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[YXF]≫ [PDF] Free Handbook to Practical Disaster Preparedness for the Family 3rd Edition eBook Dr Arthur T Bradley

Handbook to Practical Disaster Preparedness for the Family 3rd Edition eBook Dr Arthur T Bradley



Download As PDF : Handbook to Practical Disaster Preparedness for the Family 3rd Edition eBook Dr Arthur T Bradley

Download PDF  Handbook to Practical Disaster Preparedness for the Family 3rd Edition eBook Dr Arthur T Bradley

How do you prepare for an Ebola outbreak? What about a hurricane, flood, tornado, or house fire? It all starts with developing a practical disaster preparedness plan for your family. The Handbook to Practical Disaster Preparedness is the only book that provides step-by-step instructions for developing that plan. It emphasizes practical preparations and avoids the scare tactics of many other books.

The 440-page handbook is a complete guide to creating a practical disaster preparedness plan. The 3rd Edition has been expanded to cover every important topic, including food storage, water purification, home improvements, electricity generation, backup heating, personal protection, financial preparations, communication systems, disaster preparedness networks, evacuations, life-saving first aid, and much more. An entire chapter is also provided for people with special needs, including the elderly, those with young children, people with disabilities, and pet owners.

Inside the handbook are hundreds of photographs, tables, and useful tips. The new larger 8" x 10" format also includes easy-to-copy worksheets to help organize your family's preparedness plans. Working through the steps identified in this book will prepare your family for nearly any disaster, whether it be natural disasters making the news daily (e.g., earthquakes, tornadoes, hurricanes, floods, and tsunamis), or high-impact global events, such as electromagnetic pulse attacks, radiological emergencies, solar storms, or our country's impending financial collapse.

Discover why this handbook is being praised by emergency management experts, preppers, church groups, survivalists, bloggers, soccer moms, and people from every walk of life. Now is the time to take responsibility for your family's safety by putting into place important emergency preparations.

For more information on Dr. Bradley's books and to sign up for his free Practical Prepper Newsletter , see disasterpreparer.com.

Also, if interested in an exciting post-apocalyptic series that follows a US Marshal after a global pandemic, check out The Survivalist (Frontier Justice).

Handbook to Practical Disaster Preparedness for the Family 3rd Edition eBook Dr Arthur T Bradley

Just as the title says, this is a PRACTICAL disaster preparedness guide. Each of the major areas of concern is covered in a brief but thorough manner, and at the end of the chapter are bullet points and checklists. What I like is that the author sketches out different scenarios - none of which are outside the bounds of credibility - and the discusses the most practical ways to respond. You aren't told you need to go out and buy a year's worth of food and 10,000 rounds of ammo and head for your mountain retreat at the first sign of trouble. This is by far the most sensible and realistic basic disaster preparedness book I've read. You won't be disappointed.

Product details

  • File Size 20261 KB
  • Print Length 440 pages
  • Publication Date June 6, 2012
  • Sold by  Digital Services LLC
  • Language English
  • ASIN B0089NLHD4

Read  Handbook to Practical Disaster Preparedness for the Family 3rd Edition eBook Dr Arthur T Bradley

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Handbook to Practical Disaster Preparedness for the Family 3rd Edition eBook Dr Arthur T Bradley Reviews


This book is to blame for several thousand dollars in spending. My wife is unhappy, nigh hysterical. My kids are asking what I mean by "College isn't for everyone." My neighbors are giving me the evil eye.

Just kidding. This book got me started on prepping. It is targeted at the laymen, explains the relevant concepts in detail, and is organized usefully around the primary survival needs of a family. Let me note up front that I am not what I would call a dedicated prepper. Everyone must make their own judgment regarding the commitment of time and resources to the level of preparation and the ability to live off grid. For my part, I found that this book helped to clarify the principal concepts, even if I didn't end up adopting them all in short, it helped me to start asking the right questions.

Let me repeat one thing this book was made for a FAMILY. Some very good thinking (and first-hand experimentation) has gone into the recommendations in this book on how a man, a woman, and a couple small children can prepare themselves for the adversity of a disaster situation. This is a practical element that is absent from a lot of disaster prep literature out there.

What I liked most is the point, emphasized in several places, that preparedness is not about making a list of things to buy, but thinking through and experimenting with a strategy that will actually work in practice for your family. This is good advice. Prepping is a lifestyle, not a closet full of stuff. As I said, everyone must choose for themselves how much of this lifestyle to embrace. But the first step in choosing is to know there is a choice.

If you're looking for information to help you embark on the journey to prepping, this is as good a start as any I have come across.
As someone who lives in the middle of Kansas, tornadoes and--to a much lesser extent--bad winters are some things that are constantly on my mind.

I felt that this book was an excellent one-stop shop for getting one in the right mind-set to prepare for almost any disaster. Many might say that "oh, well that's just common sense!" . . . only to answer in the negative when asked if they have a month's supply of food stored up or have bothered to take a photographic inventory of their household goods. Sometimes even the "common sense" things need to be reiterated.

Below I'll list a few tips and comments of my own regarding some of the categorized chapters in this book.

FOOD
--If you are trying to have a goal of a one-month's supply of food, I would strongly suggest getting a bulk amount with a shelf life of 25 years. Buy it once and be done with it. Wise Food Supply, Thrive--among others--have a variety of bulk packages you can buy sometimes with free shipping and/or other goodies tossed in.
--I felt the author was a little too concerned with taste. If I'm in a survival situation I can care less about taste as long as it's edible, doesn't make me sick and lets me live to see another day.
--A P38 is still a great can opener. Where else can you fit a can opener on your key ring?

WATER
--Some newer home toilets only use 1.6 gallons per flush, which is less than the 2-3+ cited by the author. One can also cut down on toilet-water costs by installing a European-style Dual-Flush kit, which allows you to use about half as much water (.8 gallons) for liquid waste.

SHELTER
--I found it odd that Shelter is the most important--according to the author--but shows up in Chapter five AFTER Food and Water. If Shelter is indeed number one, then it should also be the first thing discussed.

LIGHT
--Don't forget that one can also use Parrafin Lighter cubes to start an easy fire. You can buy them online and from experience I can tell you that even one cube is enough to get a stack of coals going on the grill.

ELECTRICITY
--Of all the things that could happen, I'd consider loss of electricity to be one of the most detrimental. So I found it amusing that the author listed primarily websites and suggestions of keeping lists and spreadsheets on your computer. I'm sorry, but when the power goes out, what good is that going to do for you?

HEATING / COOLING
--Another heat source to consider is the Micathermic space heater. There is no blower, no glowing parts and no moving parts. You also don't have to worry about oil dripping (oil-filled radiator).

MEDICAL / FIRST AID
--In addition to bookmarking a few medical websites, if the power goes out, I would recommend a few books, such as this one . . . Take Care of Yourself, 9th Edition The Complete Illustrated Guide to Medical Self-Care that was recommended to me when I was in the Army.

FINANCIAL PREPAREDNESS
--Something I do religiously every Friday--log into all websites that involve money and track all your finances on a spreadsheet. Set limits for certain expenses and color code as you go so that you can quickly see if things are going good (green) or bad (red). Doing this every Friday helps you remember the password for your websites and know for certain what you have in there.

PROTECTION
--Don't forget swords. You can buy a fully functional katana blade for about $300. Hanwei/Paul Chen is a good place to start. Not as good as a gun, but a heck of a lot better than a knife. Also, beware of "wall-hanger" swords you see in malls. When I say "fully functional" I mean a sword that can chop a limb in half.

CREATING A (D)isaster (P)reparedness NETWORK
--I think a neighborhood DP network is a good idea for those who can't immediately afford some of the more expensive survival items listed (generators, gas masks, etc). However, having a DP network where everyone knows what the other has was also ironically contradictory to the author's statement that you shouldn't reveal what supplies you have on hand. If possible, I'd say you're better off fending for yourself, especially if you live in a bad neighborhood.

OVERALL

While I'd argue that this book is not completely practical--do you really have the money to go out and buy a NukAlert or an expensive generator setup?--I did feel that it covered all the bases, offering much food for thought along the way. Perhaps future editions can give recommendations on how to set up a survival kit on a limited budget or using only everyday household supplies. I consider myself middle-class and even on my salary some of the products mentioned are ridiculously expensive--even if I only focused on applicable threats.
OK... I like to consider myself a thoughtful, prepared person. We had just moved to a different part of the country (sitting on an earthquake fault line) and bought a home, so I thought "OK... risks are different after the move... time to think about being prepared."

What I DID NOT want was a guide on how to farm my own crops and stockpile hundreds of pounds of wheat for milling and how to stockpile my own bunker to arm my own militia. I also knew that buying a pre-made backpack of cheap 'survival gear' from wasn't going to cut it either.

I got exactly what I needed plus much more.

Dr. Bradley goes through air, water, food, and first-aid so you can see where you might need to improve your own plans. He also goes into some self defense and security without letting it overwhelm the book... it is in balance with the scope and scale of all of the topics. He also talks about other risks and risk planning like building a support network and building a sound financial plan for you and your family so that you aren't overwhelmed when a risk event hits (anything from a heavy car repair bill to the loss of a spouse).

The book helped me flesh out the plans / preparations I had planned to set up (primarily water/food/light/air), made me re-think work I had already done (enough life insurance?) and brought several additional topics to mind that I hadn't thought about (Nuclear disaster, Shelter-in-place, EMP) that aren't really in my sphere of control, but I can help plan a bit for to protect my family.

Thank you!
Just as the title says, this is a PRACTICAL disaster preparedness guide. Each of the major areas of concern is covered in a brief but thorough manner, and at the end of the chapter are bullet points and checklists. What I like is that the author sketches out different scenarios - none of which are outside the bounds of credibility - and the discusses the most practical ways to respond. You aren't told you need to go out and buy a year's worth of food and 10,000 rounds of ammo and head for your mountain retreat at the first sign of trouble. This is by far the most sensible and realistic basic disaster preparedness book I've read. You won't be disappointed.
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