More - Are YOU Prepared?
by Marcie Christensen
I’ve asked this question before but in a different context. I was asking if you were prepared when it was time to say goodbye to your pet pig. You can read that article at:
http://www.cppa4pigs.org/Emergencies.html
Another article we wrote was are you prepared in an emergency such as a natural disaster. You can read that article at:
http://www.cppa4pigs.org/Natural_Disasters.html
But the purpose of this article is to bring things a little closer to
home. What will YOU do if your neighbors home goes up in flames? One
of CPPA’s long time members contacted me recently with this exact
situation. She and her husband were out to breakfast. She got a call
on her cell phone from her mother that the neighbor’s home was on
fire. FLAMES shooting out of the second story. My friend has two dogs
and two pigs. The dogs were in her house and the pigs were in their pen
outside.
After calling 911 to make sure the fire department knew of the fire, she
sprinted home. She worried about what to do with the pigs and dogs if
her house caught on fire. The fire fighters got the dogs outside but
they had no idea what to do with the pigs either, so they just stood by
and waited. Meanwhile the fire fighters managed to save her home but
the neighbors no longer have a second story.
I asked my friend if she was prepared if HER home had caught on fire? What
would she have done? Thank you my friend for sharing this invaluable
information with us all. Here are her answers:
“Well I don’t think you can be prepared, but here are some of the things we thought about:
1) The pets, so you get them out, what do you do with them? The
neighbors couldn’t find a hotel that would take the dog. They left him
in the bottom burned out part of their house overnight in a crate. We
offered to take the dog but they wouldn’t let us. So make sure you have
friends, family or a boarding facility you can get the pets too while
you transition.
2) We also had to lend our neighbors a leash because they left the
house without one for the dog. So make sure you have those, maybe a
spare in your car.
3) Know your insurance agent! He did not know his but he knew
where the policy information was in the house. The fireman saved that
drawer with the paperwork. Otherwise that could have delayed the whole
process.
4) I always get angry because people don’t park their cars in their
garage. They use the garage for storage. Well if our house would have
caught on fire we would have lost our car, motorcycle, boat. So we no
longer park the car in the garage. You are going to need your cars in
the event of an emergency!
I really didn’t find myself caring about material stuff. All that can
be replaced. If you are into pictures you may want to store those in your
computer on one of those offsite storage places like
photobucket.com.
Have an inventory of what you own and keep that inventory offsite. It’s
amazing what you don’t remember during an emergency.
Your pets will also react to your panic. Be prepared for that…the dogs
were extremely hyped. Not sure if it was from the smoke, fire, fireman,
heat or all of the above. But they were hard to manage.
Our pigs and my mom were well prepared. She was outside her front door
ready to go! The pigs were both at their gate ready to go!
Oh and don’t drive over the fire hose like my husband did. The fireman will get mad at you. But hey…anything for the pets!”
Chris and I recently completed our CERT, DART, Noah’s Wish training and
FEMA classes. All of these help train you for disasters and
emergencies. Once you are trained you can become a First Responder in
the event of a disaster and if you so choose you can deploy to help at a
disaster as a First Responder under these organizations.
For more info:
CERT
National: https://www.citizencorps.gov/cert/
Noah’s Wish: https://www.Noahswish.org
and for local DART teams in your area, search Disaster Animal Response Team.

Take two pigs and call me in the morning.