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Meridian Magazine : : Home

 

Pulled up Sharply by the Soaring Price of Food
With an avalanche of economic news this week, you may be wondering what to do next.
By Carolyn Nicolaysen

Helping with Hurricane Cleanup
As an outsider watching people's possessions devastated by hurricanes, what can you do to help?
By Carolyn Nicolaysen

An Earthquake Strikes
Since earthquakes can happen anywhere, how do you respond immediately when you feel the “earth move under your feet?”
By Carolyn Nicolaysen

"Earthquakes Really Do Happen Just About Everywhere"
Some people think the place they live is immune from earthquakes and they don't have to worry about them.  Don't worry, but be prepared!
By Carolyn Nicolaysen

Keeping Our Kids Safe While Away at College
Did you ever consider adding “emergency preparedness items” to the list of things to send to college with your student?  Did you consider that they need to have a 72-hour kit with them at school?  Come and consider the possibilities.
By Carolyn Nicolaysen

Surviving the Next Heat Wave
The summer of 2006 brought to North America a heat wave that left the USA and Canada reeling. From July 15th to August 27th, its death toll was 225. Knowing what we know now, no family should be unprepared when it comes again.
By Carolyn Nicolaysen

Flood Clean-up: When the Real Work Begins
As bad as a flood seems, the flood itself is only the beginning.  As floodwaters recede in the Midwest , the Southeast watches anxiously for a new hurricane season. Now is a good time to be better informed about the huge task of clean-up that follows the flooding of your home.

By Carolyn Nicolaysen

Looking Ahead to Times of Drought
It is high irony that with record flooding in the Midwest USA, many areas of the nation and world are experiencing severe drought. There is  a concern for water shortages and inevitable price increases for this essential commodity.   When the order comes to restrict your water use, what can you do?

By Carolyn Nicolaysen

Slammed at the Pump — Stretching Our Limited Fuel Dollars
Here are some practical ways to bring down the cost of transportation, and to help your car achieve the best mileage possible while keeping your family safe, and your trips as cheap as possible.
By Carolyn Nicolaysen

Calamity May Be Just around the Corner
Like Dorothy in the Land of Oz, we can watch the news these days and conclude there are plenty of Lions and Tigers and Bears among today's list of natural disasters to keep us all on the lookout. Oh my! 
By Carolyn Nicolaysen

Looking to the Past, Preparing for the Future
Some people who are vulnerable may not recognize it, and may not be prepared. Some young families have become accustomed to prosperity and their ability to charge expenses on a credit card and just assume there will always be "next month" to deal with debt.
By Carolyn Nicolaysen

Responding to Uncertain Times
Two weeks ago Meridian Magazine quoted prophets who warned us of calamities. Now the news media are making the same predictions.  What has happened in the past two weeks? Plenty!
By Carolyn Nicolaysen

Why Don’t We Prepare?
Like the grasshopper in Aesop's fable of the grasshopper and the ant, all too often we put off preparing for tomorrow as we revel in the busyness of today. Here are some reasons why we shouldn't postpone preparing for the future.
By Carolyn Nicolaysen

Protect and Secure Your Home from Invaders
With the price of gas and other basics skyrocketing, many thieves seem to be getting bolder, and your home could be a target.
By Carolyn Nicolaysen

LDS Fire Survivors Tell Their Stories
Survivors of last fall's fire storms in California tell what they learned from the harrowing experience.
By Carolyn Nicolaysen

Prepare to Communicate
When families are separated in an emergency, communicating can be next to impossible. How can we communicate, when all else fails? This is where a ham could save the day.

By Carolyn and Don Nicolaysen (KR6US)

Take CERT Training to be Truly Prepared
Now is the time to get some training and prepare yourself with lifesaving skills. If you want really comprehensive training to give you the skills and self-confidence to face an emergency, it's time to check out CERT training.
By Carolyn Nicolaysen

What Your Neighbor Wants to Know about Preparedness
This week's preparedness column includes questions and suggestions from Meridian readers. It also tells readers who may be overwhelmed by preparedness issues how to eat the preparedness elephant, one bite at a time.
By Carolyn Nicolaysen

Ordinary Items for Extraordinary Survival
Sometimes it's the everyday things that save lives or help us avoid tragedy during a crisis. Whether stranded in the snow, by a heat wave, power outage, hurricane, or by the simple cancellation of our return flight from abroad — we need to take a new look at the items we commonly have in our possession for their possible value in our emergency.

By Carolyn Nicolaysen

Storm Tests Family's Preparedness
One LDS family in California uses a powerful windstorm to gauge the effectiveness of their emergency preparedness plan.

By Carolyn Nicolaysen

Preparing in Diverse Places
Recently someone living in earthquake and firestorm prone Southern California asked where people should move to avoid natural disasters. The answer is — there is no such place. FEMA and local governments are recognizing this fact, too, and waking up to the job of urging citizens to prepare on their own.
By Carolyn Nicolaysen

Helping Children Cope with Disaster
Whether it's a natural disaster, an act of war, or a family emergency, your children will be affected by trauma at least as much as you will. Here are ways to prepare them ahead of time and help them after the crisis is over.
By Carolyn Nicolaysen

Staph Infection: The Pandemic Next Door
Whether the threat to our health is an exotic avian flu from a remote province of Asia, or a staph infection from the school locker room — the illness or loss of just one loved one is a pandemic to that person's family. Time once again to prepare.
By Carolyn Nicolaysen

Survival for Every Family Member
Emergencies and the need for preparation affect all of us no matter where we live. If you haven't yet thought about how to evacuate your family members with special needs — the elderly, disabled and yes, your much loved pets — here are some tips that can help.
By Carolyn Nicolaysen

Teaching Children to Live Within Their Means
When we help children to understand that there is happiness in providing for ourselves through work and prudent budgeting, they prepare to succeed in a world that rewards consumption and excess.
By Carolyn Nicolaysen

Fifty Ways to Live Within Your Means
How many families, companies, churches, governments, or organizations do you know that spend less than they earn and remain debt free? If you follow this handy guide, your family can join this elite group.
By Carolyn Nicolaysen

Is Your School Prepared for Emergencies?
Teachers, administrators, school support staff, and classroom volunteers are the first responders during any emergency that occurs in our schools, but are they prepared?
By Carolyn Nicolaysen

Preparing to Provide Refuge
So you think because you don't live in a flood plain, near a river, or in the probable path of a tsunami, hurricane, earthquake or tornado, that you are exempt from being prepared? Think again. Even if you live in an area far from a disaster zone, that disaster can affect you.

By Carolyn Nicolaysen

30 More Days and 30 More Ways to be Prepared
September is National Preparedness Month in the USA, and no better time to help our families understand the goal of becoming the most self-reliant and prepared people
ready for any challenge.
By Carolyn Nicolaysen

“Prepare to Evacuate!”
You prepared and rehearsed, and now the time has come. The police officer has just announced on the loudspeaker from his car: "Prepare to evacuate!" Are you ready? Of course!
By Carolyn Nicolaysen

Living on Food Storage — Real Life Experiences
There are those who have lived on their food storage or experimented with living on their storage, and there is much we can learn from their experiences. Here are some of the things they have learned.
By Carolyn Nicolaysen

Surviving the Next Heat Wave
The summer of 2006 brought to North America a heat wave that left the USA and Canada reeling. From July 15th to August 27th, its death toll was 225. Knowing what we know now, no family should be unprepared if it comes again.
By Carolyn Nicolaysen

Storing Food Safely
It would be a sad situation indeed, to finally be faced with an emergency need for food storage, only to find that our supplies are damaged or spoiled.
By Carolyn Nicolaysen

Insurance: Part of Being Prepared
Will your insurance coverage be up to the job if natural disasters, or a flood or house fire, sweep your home away? Part of being prepared is to be able to answer that question with a resounding "yes"!
By Carolyn Nicolaysen

Surviving a Dust Storm
Dust storms are among nature's most violent and unpredictable phenomena, and they don't just happen in the desert or on foreign continents. If you find yourself caught in one, here are some tips for survival.
By Carolyn Nicolaysen

Making Space for Food Storage
Having our food storage is something we all should aspire to, but nobody can obey the prophet's counsel until there's a place to put the year's supply of food. Here are some practical suggestions that could help.
By Carolyn Nicolaysen

Wildfire: The Holocaust in your Backyard
Wildfires are the fastest growing disaster threat in the United States. As more people build homes in wooded areas, they put themselves at added risk. Smaller lot sizes in cities also increase the danger. Combine these factors with drought, excessive heat or high winds and these fires can be nearly unstoppable.
By Carolyn Nicolaysen

Preparing for a Flood
Today, many of us live where floods are a threat. Short of building a ship in our backyard, there are ways we can prepare for the worst. The measure of our wisdom may depend completely on whether, like Noah, we are willing to do something about being prepared.
By Carolyn Nicolaysen

The Self-Reliant Shopper
Unless we are unusually well off, most of us can't afford to go down to Costco and simply "stock up." But with a little strategy and cunning, we can leverage advertised sales, liquidations, and bulk buys to pay for most of our storage goods with real savings. The distinction is to know real savings when we see them.
By Carolyn Nicolaysen

Prepare Your Home for the Unexpected
When trouble comes knocking, how well we fare may be determined by how well we have prepped our home
not just our 72-hour kits, but our home, its structure and surroundings.
By Carolyn Nicolaysen

Safe Havens and Safe Rooms
Tornadoes terrorize the Southern states while recovery from Hurricane Katrina is still a fact of life
more than a year later across Louisiana and Mississippi. Is this a good time to examine safe rooms?
By Carolyn Nicolaysen

Water Storage — What if the Tap Goes Dry?
Here is some straight talk about water storage. These tips could save your life during a catastrophe.

By Carolyn Nicolaysen

A Second Look at Food Storage
Food storage isn't just quaint advice from long-dead prophets.  If you haven't started storing food, here are reasons to do so and ways to get you started.
By Carolyn Nicolaysen

Surviving the Hazards of Winter Travel
Whether you are stranded in the airport or in your car, winter travel can be uncomfortable or even deadly.  Here are some precautions that will help you in both situations.
By Carolyn Nicolaysen

When the Power Fails in Winter
Knowing what to do in a power outage can make the difference between life and death, especially when a power outage occurs during a time of severe weather.
By Carolyn Nicolaysen

The Gift of Preparedness
Why give a toaster or yet another videogame, when you can give a Christmas gift that can save a life?
By Carolyn Nicolaysen

Thirty Days and Thirty Ways to Be Better Prepared
When it comes to family preparedness, there are so many things we can do that don’t require spending a penny, or even much of our time!
By Carolyn Nicolaysen

BYU Hawaii was Ready for 6.6 Earthquake
If you have a loved one at BYU Hawaii, you can feel reassured in the aftermath of Sunday's earthquake. Here's why.
By Carolyn Nicolaysen

Surviving the Unthinkable
If a major catastrophe strikes, don't count on immediate help from emergency services personnel. Public health workers, firefighters, police, relief agency volunteers, and even the National Guard have their own families in need of care.
By Carolyn Nicolaysen

 

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