Frankingun wrote: ↑Tue Aug 14, 2018 1:15 pm
Stay safe and keep us posted.
As of last night, the fire was 100% contained, and all of the evacuations had been lifted. Which leaves us with a large firebreak upwind for the remainder of at least this fire season. Since I should be PCSing before next fire season, this makes us much calmer for the remainder of the fall. We'd have been 'screwed', but not 'totally screwed', since we got all the important paperwork, photo backups, and wouldn't have left any living creatures in the house. The biggest take-away for me was really needing to go back over the lists for what to grab.
3-seconds (wake up and house is on fire): Self evident - Self and kids, leave doors open for pets to escape. This is why you should have at least a pair of house shoes next to the bed.
30-seconds (wake up and the house next door is on fire, no fire dept on scene): 3-second list, plus grabbing pets by the collars and pitching them in the car. Maybe the fire box if it's in the right place (ours was NOT). If either of the houses next door are on fire, it doesn't have to 'jump' to our house, it'll just ride the fences and come right on over. Given the proximity of the houses here, this situation looks different here than it would in say VA, where we were on 2/3 of an acre.
3-minutes (next door is on fire, fire dept is on scene): Lists above, plus firebox and heirloom guns (we only have a handful), laptop, and the lab's food since he's on really expensive prescription stuff, and I can't be sure we'll be able to get to a vet immediately to get more.
30 minutes: Pre-evac (where we were Friday), or full evac if you're already home when the order is given. If the cops are telling you to LEAVE NOW, see 3-minute list above. We loaded the 2 motorcycles in the utility trailer, put the generator in the back of the truck, loaded up food for all the pets and the cat's litter box setup for the travel trailer, and got things like the stuffed animals that the kiddos sleep with.
Anybody got pointy sticks for these lists?
Old Grafton wrote: ↑Tue Aug 14, 2018 12:40 pm
Just a quick suggestion... you can significantly increase fire resistance in your safe with a couple layers of 5/8' drywall--at the loss of just a few inches of space--which can be easily removed and dumpstered before your next PCS...(be sure to put some inside the door too)
The safe is upstairs. Any fire which would destroy the contents of such an uprated safe would likely have already destroyed the room it's sitting in, causing it to fall down into the first floor. The other complication is that the safe is at max capacity since we bought it specifically so we could put all the guns AND ammo inside since I wasn't able to get a concise, clear answer on storage requirements for here in CA. Technically they say to lock stuff up separately, but whatever. Either way, the loss of 1-1/4" all the way around means I'm not able to store all the guns.
Eventually, this 'Residential Storage Container' will likely end up as the storage spot for ammo, while the firearms themselves will get locked up in a UL-rated SAFE. All that said, your idea sparked a bit of google-fu through the intarwebz, and it appears I can get at least SOME benefit from putting a couple layers of 5/8" fire-rated gypsum board OUTSIDE the safe. Not the best solution, but at least an upgrade from where I'm at currently. And the same 'pitch at PCS' option applies.