emergency water and ice distribution centers ran out of supplies, even though the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) had delivered more than 300 truckloads of water, ice and meals three days before Wilma came ashore, according to the Miami Herald. Failure to maintain adequate supplies of food and water in a disaster can cause inconvenient situations, or worse, threaten your survival.
Posted in
florida,hurricane survival,storm survival,survival water,survival food,survival supplies
America’s top disaster preparedness agencies have consistently offered the following advice: Maintain the equivalent of 3 gallons of water for every family member in your home. This covers drinking and sanitation needs over the critical 72-hour period when you may be on your own (1 gallon per person, per day), as rescuers tend to those most in need of assistance. After seeing footage of a ravaged New Orleans following Hurricane Katrina, should we keep more than the recommended amount of safe drinking water on hand to increase our chances of survival?
Posted in
survival supplies,survival food,survival water,hurricane survival

