Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Happy Birthday Sweet Girl~Wordless Wednesday

Hooray for Disney!
photo by Amy Hodges 2006
Eleven years ago this delight came screaming into the world. Happy Birthday my sweet girl!

Friday, August 26, 2011

National Toilet Paper Day

Charmin is celebrating National Toilet Paper Day by breaking a world record. Seriously. You can go to their Facebook page and check it out. They have broken the Guiness World Record for the largest roll of toilet paper. {insert your own potty jokes here}
I have to admit that we are fans of Charmin in our house. At the Blogher Conference Charmin brought the always squeezable Charmin Bear and an enormous toilet. You know I couldn't miss that photo opportunity!

And of course I couldn't leave it with just a somewhat serious picture. (How can it be too serious when you're sitting on an enormous toilet.)

So I leave you with that! Any of you in the path of Hurricane Irene, please stay safe. Have you bought your water, batteries, and toilet paper?

I was not compensated for this post. I simply couldn't resist having an excuse to post these pictures. 

Thursday, August 25, 2011

A Hurricane is coming, what now?

NASA Satellite Captures Hurricane Igor
photo by Nasa Goddard Photo and Video of Hurricane Igor last year


I decided to write out a few of my suggestions because my vlog turned out to be so long! The first and most important thing I want to say is you cannot over-prepare. If you get supplies and don't end up needing them, what have you lost? If we don't have a significant storm or loss of power, we just use our hurricane batteries, food and water over the next several months. Here are some of my thoughts on what to do if a hurricane is coming to your area.
  1. Don't forget that hurricane strength winds can last until a storm is well inland. Just because you are not along the immediate coast does not mean you shouldn't prepare. Just ask Charlotte, NC about Hurricane Hugo. 
  2. If you can't park your car in your garage, park it car out of range of trees, even if it means parking it in the middle of your beautiful lawn. Some trees break off and some uproot and fall. You can't move your house but you can safeguard your car. 
  3. Be sure to gas up your car. If you have to evacuate, you don't want to have to stop for gas. If your area suffers significant damage, it might be several days before gas stations have power to pump gas.
  4. Food supplies for 3 days and water(a gallon per person per day)for 7 days. We also make sure we have propane for the grill. If we lose power we can grill meats from the freezer before they go bad. 
  5. Take a walk around your house and see what a storm might pick up. Potted plants, birdfeeders, lawn chairs all need to go inside. Put your kids to work and let them help with this.
  6. Find your insurance information and put it in a safe accessible place. If you are close to an area that might experience a storm surge, put important documents and valuables in a waterproof tote and put it on the highest floor of your house. 
I also wanted to share a few tips from Verizon Wireless. These are helpful since so many of us communicate mainly through our wireless devices.

    • Weather widgets and local TV stations' apps for smartphones and tablets can keep people updated on what the weather is doing if they’ve lost power in their house and can’t watch the news.
    • Limit non-emergency calls to conserve battery power and free up wireless networks for emergency agencies and operations.
    • Send brief text messages rather than making voice calls for the same reasons.
    • Don't leave the house without car-chargers to ensure you have back-up power.
    • Keep phones, laptops, PDAs, batteries, chargers and other equipment in a dry, accessible location.
    • Forward your home phone calls to your wireless number if you have to evacuate.

    My last words about hurricanes. Just because you have never seen something happen in your area doesn't mean it can't happen. Please listen to the advice of your emergency management officials and keep yourselves and your families safe!