A Prepper After Action Review - Snowmageddon Feb 18
The Beast From The East

Photo courtesy of 'Geograph'
OUTLINE
With major warnings in place, including 'Danger to Life' and 'Red' warnings, blizzard conditions swept across Britain within 48 hrs... We were ALL warned! We all knew Storm 'Emma' was coming.
We all had at least a 5 day warning lead, but was this enough?
Were we prepared for the worst conditions in 35 years?
Across the country between 3 and 28 cm of snow fell in a blanket of snow and ice, high winds, snow drifts and a variety of tempertatures ranging from -5 to -14 Celsius.
OBSERVATIONS
What I saw and heard about was the usual chaos:
Once the storm hit, emergency services were at capacity. Minor vehicle faults were magnified by cold weather.
Stranded motorists chanced their hand at travel and hundreds of drivers were stuck overnight, some even blaming 'insufficient help' and lack of help.
The Army were drafted in, in some locations, to support the worst hit areas and indeed the unprepared.
Across the country, transport provision suffered and the infrastructure could not cope. Trains were delayed or cancelled, leaving many stranded. In one case the doors of a train froze shut in only -5c conditions.
Hundreds of flights were cancelled.
Many who were either rescued or delayed away from home were forced to seek accomodation in Hotels, I wonder how many had overnight gear.
Water supplies in rural areas were threatened due to frozen pipes, leading to a water deficit/shortage.
I heard tales of broken boilers from fragile heating systems and the resulting heating system failures. Vulnerable citizens including the elderly were more reliant on support including the increased threat to life for homeless people living on the street.

Governmental agencies provided sufficient warning. Those unprepared had the chance to put in place alternative contingencies or gather extra provisions, however, many people had insufficient food supplies beyond 3 days leading to an increased reliance on others.
The sudden realisation that personal food stores were not sufficient led to a rush to the Superstores and many stores saw the usual scramble for short term perishables such as bread, milk and fruit/veg – These were the first things to go (including my favourite – bananas)!
From my perspective, our taps froze, resulting in switching to my emergency water plan (my reserve tanks and water bladders).
We see similar problems during every unusual weather event. Yet people forget! They think they will be ok, without even any kind of analysis to either their situation, stores or their skills (driving in this case).
At one point a Lidl superstore was broken into with a mechanical digger and looted (just days into the event).
Personally I will:
- Look at extra provision for our water storage and emergency coal/wood supply.
- Increase awareness in my immediate area for the locations of resources, services and facilities.
- Be more aware of the resources and situation of neighbours in order to assess their longevity.

(Courtesy of Wikimedia.org)
CONCLUSION
The 'Dunkirk spirit' was all fun n games initially, but I feel given a longer time-frame, the outlook would have taken a darker shade of grim (It was only 5 damn days!).
The fine line of goodness did not run out, with thanks particularly to the relatively short lived snowstorm.
One thing is for sure, the 5 days of snow and freezing temperatures demonstrated not how fragile our infrastructure is. The lack of training and self awareness the general public has with ANYTHING out of the ordinary only contributes to the bedlam.
The driven hunger by weather stations to out compete their rivals, sensationalise forecasts and cry 'WOLF' too many times in the past has led to the loss of faith by the general public to believe forecasts. This in turn led to an under-estimation of the effects of the February 2018 SNOWPOCALYPSE!

From the warmth and security of my 'prepared' location, I sat, watching the unolfolding examples of extreme cases portayed by the MainStream Media, I could only roll my eyes in the contempt of others and their lack of contingencies. We are only 9 meals away from chaos!
We now await the flood risk.
Here in New England it's sort of funny to hear about the army being called in and looting occurring as a result of less than one foot of snow. What the heck happened to old England?
Exactly! A nation of 'softer' folk have been bred and conditioned to rely on MSM and other, its a real patheic situation....
Didn't the mayor of London advise people to run and hide in case of attack?
Yeah he sure did... Just another Politician with an agennda, anyone with common sense will ignore them lol.
Finally got my account activated, great post hopefully this snow wakes a few people up.
It's like Project Mayhem, you have to wait outside and be mocked for 3 days.
Excellent man, get posting lol!
That's a real tale to tell. I went though a milder version in late December 2013 in Toronto. It wasn't the longest power outage I've been through, but it was the longest during a cold winter. We lost both electricity and heat.
Perhaps because it didn't last long, Toronto was calm. We hunkered down and listened to the all-news radio through battery-powered devices. The phone system still worked, it not being shut down by the ice storm, but the phones that required grid (mains) power did not work.
Thankfully, I had a cheap phone without any electronic frills: it worked all the way through.
The city did open emergency heating shelters in public spaces like community centers. I don't know what it was like there, as I didn't avail myself.
My father came up with a clever idea. He has a propane boiler: during the storm, he managed to fill a ten gallon pot with water and he boiled it outside, then brought it in. It radiated some heat, if not that much because the surface area of the pot wasn't that large compared with the volume.
He also deployed some propane camping gear fueled by those one-pound camping canisters. A camping lantern and camping stove both helped a lot.
In what seems to be a recurring pattern during cold-weather disasters, we heard over the radio the sad story of a man too clever by half, who brought indoors a propane barbecue to heat his place. He died of carbom monoxide poisoning. (!)
For us, it lasted twelve hours; we got by through the stove, instant coffee made with the water in the pot, and wearing winter clothes indoors. To be honest, the outage didn't last long enough to see what Toronto would have turned into had the power been out for more than three days in the cold.
Resteemed, in the hope that someone with that experience will post his or hers. (Maybe from the Montreal area: they've had a couple of doozies.)
I did 5 days in winter after a devastating ice storm, others in the area had 14 days in winter with no power. Luckily I have a gas stove and gas boiler so I still had hot water and the ability to keep it warm enough. It is dangerous though, a wine bottle I had on a rack near the ceiling erupted, that was a surprise. There wasn't any looting and I don't know if the national guard was called in, if they were it was only to clear downed braches and not to keep order.
Good that there was no looting. I've read horror stories about that, but only from big cities.
I don't know, I could use some new Jordan's
Ask this guy - he might have room in his bin:
:-)
(Image from [here[(https://www.ar15.com/forums/general/what_is_the_official_arfcom_mascot_/5-1690861/).)
Yeah i think primarilly propane gas is the way to go followed by a solid wood/coal stove, that way you'll have heat and cooking off the grid....
We were ok throughout just by taking simple precautions...
As always, there will be folk who aren't.
Thanks man.
Just be careful about the carbon monoxide. Detectors for it are cheap & are battery operated.
Absolutely, i have two of them... You can never be too sure.
The cry wolf analogy was our biggest problem, we've heard it all before from the MET and the tabloids, we simply don't believe them anymore.
Funny how a little blip in the universe can get everyone so wound up. Preparedness man! Great post!
Thursday was a 'fun' day at mums'. I visit her on Thursday anyway but before I had cleared the snow off the car to make the 25 mile journey, she rang me to tell me the boiler had broken. So that was an hours job getting water pressure back up and pouring boiling water over the condensate pipe. Then, the bathroom sink wasn't draining water and pissing it out from U bend onto bathroom floor because the waste pipe had frozen so it was on with the kettle again and then to top it off,...... I got stuck driving out of mum's housing estate on a slight incline but luckily, that cat-litter I posted about the other day, came to the rescue lol.
It sure made me realise how fragile our accommodation infrastructure/utilities were poorly designed to deal with this level of cold, even before we start to mention (as you have) all the agencies and gov departments that fall apart before the first flake lands on the frozen earth.
An excellent post PV. Re-steemed :)
Broken boiler? I think a lot of those systems are fragile and a single point of failure, but when they go thats it...
Glad the cat litter worked!
Yeah its a real fragile country we live in, i bet most of Scandinavia, America and Canada are laughing at us.
Hi @preppervetuk, mum had issues with boiler several years ago until I insulated the exterior pipe work. I guess this time it was just too cold to cope.
Roads all clear now but you can still see 2 lines on cat litter on the tarmac LOL
isn't -5C like 23 degrees Celsius?
@funbobby51 -5C = 23F
I think that's what you meant ;)
indeed.
Worst thing about any minor weather event like this is the FUD from the MSM! They make things far worse and this just plays on the minds of the unprepared and they take rash decisions. For me it wasn't so bad, but I'd prepared. I had my thermal base layer and my food and water preps (although now food is bolstered) I saw that 'fresh' produce in supermarkets was completely gone, so was bread, pizzas and meats.
Yeah MSM have got something to answer for! The more they hype things up and scare people, they bank on more people glued to their channels in the hope it'll all go away.....
I swear in my old home town the news worked with the grocery stores and would declare a snowpocalypse just so they could sell out of everything. Within a couple of hours of the news, you couldn't find milk, bread or beer in any store. People are crazy.
lol i bet that was the case, just goes to indicate the scale of reaction if anything big really did occur.
I said exact same thing to someone the other day! The Dairy industry in particular is in huge decline here in Great Britain and I wouldn't put it past them to hype up weather so that people go out and buy Dairy Milk. Jokes on them! Humans can't process it >.<
during a storm everyone needs to make milk casserole.
Ouch. Severe indeed.
Well, the crazy thing about it was that it wasn't severe at all lol, just the reactions, lack of preparation of the masses and overhype from the MSM.
As a population, we are getting softer.