How Will You Stay Warm Safely If The Power Goes Out?
Have you ever been
without electricity in the middle of a winter storm? How are you going to keep
warm and dry? Sometimes during severe winter storms your home heating system
could be inoperative for as long as several days. Keep in mind that alternate heating sources can be dangerous or even
deadly without the right handling.
The first thing to do if you lose power and
your heating source during a winter storm is to minimize discomfort and
possible health problems during this time. Begin by conserving body heat by
putting on extra clothing. If the cold is severe, your bed may be the warmest
place in the house. Be sure to use extra blankets and covers to trap body heat;
this is an especially good way to keep children warm.
Your
next step in keeping warm during this time is to find or improvise an alternative
heat source. Your possibilities may include
a fireplace, space heater, catalytic camp stove, wood, gas or oil heater; or a
gas-fired hot water heater. Some common materials that can be used for fuel
include firewood, newspapers, magazines, camp stove fuel, kerosene, wood chips,
straw or corncobs. You can burn coal in a fireplace or stove if you make a
grate to hold it, allowing air to circulate underneath. A “hardware cloth”
screening placed on a standard wood grate will keep coal from falling through.
Tightly rolled newspapers or magazines can be used as paper “logs”. Stack them
as you would stack firewood to allow for air circulation.
To increase the efficiently of available heat
and close off all rooms except the one to be heated. When selecting a room you
need to consider the following tips. If using a vented stove or space heater,
select a room with a stove or chimney flue. You should confine emergency heat
to a small area. Try to select a room on the “warm” side of the house, away
from prevailing winds. Avoid rooms with large windows or uninsulated walls.
Interior bathrooms probably have the lowest air leakage and heat loss. Your
basement may be a warm place in cold weather because the earth acts as
insulation and minimizes heat loss. Isolate the room form the rest of the house
by keeping doors closed, hanging bedding or heavy drapes over entryways, or by
erecting temporary partitions of cardboard or plywood. Hang drapes, bedding or
shower curtains over doors and windows.
While the chances of freezing to death in your
home are small, there’s a greater danger of death by fire, lack of oxygen or
carbon monoxide poisoning. Safety is of extreme importance in heating
emergency. Follow these precautions:
·
Do not burn anything larger than
a candle inside your home without providing adequate ventilation to the
outside.
·
Any type of heater (except
electric) should be vented. Connect the stove pipe to a chimney flue if at all
possible. (Many older homes have capped pipe thimbles in rooms once heated by
stoves.) Or hook up your stove to the flue entrance of the non-functioning
furnace pipe. If no other alternative exists, consider extending a stove pipe
through a window. Replace the window glass with a metal sheet and run the
temporary stove pipe through the metal.
·
If you use a catalytic or
unvented heater, cross-ventilate by opening a window an inch on each side of
the room. It is better to let in some cold air than to run the risk of carbon
monoxide poisoning.
·
Do not use a gas or electric
oven or surface units for heating. A gas oven may go out or burn inefficiently,
leading to carbon monoxide poisoning. An electric oven was not designed for
space heating.
·
Do not burn outdoor barbecue
materials such as charcoal briquettes inside-even in a fireplace.
·
Do not try to used bottled gas
in natural gas appliances unless you have converted the appliances for such
use. Also flues and piping suitable for gas-burning appliances maybe unsafe for
use with higher temperature oil, coal, or wood smoke.
·
Have one person watch for fire
whenever alternative heat sources are used. One person should also stay awake
to watch for fire and to make sure ventilation is adequate. If the designated
person feels drowsy or has a headache, it may be a sign of inadequate ventilation.
·
Keep firefighting materials on
hand. These may include: dry powder fire extinguishers, a tarp or heavy
blanket, sand, salt, baking soda. And water.
For additional information the NC Cooperative
Extension has a publication entitled “Preparing for Disasters”. It is free and
is available at 301 East Center Street in Lexington, or by calling a requesting
one at 242-2085.
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