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Hurricane Helene story

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Evening gents, I know this post is about 6 months too late, but I just found the survival thread here on ODT tonight, and thought maybe it would be potentially beneficial to a member or two if I shared some experiences. Also, this is honestly me venting a bit because I think it helps me feel better sometimes, and pretend like I might make a difference somehow. I know most of this will be common knowledge to us, but perhaps not others. I welcome all discussion.
For some context, I'm a firefighter in metro Atlanta, been in the job bout seven and a half years. I was "deployed" to south GA after Helene hit, and saw some things first hand that really reiterate the need to be prepared for life to happen. This wasn't in a magazine, or a movie, this is what I saw with my own eyes. So please, just consider what little I have to share in your future preparedness adventures.
1. Power goes out immediately. I mean, immediately. The storm was active in full force, in this particular area for about 20 minutes before the entire area lost power. I don't mean a few houses, I mean the entire county. When we got down there about 24 hours after it stopped raining, there were zero signs of progress to get electricity back up. The roads were so blocked with trees and other debris, that power company trucks couldn't even attempt to access what they needed to. (The trees that were down, were not something a casual chainsaw operator could handle in 5 minutes.) We were there 6 days, and on the 6th day, SOME businesses were getting electricity. Residential areas were not a priority, at least where we were, when it came to electricity. So please, have a generator, know how to use it, keep fuel fresh, treated, and rotated.
2. Food and water. It amazed me how few people had more than a days worth of food in their homes (I'll revisit this in minute.) In the 6 days we were there, we met several families who hadn't eaten in a few days, a lot with kids. We handed out hundreds, if not thousands of cases of these knock off "MRE's" while we were there. It was amazing how grateful these people were for the help, but very few seemed to have had any thoughts before hand on food storage. Back to what I said earlier about having food in the house, some people did have food in their houses, but when a 30" thick pine tree fell in the house, it was all destroyed, or completely inaccessible. So even if they had some supplies, it was destroyed in the storm. Maybe spread some things out, and don't put all your eggs (pun intended) in one basket. As far as water, bottled water is better than nothing. We had thousands of cases of water, and we were giving out more water than anything because they didn't have running water in some areas of the county. We couldn't carry enough water to keep up with the demand.
3. Shelter. We had one family in particular that had their house destroyed, and they had been sleeping outside in a tent for 4 days, and we didn't know about it until the woman came up asking for food and water. They had 6 kids, in a two person tent. I don't know how, but that's what they were doing. The husband was going back into the remains of the house looking for food when they finally ran out, and she came out in search for food. Thankfully, she found us and we helped them immediately. There's no telling how many others like them were there, that didn't find us. We would go out on what we called "patrols" but like I mention, so many roads were blocked, that we couldn't go very far.
4. Delayed 911 response, if at all. The station we were working with, and running mutual aid for, was overwhelmed to put it as politely, and as respectfully as I can. The chief of this particular department, hadn't slept in almost 60 hours at one point. He was a walking zombie. We were getting so many calls, that we would have delayed responses of over an hour. It's not that we didn't care, but we were running into the same problems the 911 caller was, blocked road ways, power lines down, roads destroyed or washed away, etc. That's all when we weren't handing out food and water, so you can imagine the level of exhaustion that accompanies those tasks. Some people later reported calling 911, and not even being able to get a dispatcher to answer the phone. Their 911 center was hit, and half destroyed in the same area as the callers were in. So their power would go out randomly, and they would be in the same boat as the caller. They did have a standby generator, but a pine tree made quick work of that.
5. The emotional and physical toll. The emotional toll is one I was not prepared for, to be totally transparent. The physical toll was a LOT, and really reiterated that just because you have some preps, you won't be sitting around while everyone around you starves to death. Clearing roads, your own land, moving and finding supplies, repairing roofs or windows, and a lot more. It was some of the hardest work I've ever done in my life. I couldn't imagine being out of shape, and trying to do what we did. The emotional toll, was even tougher, however. Seeing so many people desperate, missing loved ones, losing loved ones, truly hungry, dehydrated, exhausted, and homeless, was absolutely heartbreaking. It's easy at times dissociate and say what you'd "say or do" when someone asks you for food or water, but when that stranger is in front of you, it's different. These were not bad people, but people who were legitimately hungry, thirsty, cold, and scared. I saw people come together and help neighbors, and ran calls for people who had been taken advantage of, and violently, because of what resources they had. There were shootings, and looting, but also neighbors helping each other. Hell, even helping us when we needed it. You can make your neighbor an asset, or they can be liability, you get to choose to an extent, so choose wisely.
6. FEMA and the National guard, are as useless as you've heard and fear. They dropped off an 18 wheeler trailer of water and more knock off MRE's, but we were told to not touch it. When they decided they wanted to pick it up, the soldiers that showed up didn't know what they were picking up, where they were taking it, or why. They had no idea on when resources would be dropped off for us, or if any additional help was coming. I don't blame the ground pounders for not knowing the admin and logistics side of things, but they knew nothing about anything. At the time, it was very frustrating.
Anyway, all this to say, it made me take preparations a lot more seriously. Hopefully if nothing else it was an entertaining read. I did take away this lesson: No one is coming to save you, it's up to you. Stay ready friends.
 
I don't post here much, but those are valuable lessons that deserve being shared and they're never "too late". We live west of the Augusta area and the eye of Helene pretty much crossed over our area. Fortunately, no damage to the house other than a tree came down and sheared the power line to the house.

18 days, no power. We had zero communication for the first three days. We cleared our road, and once we could get to I20, we were able to notify family that we were alive and okay.

We don't have a gas stove (would have been nice), but plenty of camping gear and propane for a two-burner stove. Food stores were fine (we could go a month just in our small pantry, a few months with just various camping meals, and several months on actual emergency preps).

Well. Our well is actually inside our house (yeah, weird, the house used to be an old barn). It was easy to keep water running in the house with the generator. That was the difference maker.

Lesson Learned. Have more than one generator, have stored fuel, have portable fuel cans, oil/oil filters/fuel filters/air filters, and if you don't have your house wired to a generator hookup, have plenty of power cords and power strips.

I had two generators, a 4500W inverter generator and a small 1500W generator we take when boondocking. Those inverter generators did very well and sip gas. Biggest advantage is noise. You can even hear them from the main road, they're pretty quiet. I picked up a second 5000W generator that's dual fuel (gas and propane) and planning to add a couple of 30-gallon propane tanks as alternative fuel sources and serve as a backup if my primary goes down (only one for the water pump had me concerned).

I fortunately hadn't tapped into my larger fuel caddies. a 30-gallon upright caddy and a 14-gallon caddy, but most of my fuel cans were empty from rotations that didn't get refilled. Needless to say, we were able to keep the generators running for the first week-plus, before making a fuel run to Athens. I now maintain between 80-120 gallons of fuel with stabilizer, rotating throughout the year. Small PITA but having running water and power makes life so much more tolerable in a situation like Helene.

When the big Lowes and Home Depot's finally opened, people were buying generators. But guess what they couldn't buy? Fuel cans. Have at least a half-dozen or more as they're much easier to make gas runs. The best is the 14-gallon caddy as it's not too heavy to maneuver and lays flat in the truck when filling up. I have a few smaller Scepter and Wavian 2.5-gallon fuel cans which makes it easier for my wife to refill the generators as well.

Chainsaw. I now have a second gas chainsaw. Don't forget bar oil, extra chains, and fuel-mix. Somebody down the road has his chainsaw die and he didn't have a backup or the cash to buy a new one. They were only needed the first couple days to clear roads, but they were essential. I now have two gas and one electric.

Need another solar generator/battery inverter. We had a Blueetti 850W solar generator that we charged during the day by generator and used at night or for the "portable hot water heater". This was a handy item to have. Additionally, we have a dozen-plus battery-charger packs we take for the phones and other USB charged items; they also came in very handy and helped add to the generator load if it wasn't enough.

My wife's "toy" is a towed sports utility trailer built for off-road/boondocking (Woolly Bear). It has a top mounted tent and storage for camping kit, but she invested in a couple of very useful items. First, was the Ecoflow portable, battery or AC operated heating/AC unit. We used the smaller generator at night to run a fan and AC unit after it warmed up and slept just fine. Second was her portable hot water heater, a propane-heated, 12V by Camplux. Very simple and we showered outside the first week, after it cooled off, I rigged up in one of the showers and we took "normal" hot showers which was a huge morale booster.

My company, based out of Virginia didn't have a whole lot of mercy. Either burn your PTO or work. After the first few days, our program office opened up in downtown Augusta, so I still needed to clean up and worked half days downtown and when we finally got enough 5G signal, I could work some at home. So, I couldn't just ignore the hygiene basics (reality, not SHTF fantasy).

Cash is king. We ventured out after a couple days. All of the big stores were still shuttered, and the more modern gas stations were closed. The smaller grocery stores and gas stations were open, but it was cash only. We didn't really need anything, and I didn't want to or need to sit in gas lines, but that situation reinforced why you keep several hundred in cash and on-hand for such emergencies.

Lighting. I have plenty of flashlights but found that a few simple battery-operated LED lanterns are very handy throughout the house. Speaking of batteries, I have a good amount of Eneloop and Li-Ion rechargeable batteries along with a good stash of regular lithium batteries. I do charge them every year or so. I never even put a dent in them, but they were a nice thing to have.

Carry a flashlight as part of your EDC. I made the cardinal sin of simply not grabbing my flashlight as part of my EDC on a run up to my wife's school. She's an assistant principal of a middle school and as soon as the power started coming back on (and we had cell signal) she got a message about the alarm going off. She's the closest admin with access, so we maneuver around two dozen trees and powerlines the 10 miles to the school. Once inside, it was dark where there were no windows. Guess who forgot their "always carried" flashlight? Yeah, me. My wife shamed me, but we were able to get by with mobile phone lights...embarrassing.

Without rationing fuel, I figure we could do anywhere from 2-3 weeks with stored gasoline fuel, and close to another week once I add the propane for the dual-fuel generator. Food wasn't an issue, but propane is needed for the larger camping stove. Sure, plenty of isobutane, white gas, and alcohol for various backpacking stoves, but propane is just easier to use.

Radio. I had one of my GMRS radios broadcasting the storm info and a small AM/FM-radio for local info. Understand, all the radio stations were down, and hard for the first several days. Our small-town station actually came up before Augusta's, but that was our only source of information. I've considered Starlink, but it's on the back burner as a priority.

One major gap is adding a few more fire extinguishers. While we were operating everything safely, if there was a fire we couldn't get under control, there was no help coming.

For the record, we never once saw police or any emergency/FEMA type personnel (although, our town did get a small FEMA/emergency center setup after the first week, we didn't even know about it).

Thanks for the reminder. Lessons learned are only valuable if you apply the lessons and keep up those reminders to avoid complacency as hurricane season is approaching...

ROCK6
 
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