Category: disaster preparedness

  • Some quick thoughts on the Christmas Bombing

    As I write this, it’s been barely 4 days since an RV exploded in downtown Nashville. I’m 15-ish miles away and was never in any danger. Interestingly, I was walking the dog when it happened and I should have heard it, but didn’t.

    There’s still a ton of speculation–some in bad-faith, some in ignorance–about why he did what he did, but I’m not going to talk about that.

    My day job revolves around being prepared for disasters, and this can be treated exactly like a disaster due to the nature of the target. In fact, some of my colleagues have spent much of the last 4 days implementing disaster mitigation plans due to the failure of the AT&T network. I am incredibly proud of the work that they have done both in the last four days and the last four years in preparation for an event like this.

    So, looking at it from a pure communications disaster/widespread failure standpoint, I wanted to note a few things for you to think about.

    Know your local infrastructure
    When I first saw reports of an explosion downtown, I thought it was a transformer explosion. That has happened a couple of time in the last 30 years so it seemed logical, especially considering the area. Like every other IT nerd in Nashville, I knew exactly what that building was and what it’s purpose is. It needs a lot of power, and it’s been there for a gazillion years.

    Once the police said it was “an intentional act” I knew that the AT&T switching station was the target. There was nothing else important in the area (really, who bombs a Hooters?), and a much more politically appealing target–the Federal Courthouse–is only about 10 blocks away. Whoever it was, their purpose was to disrupt communications.

    The AT&T network is not as resilient as you’d think, but it is pretty resilient. A lot of people locally are angry with AT&T because of the loss of cell service, 911 service, internet, etc…but AT&T can only do so much to prepare for something like this. It took almost 5 hours from the time of the explosion until the first widespread outage was noticed. My theory–and I cannot stress enough that this is a theory and not based on actual facts–is that the automated systems started re-routing traffic exactly as intended, but that the load was too much for the secondary systems. Essentially, they moved calls from going through Nashville to going through Louisville, but the Louisville system did not have enough capacity to handle the load of the entire Nashville infrastructure going down. That’s why you had outages up that way, too: Network overload and nowhere to go.

    Sure, they could have planned for this, but then your $80 cell phone bill would be $200. It’s a calculation that every company has to go through and I’m not going to fault them with less than perfect resilience.

    Anyway, the point is that you should know your local failure points. I expected a comms breakdown because I knew the importance of that building. This is important for natural disasters, too. When we had a flood in 2010 and a news helicopter showed footage of the local gasoline depot under water, I knew we were about to have a gas shortage.

    At a minimum, you should know the locations of the following facilities:

    1. The power substation that feeds your home and/or office.
    2. The power plant(s) that feed that substation.
    3. The water treatment facility that feeds your home and/or office.
    4. The distribution point that your fuel comes from. Gasoline, heating oil, etc.
    5. The distribution point that your food comes from.
    6. The switching station or local exchange office that handles your phones.

    If there was some sort of widespread natural disaster in your area, knowing these things may help you make a decision to leave much easier and much faster. In that 2010 flood, for example, two of Nashville’s three water treatment facilities were taken out. The third came very, VERY close to also being rendered inoperable. If that one had been breached, we would have evacuated within an hour or so.

    Communications Redundancy
    This one can be confusing but I’ll try my best. I’m not talking about the need for everyone in your family to have a HAM license and a pre-programmed handheld and mobile radio (although that is useful as we’ll see later). I’m talking about the poor folks here who had AT&T for Voice, Data, TV, Cell Service…the works.

    Those people were completely cut off from the world for 24 hours+.

    The day after my wife and I had our very first date, T-Mobile had an outage that affected something like 8 states. I really needed to call this super-cool girl for a follow-up date because she was leaving town the day after, so I ran down to Target and bought a pre-paid cell phone on AT&T’s network. The day was saved, I got the second date, and now we have two kids, a dog, and a house in the suburbs.

    When we got married, she kept her Sprint phone for a while and I had switched to AT&T after the outage. This was important, because Sprint and AT&T used completely different network technologies at the time. There were no scenarios outside of a widespread long-term blackout where both of us would be out of cell service. That’s a communications redundancy.

    Today, we’re both on AT&T for cell service and we have Comcast for internet. I have Google Voice, so that gives me VoIP for my “cell phone” number and I could still send and receive text messages during the outage. We had some communication ability, but it was limited.

    Then, the day after the explosion, Tactical Dog had a medical issue and had to go to the vet, like, now. She’s fine, but the experience exposed a problem.

    My phone worked on wifi, but only on wifi. When I left the house I was completely isolated. If we’d still had separate cell phone carriers, I could have just taken the other phone, but we’d consolidated to one carrier to save money.

    Everything worked out, I just had to live in 1994 for a few hours. I remember 1994 so I was fine. But it brings me to my final point.

    Have printouts for emergencies
    Right now, can you put your hands on a piece of paper with your local EMS/Fire dispatch’s phone number? Or your doctor’s? Or your veterinarian’s?

    One of the effects of the bombing was a widespread, multistate 911 outage. Everyone had to call either the non-emergency dispatch number or the local precinct/fire hall/whatever. There were lists floating around twitter and the Emergency Management websites but you had to know where to look. And you had to have internet, which you may not have had.

    I was fortunate enough to have been to the vet’s so many times that I knew how to get there without the aid of GPS (which would have required downloading map data since our vet is outside the area we normally roam around in–which is a story for another day). If the way I knew how to get to the vet’s office had been blocked, as might be likely during a more widespread disaster, I’m not familiar enough with the area to have routed around it quickly without the aid of a map.

    A pre-printed map, or a paper map with important locations already marked, could have been a literal lifesaver for about a 36-hour period. I bought a good old-fashioned paper map last January just to keep in the car. Something to think about.

    The last thing I wish I’d had beforehand was a list of local repeater frequencies, either pre-programmed or printed out. This is amateur radio specific, but as I sat in the vet’s parking lot waiting on them to treat the dog, I realized that my little handheld was way, way out of range of the repeaters I normally use. Again, the vet is outside our normal operating area, but it’s close enough that I really should have put those frequencies somewhere handy.

    So that’s all I have for now. Just a few lessons-learned from someone on the ground with a somewhat unique professional perspective.

  • Update to the Basic Gunshot Wound Kit

    A while back I put up a post on what’s needed for a basic gunshot wound kit. That post came about because of my strong belief that folks who shoot regularly need to have one of these in their range bag, as well as the training on how to use them. My kit includes the very basics and was could fit in a quart-sized ziplock bag.

    One of the things in the kit is the Hyfin Chest Seal. The seals I bought expired in August So I ordered new ones.

    They’ve changed, slightly:

    Old on top, new on bottom.
    Old on top, new on bottom.

    The new ones are a little larger than the old ones. The first thought I had was that I ordered a different size, but they have the same National Serial Number:

    NSN:6515-01-532-8019
    NSN:6515-01-532-8019

    Now, I’m sure there is a really good reason for the size change. The guys who make these know a whole lot more about it than I do so I don’t want this to come across as a complaint. But it does present a problem for me:
    IMG_3704

    IMG_3705

    The new seals don’t fit in a quart-sized ziplock bag.

    Again, not a complaint, but I did want to put this FYI out there for anyone who built their kits using my post.

    Update to the update:

    I contacted the manufacturer and asked them if folding/creasing the seals will damage them, and why they made them larger. The response I got was:

    1 – The Chest can be folded and creased without adverse effect in performance or quality.
    2- More surface area coverage was desired by our customers according to feedback that we have received.

    So that settles that. Now go ponder what the implications of #2 are…

  • Replacement Chest Seals for the Basic Gunshot Wound Kit

    A couple of weeks ago I briefly mentioned that the Hyfin Chest Seals in my basic gunshot wound kits were expiring. I have one in each car

    Now, what I orginally bought were these. While I was searching for replacements, I came across these and thought “Hey, there’s two in a pack for the same price, so that’s better, right?”

    Welllll…. There’s a problem.

    So here is what my current GSW kits look like:

    IMG_3204

    Fits nicely in a quart-sized bag, right?

    IMG_3205

    The new double-pack…

    IMG_3206

    And now we see the problem. I know you’re thinking “well, just double them over and they’ll fit” but unfortunately I think they are doubled over already. Take a look at the stock photo and note the size of the seals vs this size of the packaging. These seals are just significantly larger.

    So, I’ll be buying more of the Hyfin seals shortly and these will be relegated to one of my range bags.

  • Keep Calm and Carry One

    No, carrying a firearm would not have helped in Boston yesterday. It wouldn’t have hurt, either, but that’s another thing entirely.

    Two things that might have helped in the aftermath:

    1. A Trauma Kit
    2. The training to use it

    You can’t pick when these things happen.

  • Deterrence is not prevention

    Yesterday, the President said this:

    We can’t tolerate this anymore. These tragedies must end. And to end them, we must change. We will be told that the causes of such violence are complex, and that is true. No single law—no set of laws can eliminate evil from the world, or prevent every senseless act of violence in our society.

    But that can’t be an excuse for inaction. Surely, we can do better than this. If there is even one step we can take to save another child, or another parent, or another town, from the grief that has visited Tucson, and Aurora, and Oak Creek, and Newtown, and communities from Columbine to Blacksburg before that—then surely we have an obligation to try.

    There is one step we can take. We know it works every time.

    We know the formula these shootings follow. They stop immediately when met with armed resistance. It happens every time.

    We know it works. It’s an easy step. It’s laid out right in front of you.

    In the coming weeks, I will use whatever power this office holds to engage my fellow citizens—from law enforcement to mental health professionals to parents and educators—in an effort aimed at preventing more tragedies like this. Because what choice do we have? We can’t accept events like this as routine. Are we really prepared to say that we’re powerless in the face of such carnage, that the politics are too hard? Are we prepared to say that such violence visited on our children year after year after year is somehow the price of our freedom?

    Making sure it’s harder for me to protect myself, my family, and random strangers who might be in the area from lunatics and psychopaths who are not deterred by “gun free zones” is the only thing that makes me “powerless in the face of such carnage.”

    I am disempowered by fiat. Remove the limits on me protecting myself and these things will cease happening.

    What people like Dianne Fienstein et al are proposing are “deterrents” to ownership by people who wouldn’t do this sort of thing in the first place. They do nothing to prevent these shootings. They didn’t work in Germany, or Britain, or Norway, or Mumbai.

    You can’t stop crazy.

    You can, however, change how you react. If more of these guys were put down by good guys before the body count hit double digits, two things would happen:

    1: The “glory” of high body counts would cease to be a motivating factor.

    2: Fewer people would die

    Isn’t that the goal? Don’t we want the same thing?

  • I think my AR just jumped the shark

    In the winter of 2005-2006 I bought a Rock River AR, used, for about $700 from a dealer at a show. I’d always wanted one for two reasons: I spent about 15 minutes in the Army, so I trained on the M16 and Democrats had told me ARs were evil.

    Now, at the time, I didn’t know much about guns. I sure thought I did, and I’m sure seven years from now I’ll say the same thing about something I buy this year. I didn’t know–or bother to ask–that the rifle was used. I probably could have gotten it cheaper, but it’s treated me very well. It was exactly what I was looking for at the time.

    Flattop upper, M4 stock, heavy barrel (because, I kid you not, I thought the 16″ barrels with M4 notches looked stupid), flash suppressor, railed gas block, and standard plastic handguards. I’m fairly certain it came with no sights but its been long enough that I may have forgotten taking them off and tossing them. Basically, it looked just like this:

    Well now it looks like this:

    I swear it weighs 40 pounds now (actually, my bathroom scale says 10). I’ll try to recap how this tragedy happened.

    First thing I did, I believe, was put a crappy red dot sight on it (similar to this one). And by crappy, I mean “battery wouldn’t last through one range session” crappy. You’d have to turn the brightness up to 11 if you were at an outdoor range, and 20 minutes later the dot would be too dim to see. It took one coin cell which, if you replaced it with a brand new one after it died at the range, would be dead by the next time you went to the range.

    After that happened three or four times I was fed up. In Summer of 2007, I replaced that with this:

    The venerable EOTech 512. Love that thing. New shooters love it, too. Point and click. Cheek weld? We don’t need no stinkin cheek weld!

    I believe at this point I had also put one of those handguard mounted rail thingies and a vertical foregrip* on it. I know I had that setup for a while.

    Eventually I “came to my senses” with the handguard rail thingy, and…got railed handguards:

    Note, these are NOT free-float. I got them because, er, rails make you faster? They have speedholes? I have no idea. Around the same time as this idiocy, I got this three point sling (remember those?) which I still don’t understand how to properly use it, if there is such a thing as “proper use of a three point sling.” You can still see one of the fabric loops for that sling affixed to the M4 stock today.

    Now, the very first time I ever went to the range with Oleg, I had a terrible calamity befall me. A couple, actually. First was my horrific embarrassment at being the only one without a suppressor. Another was that my Eotech wasn’t working. The alkaline batteries I had left in there for, oh, two years had exploded! And I still had no iron sights.

    Having your battery-powered optic explode is bad. Not having backup sights is even worse. At the time, Magpul had just come out with their MBUS backup sights, so I looked in to getting some. What I learned was that while the Magpul MBUS Folding Rear Site would work just fine and dandy, the front sight would not. Why?

    Because when I paid extra to get the rifle with no front sight, I severely limited my front sight options. The rail height on a gas block is much lower than the rail on an upper or free-float handguards. That, and apparently the MBUS front sight has been known to warp when mounted to the gas block.

    So I bought a YHM Gas Block Mounted Front Flip Sight. Pay extra to have no front sight, pay even more to put one on. Genius, this guy.

    Okay so now I have sights. And I was able to repair my Eotech after the battery mishap (and yes, it has lithiums now). But now I have a Magpul part. And I know who Chris Costa and Travis Haley are.

    BAM! Off goes the vertical grip, on goes the AFG. I also ditched the sling because I found it was getting in my way.

    The rifle stayed like that for a while, until I put a cheapie weapon light on it back in July.

    Now we’re starting to get just a wee bit ludicrous.

    The rail covers are starting to rot. They’ve always been a bit large for what they do, so I’m looking at alternatives. The rifle as a whole has a more bulky feeling than I’d like, but my use case is as a barricade weapon, not a house-clearing gun. Stay in place, let the bad guys come to me. My house layout isn’t conducive to room clearing with a rifle.

    Well, then a friend at work tells me she bought a bunch of “backpacking” stuff from a Marine, and “there’s some rifle part in there.” As she’s describing it, I realize it’s a Redi-Mag. She asks me if I want it, and of course I do because TRAVIS HALEY.

    So that’s how I got here. I’m probably going to take the Redi-Mag off because (and I don’t know if I just installed it wrong or what) it makes it really hard to push the mag release.

    Maybe I’ll take some Christmas money and buy a free float handguard. Maybe I’ll build a new rifle with light weight in mind. Maybe I’ll keep it the way it is, and continue into self-parody when the new suppressor comes in.

    I don’t know. I just felt like–confessing.

    *Oddly enough, I now view vertical foregrips as a “oh, he must be new at this” marker. They probably always were.

  • Accident at the local range

    Yesterday a 13 year old boy was accidentally shot at what we like to call “The Wild West Range” since it’s the only unsupervised public range in the area. I’d like to say I’m shocked by this, but it’s surprising to exactly no one who’s ever been out there. Because there are no RSOs, no lanes, no check-in, and no enforcement of any rules that may be posted, I never go to this range alone and for a long time wouldn’t go without wearing soft body armor (Yeah. I’m that guy). Everyone who’s been there more than a couple of times has a story of where they were down range putting up targets and Bubba and Cletus start blasting coke bottles 3 or 4 lanes away.

    This range is the reason that Oddball and I took a gunshot wound treatment class from the late Paul Gomez. I encourage everyone who is more than a once-a-year shooter to take a similar class and put together a simple GSW treatment kit. I keep one in each vehicle we own and one in my range bag.

    Now, all that being said, this is the first accident I’ve heard of in the 15 years I’ve been going to that range. Bubba and Cletus are technically correct when they say “c’mon, man! You’re way over there! I’m not that bad a shot!” It’s highly unlikely that anyone is that bad a shot, but I’d prefer not to find out.

    This tragedy appears to have happened not because someone started shooting during a cold range, but because of a series of handling safety failures:

    The boy, whose identity and hometown was not released, was shot with a .22 single action revolver, said Randy Cromer, who oversees the CMWA.

    He was taken by Life Flight to Vanderbilt University Medical Center.*

    Cromer said the boy was there with his father and another family member. They were checking on their targets when the shooting occurred.

    He said several firearms were on a bench when a woman moved them and that’s when the revolver discharged, hitting the boy in the lower abdomen.

    What appears to have happened, based on this limited report, is that someone left a single action revolver loaded and with the hammer cocked on the table. Then, a person who wasn’t familiar with the firearm started fiddling with it while people were down range. The negligent discharge happened because that person violated rules 1, 2, and 3.

    Now for the good news:

    Cromer said the injuries appear to be non-life threatening.

    I told my wife last night that everyone is very, very lucky this happened the way it did. The boy was hit in the abdomen (rather than the chest or the head) at 25 yards (the closest target stand to the bench) with a .22LR (rather than, say, a .44 or God-help-us a rifle round) fired from a pistol (rather than a rifle).

    The kid, and the woman who had the negligent discharge, are very lucky.

    PS: I will happily and enthusiastically promote any GSW classes you can find. You can leave them in the comments or shoot me an email. I may make a new dedicated page for providers if I can find enough of them. Please, please, please take a class and make a GSW kit.

    Edit: Reader Kevin suggests this class with dates across the country.

    *I’m glad that we now know they will send LifeFlight to pick up an accident victim at that range. It’s probably 25 minutes away from the nearest emergency room, and Vandy is a level 1 trauma center.

  • The Freight Train

    image

    That’s what I got. And yes, it’s got baby seal skin seats.

    2002 Ford Excursion Limited Ultimate. I went with a V10 instead of a diesel, because for the extra $7-10,000 a diesel was going to cost me, I decided I’d just buy a commuter car.

    This one gets 15mpg on the highway, 12 in town. I filled it up when it had 1/4 tank, and it cost me $110.

    I have no practical use for it. I’m not towing anything, and don’t plan to. We’re not going to end up with a basketball-team’s worth of kids. I got because I wanted it, with a side of “Screw you, hippie.”*

    In 2006, I was waiting outside a canoe-rental place for some friends of mine, and a black diesel Excursion with a really big lift and some ginormous tires roared by. I made up my mind that one day I would have one. I did the same thing in 2001 with a Full-Size Bronco…saw one at a gas station, decided I wanted one, and a couple years later I bought one.

    Driving this thing reminds me of that Bronco. It’s a big, lumbering, mobile fuel tank that’s fun to own. That it’s practically a luxury car on the inside is just a huge bonus.

    It’s also the first car I’ve owned that was made after Clinton was President.

    A couple of months ago I decided that the Jeep was getting to the point where I needed to start looking at my next vehicle. If you’ve read “How to buy a cheap car”, you know my process is to start with a budget and then figure out what you get. After that I got on some forums and asked about the various engines and model years, and learned that the V10 was going to be my best bet. I also wanted captain’s chairs in the second row instead of the bench, because Tactical Dog will jump over bench seats like they’re hurdles. Repeatedly. Enthusiastically. In a 2003 or later, swapping them out is fairly straightforward but the chairs are expensive. Before 2003, there’s some cutting and welding required.

    I stopped looking at them when I started getting excited about buying one. I wasn’t ready yet, and there was no need to get worked up about a good deal on something that was close to what I wanted when I wasn’t planning on buying one for 6-9 months.

    Then, a couple weeks ago, I left for work and by the time I got to the end of my 40 foot driveway I had smoke coming from the dashboard of my Jeep. Long story short, there’s a wiring short somewhere behind the dash and I can’t have any dash illumination. So I can’t see my gauges at night. This kind of problem is very difficult to hunt down (read: expensive), so after lots of reflection we decided it was time for me to go ahead and buy an Excursion.

    Original sticker price was just north of $50,000. I paid less than 20% of that, in cash. It’s the nicest car I’ve ever owned.

    *No, I’m not calling Tam a hippie. Read the post. You’ll get it.

  • I lol’d


    That’s some creativity right there.