Protecting Your Home From Home Invaders
Although self-defense is not normally listed as one of the top three survival priorities, in a way it supersedes them all. It’s pretty simple really – if someone kills you, then it doesn’t matter if you have heat for your home, water to drink or food to eat. The normal survival priorities we think of only matter as long as you’re alive. If someone or something manages to kill you, they won’t be priorities at all.
In the current situation we find ourselves in, there are two separate and distinct threats to our lives. The first is the disease itself. Collectively, we are fighting a war against an enemy too small to see and too deadly to ignore. While it may take that enemy time to kill and it may not be able to kill everyone it attacks, it can still kill, nevertheless. That’s something we just can’t ignore.
Not only can it kill, but it can come into our homes and kill us there. And it can do it, without us even knowing it has come. That’s scary, if you think about it. An enemy that you can see is bad enough; one you can’t see and have no way to detect, is much more deadly.
But that’s not the only threat we face. There’s the threat of desperate people, who decide to do desperate things. While we haven’t seen much of that yet, there have been a few cases of people attacking shoppers to steal what they had. If things follow the normal pattern seen in the wake of most disasters, this will increase in the weeks to come, with people breaking into homes, in order to get the supplies that they need.
Let’s deal with the problem of people breaking into your home first. This may not happen, simply because the stores are still open. If the supply conditions continue to improve, it will mitigate against people attacking others to get what they need. But there’s a flip side to that coin. As more people lose their jobs, we’re likely to see an increase in home intrusions. So it only makes sense to be ready.
The one good thing we can say is the fact that home intruders are not very imaginative people. They all come in the same way – through the front door.
The classic attack is to kick the door open and for two to three people to rush in, overwhelming the residents.
You’ve probably heard that a deadbolt lock on your door will keep that from happening, but that’s not true. While even the cheapest of deadbolts is strong enough to withstand that kick, the deadbolt only goes into a small striker plate in the door frame. That frame is ¾” thick pine and the edge of the hole for the deadbolt to go into is only ½” from the edge. When someone kicks the door open, the deadbolt breaks through the door frame, allowing them entrance.
Related: Scare Them Off Or Shoot Them Dead?
This is actually a fairly easy problem to fix. All you need to do is replace the deadbolt’s striker plate and the door lock striker plate with what’s known as a “security striker plate”.
This is a longer plate, which covers both locks and allows many more screws to be used.
That spreads the force of the kick out farther, so that it isn’t concentrated in one place, allowing the intruder to kick the door open.
When installed properly, with 3” or longer screws, the screws go through the door frame and into the studs behind it, so that the force of the kick is actually transferred to the home’s structure, which is more than they can break.
While you’re installing that, be sure to replace the screws on the hinge side as well, putting 3” or longer screws into the frame and 1 ½” long screws into the door.
For greater security, you can add a door club to the bottom of the door. This is a device that goes into the floor, essentially acting like a second deadbolt. You can also use a door prop, if you have a hard floor surface (not carpeting) for it to brace against.
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The harder challenge is keeping the invisible enemy, the virus that’s causing the pandemic, out of your home. The basic problem is that we can’t see the virus. It’s so small, that we could carry thousands of them into our home on an envelope received in the mail, a package of food we bought at the store, or our hands. There’s no way we’d know if we had it or not.
I know it sounds paranoid, but the only way we can keep that virus out of our homes, is to assume that everything is contaminated.
All it takes is someone who doesn’t know they are infected to cough on a shelf of products in the grocery store.
Or a worker packing your shipment to cough as they are pulling and packing your order.
Or it can be your local mailman the one having the virus on his gloved hands, and your package will be contaminated.
If you bring that package into your home, you’ve just let the disease in. The only question then is, which family member will be the one to get sick?
Social distancing helps, when we follow it. Most of us aren’t visiting friends and our friends aren’t visiting us. So if one of them gets infected, he won’t bring it into your home. Of course, you won’t know if they bring it into your home for a couple of weeks, so it’s best not to let them come visit. If they insist, then I’d make them decontaminate when they arrive at your home.
But what do you do about those packages? The things you buy at the store or that come in the mail? That’s the bigger problem.
You can decontaminate those too. In fact, you should decontaminate them, each and every one.
I know it’s a lot of extra work (trust me, I know), but it’s the only way you can be sure of keeping your family safe. All it takes is one package coming in the door, which hasn’t been decontaminated and your whole family could end up sick, or worse.
So, how do you disinfect all that stuff?
It’s not really all that hard, although it can be a bit time consuming. To do it, you need paper towels and some sort of disinfectant spray. I prefer to use something that contains chlorine bleach or at least 60% alcohol. For the bleach, mix 1/8 cup, plus 4 teaspoons with a gallon of water to give you the right concentration. Then put it in a spray bottle for use.
Related: Disinfect Huge Amounts Of Water With This Common Household Item
It’s best to disinfect things outdoors, then pass them into the house. My wife and I did this today, when we got back from the grocery store.
We would disinfect the things outside, then pass them through the door, placing them on a chair.
My last swipe with the paper towels would be the part of the container that I had been holding. She would then pick up the decontaminated items from the chair and put them away.
In this manner, only I was touching the contaminated items, and I was wearing rubber gloves. She never touched them.
Soak three or four paper towels with your disinfectant. You want them just shy of the point where they are dripping. Then:
Related: How to Make Black Garlic For Boosting Your Immune System
All the boxes, bags and other containers that aren’t disinfected should be immediately tossed into the outside trash can. Don’t even bother taking them indoors. Then, if you just came back from the store, disinfect your car, paying special attention to the door handles, steering wheel, gearshift level, turn signal lever and anything else you might have touched.
One last detail – if you’ve gone through all that trouble, on the chance that COVID-19 virus was on something you bought in the store, then there’s a good chance that the virus got on your clothes while you were there. So take your clothes off and put them in the laundry. Then wash your hands before dressing again.
To disinfect your clothing, either add one-half cup of 3% hydrogen peroxide (the kind they sell for first-aid use), color-safe bleach or 20 Mule Team Borax into the wash. Hydrogen peroxide is an excellent disinfectant. Color-safe bleach contains it and borax mixes with the water to create it. So in any of those cases, you’re going to have hydrogen peroxide in the water to disinfect your clothes, making sure that they are ready for the next time you wear them.
Like I said, I know it sounds paranoid, but am I being paranoid enough? Only time will tell.
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The UV rays of the sun can eliminate the virus on hard surfaces such as cereal boxes, etc. Recommend one rotate each side of box toward the sun for a couple of minutes each.
The SOTIS method of water purification requires 12 hours of full sunlight. Even slightly overcast days require more time. I have no recommendation with regard to sun treatment but I would think at this time of the year sun exposure would require more than a couple of minutes on each side.
Chuck, are you ref SODIS [SOlar DISinfection] ? The main reason water has to be exposed longer than hard surfaces is because the water effectively blocks full penetration of the UV light. Personally when using SODIS I like to have a 3 day rotation so that the water sits in the sunlight for 3 days before use.
https://www.amazon.com/Cardinal-Gates-Door-Guardian-White/dp/B004RL1IMC
use these –took 5 minutes to install.
Jayjay: Thanks for the link. I have to investigate further.
I have 4 and I installed in less than 5 minutes each one.
Just drill the 3 holes about 2 1/2 or 3 inch and screw it in the door trim.
They come in 3 colors–white, gold or bronze
Kid proof, I have no kids–bought for night time security.
Bronco’s suggestion is a good one. Being here in Yuma with lots of sun, I do the same with grocery items before bringing in the house, I also made myself a UVC/Ozone wand from a bulb obtained from Amazon as a added disinfecting device.
The Clorox folks are still recommending 1/2 cup of bleach to one gallon of water. Allow the solution to remain on the object to be disinfected for five minutes then wipe off.
For hospital disinfecting they recommend the same dilution, 1/2 cup to 1 gallon of water but the application is somewhat different from ordinary household disinfection.
Read the label on the Clorox bottle if that is what you are using. I am sure Purex bleach also has disinfecting instructions on their label for their product.
While it may be an unwarranted assumption, I assume the Clorox and Purex folks have done some testing to advise the concentrations that they do for their products and their applications.
My mother told me that the local hospital,back in 1920s hung their laundry out in sunshine to disinfect.I have been washing and hanging out laundry–Oh how wonderful bed sheets smell ! Actually,I believe being out in sunshine (we live in country so that is possible) Has gone a long way to keeping our family healthy.
Susie, I make an effort to read 30 minutes on my porch with my bare feet stuck through the railing on sunny days.
I don’t exercise, but I eat healthy and am never sick.
At age 69, I don’t take any prescription drugs. Lo and behold every 5 or 6 years, I have gall stone attacks and it must have been 2 weeks ago. I threw up so hard, my stomach muscles were sore for days. I have started taking my magnesium, turmeric again.
Off topic, but interesting find for all of you with excess eggs. Found a recipe for sweet pickled eggs at Allrecipes.com. Makes eggs that last in fridge for 6 months and taste like bread and butter pickles.
Seems like it’s all a hoax
I was going to disagree with you then thought about what you said and understood it. Coronavirus reaction is not a hoax in the traditional sense because, of course, quite a few people have died. We didn’t know much about it and most likely over-reacted. And it is abundantly clear and frightening the way politicians are abusing the situation. I am the type of person whose gut reaction to most everything is, “oh, it’ll be okay,” but the more astute people on this website are probably dead on. This does not bode well.
I was pleased to hear what they said yesterday during the White House briefing. Birx is already thinking ahead as to how to deal with the possible confluence of flu and coronavirus outbreaks this coming winter and how if at risk persons get a flu shot, it would go a long way toward taking it out of the equation and President Trump said, twice, that there would be no need to shut down this winter, that we will know more about immunity and can focus on protecting the more vulnerable and not halt the economy.
I know they say every 4 years that this is the most important election you’ll ever vote in, but this time I truly believe it. I am heartened by the protesters, but if the rest don’t wake up, may as well all buy a pair of black pj’s. That is my long-winded way of saying you are right.
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