Submitted by Rick Johansson
Gather Emergency Supplies
Water Supplies
If a natural or human-caused disaster strikes your community, you
might not have access to food, water and electricity for a while. By taking
steps now to store emergency food and water supplies, along with a disaster supplies kit, you can reduce the affect of any such disaster on your family.
In an emergency, having a
supply of clean water for drinking, food preparation, and hygiene is a top priority.
·
Store at least 1 gallon per person and
pet per day.
·
Store at least a 3-day supply of water
for each member of your family.
In an emergency, drink at least 2 quarts of water a day, 3 to 4
quarts a day if you are in a hot climate, pregnant, sick, or a child. If
supplies run low, don't ration water: Drink the amount you need today and look
for more tomorrow. Don't risk dehydration. Emergency assistance should be
available within a few days at most.
How
and Where to Store Water
Learn where the water intake valve to your home is. If you hear
reports of broken water or sewage lines, or if local officials recommend doing
so, you would need to shut off water to your house at the incoming water valve
to stop contaminated water from entering your home.
·
In a cool, dark place in your home,
each vehicle, and your workplace.
·
Preferably in store-bought,
factory-sealed water containers.
·
Alternately, in food-grade-quality
containers made for storing water and available from sporting goods and surplus
stores and other retailers. These containers must be thoroughly washed, sanitized, and rinsed. The water you store
in them, if it's from your tap, may need to be treated before being stored. Ask
your public health service or water provider for information on whether and how
to treat the water. Follow those instructions before storing any.
Safe
Use of Water Containers
1. Wash containers with dishwashing soap and
rinse with water.
2. Sanitize by swishing a solution of 1 teaspoon
of liquid household chlorine bleach to a quart of water on all interior
surfaces of the container.
3. Rinse thoroughly with clean water before
use.
Avoid
using
·
Store-bought water past the expiration
or "use by" date on the container.
·
Containers that can't be sealed
tightly.
·
Containers that can break, such as
glass bottles.
·
Containers that have ever held any toxic
substance.
·
Plastic milk bottles and cartons. They
are difficult to clean and break down over time.
Do
·
Change stored water every six months.
Alternate
Emergency Water Sources Inside and Outside Your Home
Inside
If a disaster catches
you without a stored supply of clean water, you can use the water in—
·
your hot-water tank
·
pipes and faucets
·
ice cubes
If your tap water is
safe to drink, so is the water in your pipes and hot-water tank, even if the
idea seems unappealing. If you don't drink tapwater, the water in your pipes
and hot-water tank may still be useful for sanitation.
To use the water in
your hot-water tank, be sure the electricity or gas is off, then open the drain
at the bottom of the tank. Start the water flowing by turning off the water
intake valve at the tank and turning on a hot-water faucet. Refill the tank
before turning the gas or electricity back on. If the gas is turned off, only a
professional can turn it back on.
To use the water in
your pipes, identify and turn on the highest faucet in your home to let air
into the plumbing. You then can get water from the lowest faucet.
Outside
If you need to find
water outside your home, try
·
Rainwater
·
Streams, rivers, and other moving bodies of water
·
Ponds and lakes
·
Natural springs
Take steps to make
water from any of these sources safer before drinking it. You should not drink
flood water. Avoid water with floating material, an odor, or dark color. Use
saltwater only if you distill it first.
Ways
to Make Outdoor Water Safer
Note: These instructions are not for treating water to be stored,
only for emergencies when no other water is available.
Untreated water can
make you very sick. Besides having a bad odor and taste, it can contain toxic
chemicals, heavy metals and germs that cause such diseases as dysentery,
typhoid and hepatitis. Before drinking outdoor water, using it in food
preparation or for hygiene, make it safer to use by
·
Straining it. Pour the water
through paper towels, a clean cloth, or a coffee filter to remove any suspended
particles.
·
Boiling it. In a large pot or
kettle, bring water to a rolling boil for 1 full minute. Cool it and pour it
back and forth between two clean containers to improve its taste before
drinking it.
·
Chlorinating it. Using household
liquid bleach that contains 5.25 to 6.0 percent sodium hypochlorite (listed on
the label) as its only active ingredient, add 16 drops (1/8 teaspoon) per
gallon to water in a large pot or kettle. Stir and let stand for 30 minutes. If
the water does not have a slight bleach odor, repeat the dosage and let stand
another 15 minutes. If it still does not smell of chlorine, find another source
of water and start over.
·
Distilling it. Fill a pot halfway
with water. Tie a cup to the handle on the pot's lid so that the cup will hang
right-side-up inside the pot when the lid is upside-down without dangling into
the water. Boil the water for 20 minutes. The water that drips from the lid
into the cup is distilled.
None of these methods
is perfect. The best solution is to use all of them. Boiling and chlorination
will kill most microbes but will not remove other contaminants, such as heavy
metals, salts and most other chemicals. Distillation will kill or remove most
of any remaining contaminates.
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