Showing posts with label guest post. Show all posts
Showing posts with label guest post. Show all posts

Apr 4, 2011

Misawa Monday Preparedness Perspective

(Wow, I've always wanted an alliteratively titled weekly post!  Sweet!)
Today's guest post was written by my friend Janeen.  Also known as "Healthy Friend Janeen".
Janeen and her husband Merrill (who is Doug's good friend and also a Dentist) were our "Sponsors".  That means, before we even moved here, we were e-mailing them asking questions about Japan, and they were helping us get housing and setting up our post office box.  I liked Janeen before I even met her and was determined to win her friendship with baked goods of the overly sweet and chocolaty variety.  Little did I know she's one of the most fit people on this base.  She's a certified personal trainer, she teaches SPIN, does (and wins) triathlons, and she teaches a class on plant-based eating and nutrition.  Plus, her house is super clean.  It's frankly astonishing that we're such good friends.
Them and Us!  (At Tokyo Disney)





So What's in Your Bag?

We had some neighbors (good friends) who used to make fun of Mormons for their emergency bags. Haha They have seen the light and even went to the store the week after with another LDS friend and list in hand of what they needed for their own bags. Nothing like a little earthquake scare to shake you into action, eh?


This post is dedicated to what I wish I had known or had on hand before the big quake in our 72-hour emergency bags.


We were low on decent flashlights. We did have a few, but the Buzz Lightyear and the Princess flashlights didn't really cut it. But the LED flashlights were great.


I had sort of not given much thought to candles in the past - I am such a de-clutterer that I have been known to get rid of them. We had two that I had been given as gifts recently that worked out really well. We perched them on a tall dresser (out of reach of little people) and with the reflection off the ceiling they did a good job. They also smelled good, which was an added bonus.


So I spent a good chunk of time on Monday getting all of my stuff out of the closet designated for our 72 Hour kits. I am embarrassed to say that we didn't even have a kit for our 22-month old. (oh the shame!) I have some crazy friends who would go through their 72-hour-kits every 6 months (usually during General Conference weekend). I'm totally on board with that idea now! In fact, we are starting THIS conference,  just to start the tradition. Also, this way my kids can see what is in their kits. (*My kids so wanted to be a part of the packing of the kits, but there was no way that I was going to let them pack 4 lbs of Pokemon cards - if Pokemons really had powers?... maybe)


I found quite a bit at the BX (pleasant surprise), but we had to order a few things too. We ordered stuff from Survival Solutions (they made a special trip to the USPS just for us, they normally ship FedEx), Emergency Essentials and the American Red Cross.


So in the Kits:
- 2 Radios, both are battery operated AND have a hand crank (batteries packed separately in case they corrode) (*ordered one of them from American Red Cross)
- Sterno cook stove and flammable bases
- Flashlights, LED (with extra batteries packed separately because they corrode over time)
- 2 28 LED lanterns (the Lanterns were awesome at night because they could light up the whole room)
- Candles (we have one that burns for 100 hours, and some others that have multiple wicks)
Waterproof matches
- 1 small can opener
- 1 emergency tent/shelter (very primitive; folds into a little bag)
- Sleeping bags (same sleeping bags as we use for camping, just stored in a different place so they are easier to grab)
- 2 emergency blankets (think shiny & reflective & light, not warm and fuzzy)
- First Aid kit (our family doesn't have any Rx meds, but that is something to have extras of - we put band-aids, Tylenol/Advil, ploysporin, sunscreen, splits/bandages, etc in there -- I just cruised through the pharmacy aisle to see what we'd need)
- Ponchos for everyone
- Cash!!! (If your electricity is out you can not swipe a CC and you'd can't get money from the ATM)
- Personal hygiene items (in mini travel size, toothbrush, toothpaste, soap, lotion, hand sanitizer, folding brush/comb, feminine hygiene...)
- Toilet paper and wet wipes
- Hand sanitizer
- Multi-purpose tool, hatchet, mini saw, work gloves, duct tape
- Little games and activities: UNO, Rook...
- Food: Little handheld Tomato Soups, Rice and Beans, plain oatmeal packets, granola bars, apple sauce, fruit cups, crackers and peanut butter, cereal bars, dried fruit, nuts, gum, chocolate, plastic sporks
- Water (recommended: 1 gal/person/day)
- Water purification tablets
- We also have our important documents in a ready-to-grab folder


That is all I remember off the top of my head. 
So get it together!


Thanks, Neeners!!!

Apr 3, 2011

Operation Tomadachi---NODA*

Today we have a guest post written by my husband Doug.  He hasn't been "Feeling Bloggy" lately and hasn't kept up his blog.  So I asked him to post it here.

Yes Cololnel Rothstein, I have FINALLY done it!

Our base commander has instituted the slogan "Have you done it?" He goes around asking people this. Now it is generally known what he is referring to, but for the first day people had to figure out what "it" was. "IT" is going on the Red Cross volunteer trips.  (Check out "Misawa Helps" on Facebook.)  My friend Tyler has taken over the head role from my other friend Wes who moved on Tuesday.

Anyway, I showed up early Thursday morning and boarded a bus with some friends. Luckily I was in the bus with the Air Force workers and not the Marines who are up from Okinawa helping out. They are a different breed for sure!
We loaded up and headed south about 2 hours to Noda. This is a little town of about 4700 residents. It sits in a cove on the coast and the tsunami, I'm told, was amplified as the wave entered the cove and wiped out 500 of the 1200 houses.  Fortunately "only" 37 were reported dead.  Evidently the emergency sirens worked. The displaced victims, I'm told, are living at the high school or with family. It was reported from multiple sources, though I can hardly imagine it, that the tsunami wave was 20 meters! (1 meter=3.2 feet)


As we entered the town center I began to see signs of damage; broken windows, flooded shops, and a lot of debris. Then we pulled into the center plaza: looking west was a large plane of leveled houses. It was just unbelievable.

Once there Capt H met with the town's mayor who gave us our assigned clean up area for the day. We then unloaded a van of food and blankets and diapers for the locals. Nearby I saw where they were keeping all the personal effects like photos. A lady was crouched down rinsing silt and sand off the pictures and hanging them to dry. There were some really cute pictures there too.

Once at our site we all immediately set to work. Imagine a newly zoned construction area...in the city dump. This is how is seemed, and our job was to clear it while trying to find things that where not broken and setting them aside: statues, bowls, plates, bottles of booze...someone found a title to a property undamaged in a card board tube (how does a cardboard tube survive a giant tsunami!?), pots, toys, tools, etc. Everyone was eager to work. All the rubble was hauled to the "curb" and piled there.

I decided to start where I was standing. I found a lot of roof tiles so I started a pile of the unbroken ones. As I worked I began to see people take to different techniques. Some would focus on finding unbroken items. One man seemed intent on finding the largest things to conquer. He'd spend ten minutes beating bricks off a fallen wall so he could haul it away. Another was making a large stack at the curb with cinder blocks and then moved onto making a collection with the landscaping stones (this house seemed to have had beautiful landscaping). I moved over closer to where my friends were working and got caught up in some rubble there and soon noticed I was drifting around not really sure where to work or what to do. Running through my mind was advice I think I heard from Em, "just focus on where you are".

It was true, you just had to focus on the spot you are working on. I found a stretch along side one foundation and focused there. I soon saw some progress and found some nice photographs, a framed collage of a family pictures, some clothing, (though they likely wont want it) some more roof tiles, bowls etc.


I spent about an hour in one spot near another foundation uncovering a lot of kitchen ware, then moved over to the next house helping two other men heft giant logs out/off of its floor. Our crews made a lot of progress, yet when you stand up and look over the whole area, the magnitude is sobering. As were carrying a plastered covered wall to the pile, Merrill mentioned the quote from Elder Uchtdorf "Lift where you stand." True, it is overwhelming as many things can be in life, but you just have to start where you are and lift where you stand.

Though we did a lot of work, recovered some personal effects, I think the biggest gain from this "operation" was what the name implies: Tomadachi-Friend. We were seen by the people of Noda as friends coming to help out. That is the mission, to show them we care and build a true friendship between the U.S. and Japan. Then if I look at the few lots that we cleared out I'm sure it made a big difference to those people. I think I would be grateful for the few photos recovered if I lost all of my photos of our family.
(the remnants of the tsunami sea wall)

I am so grateful to have been a part of that day's efforts. I am also thankful to have had the opportunity to live through/during these disasters. It will forever be a part of me and my family. I had the boys get out of the car and stand in front of a giant ship in Hachinohe so they could later see they were a part of these events. Often this verse has gone through my mind since Em read it to us the other night: "Thou knowest the greatness of God; and he shall consecrate thine afflictions for thy gain. Wherefore, thy soul shall be blessed." (2 Nephi 2:2-3)


To top off a great day of tsunami damage clean-up we had a large quake while we were loading up the bus to leave!!!!!
Here is a better written article on Noda.

*Other titles for this post: Where do I start? Is this helping? Do I pick up those little things? Do I bother with that giant beam? Did this really happen? Will this ever be done? What do I grab before fleeing? How'd that house get there? Why is that house demolished and the others around it fine? Wow!