The Gift of Preparedness
By Carolyn Nicolaysen
Toasters, ties, and toys. The season
for giving not only tests our imagination and budget, but can also
stretch our inspiration. Well, just in case your friends and kin
could benefit from a little more Emergency Preparedness, here are
some ideas on how to remember them with creative gift ideas that
are fun and practical.
Gift Idea #1:The Theme Gift
Choose a theme and give a gift that
delivers on that theme. Place a quote or scripture on the
gift to announce your theme. For example:
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Light:
“You light up my life” or quote John 12:35 ― “Walk while
ye have the light, lest darkness come upon you: for he that walketh
in darkness knoweth not whither he goeth.”
Include glow sticks, flashlights,
maybe a flashlight and radio combo, candles in glass jars for
power outages, or solar lights that can be charged during the
day and brought in at night during a power outage.
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Eat, drink,
and be merry: Give MRE meals, water, energy bars, and a travel
game.
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Commuter survival:
Orange safety vest, large safety glow sticks, work gloves, food
and water.
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Food storage
starter kit: A case of food from each of the food groups.
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The weather
outside is frightful: Space blankets, rain poncho, hand-warmers,
glow sticks, flashlight, battery-powered radio, hot cocoa and
hot cider mix.
Gift Idea #2: Gift Certificates
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Garden Kit:
Purchase a garden bucket, add some packets of seeds, a trowel,
a planting guide and a gift certificate good for your help with
next spring’s garden planting. Add the book The Secret
Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett for family reading.
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Canning Kit:
Give a case of new canning jars, some of your favorite canning
recipes and a gift certificate for a lug of fruit from your local
orchard next summer or a day of canning help.
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Canning Season
Order Form: Create a gift certificate that is an order form
for next canning season. Label the top of the certificate
“Redeemable from Summer 2007 Crop." Directions: “Choose one
from each section." Then create sections for items
you normally can. For example, “Fruit” choose from pears,
applesauce or peaches. You could include a jam and jelly
section, vegetable section, and a “Just for Fun” section, which
could include such things as pickles and spaghetti sauce.
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Disaster Preparedness
Kit: Send for, or download, information concerning natural
disasters known to occur in your area. This information
should also include counsel on what to do to be prepared for such
emergencies. Wrap it in a gift bag and add a gift certificate
from a provider of 72-hour kits and preparedness items.
You will not only have “warned your neighbors,” but will have
provided them with a way to act on the knowledge they have gained.
Gift Idea #3: The Survival Kit
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College Survival
Kits: With the recent earthquake in Hawaii affecting student
at BYU Hawaii, it reminds us again of the importance of helping
college students to prepare. Everyone living independently,
and this includes students living away from home, should have
some food storage. The following are some of my favorite
ideas for students:
- Cookies and soup in a jar.
You’ve seen these and they are great for students with little
time to fix meals. Layer cookie ingredients or the ingredients
for soup in a quart canning jar. Attach the direction
for preparing the foods. Pack 6 jars of cookie mixes and
6 jars of a variety of soup mixes in a canning jar box.
- Dinner basket. Purchase
a large laundry basket and fill it with a copy of your favorite,
or your student’s favorite, recipe. Purchase all the ingredients
to make that recipe 5 times. Taco soup would be a great
example since most of the ingredients are canned.
- Private cache. Purchase
a case of a favorite food. This is also great for young
children. It helps them realize just how much is really
needed for a year's supply and teaches them your commitment
to having a year’s supply of food. Brownies or Mac &
Cheese are perfect here.
- Auto survival. Every student
who drives a long distance to school should have an emergency
car kit. Sadly, college students have frozen returning from
Christmas holidays, when cars break down in severe cold temperatures.
So in addition to coats and blankets carried separately during
winter, kits should include: glow sticks for light if you need
to remain in the car for an extended period, water packets,
food bars, mylar blanket for warmth in winter or to cool a car
during the summer, flashlight, poncho (preferably yellow for
better visibility when walking), first aid kit, whistle, and
towelettes for after changing a tire or putting on snow chains.
This should be in a backpack or fanny pack, to keep hands free.
This is important as in an emergency you want hands free for
balance, especially in the snow or when dealing with debris.
- 72-hour kit. Refer
to our October 17th Meridian article
“BYU Hawaii was Ready for 6.6 Earthquake” for suggestions
from school safety officials concerning building a kit for college
students.
- Healthy semester kit. Remember
college diets and late semester colds and flu? Prepare
a healthy semester kit by including vitamins, cold remedies
like Zicam (or cold preventatives like Airborne), tissues, robe,
slippers, and chicken soup.
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Pandemic or
medical emergency survival kit. Okay, so this doesn’t
sound fun. Nevertheless, pandemics often thrive when people are
clustered indoors, as they are in winter. Include towelettes,
small biohazard bags, hand sanitizers, medical masks, medical
gloves, instructions for preparing for a medical emergency (these
can be found on the Center for Disease Control website or at pandemicflu.gov), and finally,
a favorite family DVD. After all when the flu hits everyone
will need a distraction.
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Pet survival
kit. Got Pets? Include a leash, small food and water
dishes, ID tag for their collar with the name and phone number
of the family’s out of state contact, water and a couple of meat
MREs. MREs are good long after the 5-year shelf life, however
they can experience a change in taste. MREs which are due
to “expire” can often be found at bargain prices and serve well
as emergency pet supplies.
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Purchase
local maps and regional maps. Mark several routes to exit the
area in case of an emergency.
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The family shirt.
Or whatever ― something that identifies you as part of a
family unit is an important way to improve your chances for being
reunited quickly in a Katrina-scale disaster. Purchase a solid
color t-shirt for each member of the family. Shirt sizes
for children should be at least one size larger than they are
now wearing. Include a set of fabric crayons and instructions
to create a family shirt. These shirts will then be placed
in their 72-hour kits and worn when the family needs to evacuate.
Each shirt should have the same picture on them but not a name.
Have each member contribute something to the picture, iron it
on to a shirt and then recolor and reuse for each additional shirt.
Shirts should be a bright color to make them easier to spot in
a crowd and more memorable. I remember the frustration during
Katrina when family members were looking for their children.
Everyone had seen a pretty little girl with curly hair but there
were hundreds of pretty little girls with curly hair. If
your family is all wearing the same distinctive shirt it is much
more likely that someone will remember seeing your child.
Even better, you might get a member of the media to say “This
child is wearing a shirt just like this one”. You can also
use the same tactic with bandanas and baseball caps. Just
remember to make them all the same and distinctive from those
you can purchase.
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Oil for your
lamp. Don’t forget spiritual preparedness. Give a set
of scriptures or a small inspirational book to be kept in a 72-hour
kit or in the car for times when you are stuck waiting for a road
closure. The military style scriptures are a possibility.
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Scripture-a-day.
Compile favorite scriptures from family members and create a scripture
for each day of the year or even a month.
Gift Idea #4: A Subscription.
Order a subscription to the Liahona
magazine for a family member or friend who served a foreign language
mission. Some languages are published each month and some
only once a year, but all are wonderful to receive. Of course, The
Ensign, New Era, Friend, and Church News are excellent
gifts for family who are not taking advantage of these resources.
Gift Idea #4: Financial Preparedness.
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Savings bonds
are a great gift for anyone and especially for young children.
They are tax exempt when used for post high school education.
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Cash for a rainy
day. What will we do for cash, if the power is down, along
with the internet connections to your local ATM? It takes discipline,
but some well-hidden cash is an important part of preparedness
planning. And of course, for college students, rolls of quarters
are always appreciated. Likewise for students, a gift certificate
to a local grocery store.
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Savings accounts.
Why not set up individual savings accounts for grandchildren?
They will love going with you to the bank and it will make them
feel very grown up and responsible. Help them understand
that the money is for college or a mission. You can add
to the account as they grow. We have a piggy bank at our
home and when our grandchildren visit and help with chores, we
place money in the banks. You could use their savings account
in the same way.
So, these are a few ideas for the gift
of preparedness. With a measure of imagination and inspiration,
anyone can make preparedness fun and personal. And in an emergency
scenario, being prepared is so much more fun than the alternative!