Coronavirus prep
Replies
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I AM PANICKED NOW!
I just pulled the last can of artichoke hearts from my cupboard. How did I let this get so low?
I will trade TP or ammo for artichoke hearts. Who wants to barter?
Hopefully the hoarders left some at the store.12 -
I had to remind myself at the grocery yesterday that I still live alone and I still don't need the big bag of pinto beans nor five pounds of rice.4 -
I AM PANICKED NOW!
I just pulled the last can of artichoke hearts from my cupboard. How did I let this get so low?
I will trade TP or ammo for artichoke hearts. Who wants to barter?
Hopefully the hoarders left some at the store.
Is there anyone (other than you apparently ) hoarding artichoke hearts?
Nah... forget I asked that.7 -
cmriverside wrote: »
I had to remind myself at the grocery yesterday that I still live alone and I still don't need the big bag of pinto beans nor five pounds of rice.
I have a teenaged boy in the house... I'm scared.5 -
cmriverside wrote: »
I had to remind myself at the grocery yesterday that I still live alone and I still don't need the big bag of pinto beans nor five pounds of rice.
I tend to make huge batches of beans for later consumption so we usually have 3-4 pounds of them anyway. Neither of us spend many calories on rice so having an abundant supply of it would be potentially wasteful. I was going to order a couple of extra boxes of stock but the hoarders wiped Amazon out on it. My whole PP order was maybe 6 things. I need to go to costco for some more fish but I won't be stocking up on anything else... EXCEPT ARTICHOKE HEARTS!! I NEED ALL OF THEM!3 -
You really shouldn't go to large gatherings like Costco.
DON'T EAT THE SAMPLES!!!!
I'm kidding. sort of. I haven't been to Costco for 20 years.
Social Distancing. It's a way of life.5 -
GaleHawkins wrote: »While is is mainly on the West coast today in the USA one article said it will be spreading the month of March and April to the rest of the country. Thankfully spring time is coming.
The only problem with that is it's summer in parts of Asia and they aren't seeing this die off. My cousin is an immunologist and that frightens her.8 -
*Keep extra pet food on hand*
Always a good idea to stock up on shelf stable food just in case, been through shelves being empty due to tornados or ice storms before--don't forget your pets need to eat too! I try to keep 60 days of dog food, cat food and chicken feed. Probably too much, but I can always share with friends, family and shelters if necessary.3 -
I AM PANICKED NOW!
I just pulled the last can of artichoke hearts from my cupboard. How did I let this get so low?
I will trade TP or ammo for artichoke hearts. Who wants to barter?
Hopefully the hoarders left some at the store.
Is there anyone (other than you apparently ) hoarding artichoke hearts?
Nah... forget I asked that.
I have six steam bags of artichoke hearts in the freezer, does that count?3 -
As others have said I am not concerned about the virus I am concerned about the reaction to the virus. I have a disaster preparedness kit. I have a pantry and a freezer. I could easily go a a couple of months on food... it would get pretty boring but we would not starve. I think I could manage 3 week on hygienic items right now. This is really all without buying anything more although I did place a Prime Pantry order for a little more TP, and toothpaste. I was already at a place where I needed more dog food.
I am not cancelling any of our plans including an upcoming cruise. I do not allow myself to be impacted (at least greatly impacted) by the 24 hour news cycle. It is a money making venture and the appeal to emotion fear is good for business.
I refuse to sit around in fear and panic as well. The virus has been in the US since almost the start. The thing is, since it is flu season and we were not looking for it, illnesses and even deaths were most likely written off as flu and pneumonia. I know of people who were sick, went to be looked at, had very distinct Coronavirus symptoms, but were not tested because they hadn't been to China or around someone who had been. There are a bunch of stories like that.
Will I buy a couple things this week that I maybe would have held off on for another week or so? Sure. Honestly, when you have medical issues that often result in increase bathroom usage, there is never such a thing as too much toilet paper. But I am not going to start hoarding canned food and other supplies. That is just a silly over reaction.
Now, I do have few concerns. (1) is the fact that I pretty much always have a cough and chest congestion due to year round allergies. So I worry that people will treat me horribly even though I am not sick. (2) I am allergic to the majority of soaps that are used in public restrooms. As in, my hands will blister and I will get open sores. So I CAN'T use that soap! Often what I have to do is wash my hands under warm/hot water. I scrub for a longer period of time then most people who do use the soap. Then I will use a safe hand sanitize. Sorry all. It's the best I can do because open wounds on my hands is just asking for OTHER infections. (3) Medications. Some medications can not be refilled ahead of time. If I can't go to the pharmacy and get my refill then I am in danger of withdrawl symptoms that can be dangerous (anti depression and anxiety meds). I wish I could "stock up" in case... but I can't. It's not allowed.
You can get medications delivered to you these days. If not, if your pharmacy has a drive-thru that keeps you safely away from anyone and you take precautions then I don't see why you shouldn't just do that. What a lot of people are missing is that you will not have an armed guard in front of your home enforcing a quarantine. It will be voluntary. If it gets bad enough there will be ways to get medication or guidelines to follow if you need to go out and get it.
That all assumes that you or someone in your house gets sick.
These are all good points. I guess I was thinking more along the lines of businesses being shut down or the supply chain interrupted. As part of the guidance I have seen, they do mention keeping a supply of medication on hand, which is what prompted me to wonder about the whole thing.
BTW, my personality is such that I can worry about virtually anything, but I'm actually not too concerned about this, except for those in my life who are part of the high-risk population.
Edited to add: There is also the element that, in our case, we live in a rural area with only 1 pharmacy in a 30 mile or so radius, and I'm sure we are not alone in that.
I would suspect the concern re prescriptions is first a supply chain disruption and second, as your ETA suggested, not everyone lives somewhere with a drive thru pharmacy or an order by mail option covered by their prescription plan. I know more than one person whose only option is one drug store chain, and they still can barely afford it so they wait until the last second or sometimes risk going without for a few days until they get paid. Folks like that should really be considered as part of the vulnerable population. Not that they are more likely to get sick from the virus, but they are more likely to be caught unprepared without options they can afford.4 -
cmriverside wrote: »
I had to remind myself at the grocery yesterday that I still live alone and I still don't need the big bag of pinto beans nor five pounds of rice.
I tend to make huge batches of beans for later consumption so we usually have 3-4 pounds of them anyway. Neither of us spend many calories on rice so having an abundant supply of it would be potentially wasteful. I was going to order a couple of extra boxes of stock but the hoarders wiped Amazon out on it. My whole PP order was maybe 6 things. I need to go to costco for some more fish but I won't be stocking up on anything else... EXCEPT ARTICHOKE HEARTS!! I NEED ALL OF THEM!
We eat rice so often that we buy it in 5 kg (11 lb) bags.0 -
cmriverside wrote: »
I had to remind myself at the grocery yesterday that I still live alone and I still don't need the big bag of pinto beans nor five pounds of rice.
Rice.. just 5?? Pfft.
I buy them in a sack 20 lbs ..🙃
That's regular for asians.. 😂7 -
rheddmobile wrote: »I AM PANICKED NOW!
I just pulled the last can of artichoke hearts from my cupboard. How did I let this get so low?
I will trade TP or ammo for artichoke hearts. Who wants to barter?
Hopefully the hoarders left some at the store.
Is there anyone (other than you apparently ) hoarding artichoke hearts?
Nah... forget I asked that.
I have six steam bags of artichoke hearts in the freezer, does that count?
I have 6 artichoke plants growing. I am preparing for the artichoke apocalypse7 -
I just realized I only have one roll of TP left... I might be doomed to a life of crime now.5
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News: Italy has just ordered it's schools closed until March 15th.0
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ladyreva78 wrote: »I just realized I only have one roll of TP left... I might be doomed to a life of crime now.
That's always how it starts.8 -
rheddmobile wrote: »I AM PANICKED NOW!
I just pulled the last can of artichoke hearts from my cupboard. How did I let this get so low?
I will trade TP or ammo for artichoke hearts. Who wants to barter?
Hopefully the hoarders left some at the store.
Is there anyone (other than you apparently ) hoarding artichoke hearts?
Nah... forget I asked that.
I have six steam bags of artichoke hearts in the freezer, does that count?
I just drilled your identity and stole them all. Sorry not sorry.4 -
Just came from a conference where this was discussed. The reason we haven’t yet seen reported cases that much is that the CDCs test kits were faulty so people are not being screened yet. We really don’t know yet how many infections there really are vs people just thinking they have the regular flu or a bug. FDA is allowing hospitals and independent labs to come up with their own tests and will fast track them.5
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I received this from a kid's youth sports organization:
Practice frequent and meticulous hand-washing with soap and water or alcohol-based hand rub
Avoid touching your eyes, nose, or mouth with unwashed hands
Cover your nose and mouth when coughing and/or sneezing with a tissue or flexed elbow
Avoid close contact with anyone with cold or flu-like symptoms
Quarantine anyone who is sick (players, coaches, parents, roommates)
Ensure safe food sources; thoroughly cook meat and eggs
Handshake lines after games should include fist bumps with gloves on
Use individual water bottles; do not share them
Towels should not be shared in any way
My question is: why isn't this the way we all live our lives every day, with or without a pandemic scare? Once this scare has passed, do people just go "whew, now I can stop washing my hands, can go out in public when I have illness symptoms, can share water bottles, eat unthoroughly cooked meat and eggs, etc.?" Lol21 -
Bry_Fitness70 wrote: »I received this from a kid's youth sports organization:
Practice frequent and meticulous hand-washing with soap and water or alcohol-based hand rub
Avoid touching your eyes, nose, or mouth with unwashed hands
Cover your nose and mouth when coughing and/or sneezing with a tissue or flexed elbow
Avoid close contact with anyone with cold or flu-like symptoms
Quarantine anyone who is sick (players, coaches, parents, roommates)
Ensure safe food sources; thoroughly cook meat and eggs
Handshake lines after games should include fist bumps with gloves on
Use individual water bottles; do not share them
Towels should not be shared in any way
My question is: why isn't this the way we all live our lives every day, with or without a pandemic scare? Once this scare has passed, do people just go "whew, now I can stop washing my hands, can go out in public when I have illness symptoms, can share water bottles, eat unthoroughly cooked meat and eggs, etc.?" Lol
I remember overhearing a couple of girls in the bathroom at a basketball game - 8-10 year old range. One commented “why do I have to wash my hands? They are just going to get dirty again!” Definitely a disconnect going on there, and likely a lack of basic education (basic health and sanitation likely isn’t on any standardized tests). Oh the cringey germ stories from basketball! We enjoy the season, but I dread it at the same time!
I blame shows like CSI for my borderline germaphobe tendencies - I can almost visualize the transfer of germs the way they would show transfer of various things by a color glowing on hands and surfaces (hard to explain).
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Good points. ^^
I've lived in Alaska and the backcountry for most of my life. Still do. During the winter months our food haul arrived via snowmobile across 100 miles of snow. There was no running to the grocery store, ever. I go to the store about once a month so not having staples would be foolish on a normal winter's day of -30 below zero. We're not hoarding but simply living the way we've been living. Prepared and doing the best we can to stay alive and well. No one I know wants to spend any time in the doctor's office or hospital right now.
We have a small airport that brings tourists in from all over the world. We are a clearing house for tourism. Those are the folks that concern us.5 -
I am compulsive about my hands being clean. I also hardly ever get sick. I do have to use a lot of lotion though to fight back the roughness.
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moonangel12 wrote: »I currently have 4 children knocked out with flu like symptoms... it’s been days of high fevers, crazy coughing, etc. I “joke” that it could be coronavirus, but we’ll never know since they can’t test for it yet! (Although I am seeing headlines that tests are making their way around). We are on the outskirts of DC, a “bedroom community” for people that work in the city, so lots of potential to bring it in. Haven’t been to the doctor, we homeschool so no need to expose them to anything else if the symptoms are treatable at home (we have been often enough to have the needed meds for her croup) so not 100% sure what it is.
Wednesday is when it started, I thought my daughter was reacting to some bags of soil I bought - her cough started within minutes of being in the car with them. Super sensitive lungs, at age 8 she gets croup that shuts down her airways with any airborne irritant (no longer able to even swim in indoor chlorine pools). I went to buy a mask for her since we still had 45 minutes in the car to get home and found the supply wiped out... at multiple stores. Didn’t know what was going on, until the guy at the hardware store told me why the shelves were cleared.
We would be ones that would need to stock up on water, our well water is awful to try and drink... something I took for granted when we lived in NC with well water so good we could bottle and sell it.
We too are on the outskirts of DC (Reston, Virginia). I got a very bad cold 13 days ago; we joked that I had coronavirus and I waited for it to end, with the traditional box of tissues and waste paper basket next to the bed, kindle in hand. It didn't really improve at all in the typical 3-4 days. Then in the past week my wife and our two cats have gotten the same exceptionally bad cold, same exact symptoms (and a bit unique - congestion on one side of the head, etc.) and I'm only half way back to normal after like two weeks, just started working out again. It has occurred to me that, despite not hearing about coronavirus outbreaks in DC, we are dead smack center in the middle of the action as far as jet setters and business people coming and going from Asia, Europe, etc. I mean, if anyplace is gonna be a vector for virus proliferation, Dulles Airport is a good bet.3 -
@lgfrie and @Diatonic12
That's precisely the point. Not very many of us live on an island with no "outside" visitors. I don't think the Us vs Them approach is good, though. (Diatonic). We can't blame our neighbors for a random string of RNA. We're all in this together.
People come and go. Neighbors bring stuff back, it's not just tourists.
COVID 19 virus (they say) can survive outside cells (bodies) for up to nine days - maybe longer, they're just not certain right now. I've touched a LOT of things outside my home in the last nine days, don't know about you. If the acute part of the illness can be slight, and/or if you can be asymptomatic for a couple or three days in the beginning, I really don't know how this can be contained at this point.
Again though - the seasonal flu kills hundreds of thousands of people every year, and it's something that is tested for pretty regularly. COVID 19 just started being tested for.
There are a lot more cases out there than anyone knows. It's just getting coverage because it's new (novel) and unknown.
Wash your hands.
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If I were to guess, I would say the virus has already spread to US and some other countries before US found out about it in January. The virus could have been contained and controlled better if China had been more honest early. Apparently China have known about this since November/December of last year. So the bottom line is if anyone is sick with cold, go in and get tested as soon as possible so you know what you actually have. This is one way to slow the spread besides washing your hands.3
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cmriverside wrote: »Yoda had a baby?
I am SO out of the loop.
No..it is yoda as a baby.
No, it's not. Three more pages and no one corrected this??
The Mandalorian is set well after Return of the Jedi. The Child (dear god, please let them give him a name next season so everyone stops with the Baby Yoda thing) is the same species as Yoda. Whether he is related to Yoda in any way at all remains to be seen.9 -
Nony_Mouse wrote: »cmriverside wrote: »Yoda had a baby?
I am SO out of the loop.
No..it is yoda as a baby.
No, it's not. Three more pages and no one corrected this??
The Mandalorian is set well after Return of the Jedi. The Child (dear god, please let them give him a name next season so everyone stops with the Baby Yoda thing) is the same species as Yoda. Whether he is related to Yoda in any way at all remains to be seen.
Thank you! I was finishing reading before I corrected. This is the way.2 -
Nony_Mouse wrote: »cmriverside wrote: »Yoda had a baby?
I am SO out of the loop.
No..it is yoda as a baby.
No, it's not. Three more pages and no one corrected this??
The Mandalorian is set well after Return of the Jedi. The Child (dear god, please let them give him a name next season so everyone stops with the Baby Yoda thing) is the same species as Yoda. Whether he is related to Yoda in any way at all remains to be seen.
Sooo...the small yoda-ish creature is just a cliff-hanger? Then we don't care if his/her supply chain is disrupted until next installment...
I am glad to have that answer!0 -
Nony_Mouse wrote: »cmriverside wrote: »Yoda had a baby?
I am SO out of the loop.
No..it is yoda as a baby.
No, it's not. Three more pages and no one corrected this??
The Mandalorian is set well after Return of the Jedi. The Child (dear god, please let them give him a name next season so everyone stops with the Baby Yoda thing) is the same species as Yoda. Whether he is related to Yoda in any way at all remains to be seen.
Who cares! LoL. Nothing to do with the thread topic2 -
Nony_Mouse wrote: »cmriverside wrote: »Yoda had a baby?
I am SO out of the loop.
No..it is yoda as a baby.
No, it's not. Three more pages and no one corrected this??
The Mandalorian is set well after Return of the Jedi. The Child (dear god, please let them give him a name next season so everyone stops with the Baby Yoda thing) is the same species as Yoda. Whether he is related to Yoda in any way at all remains to be seen.
Who cares! LoL. Nothing to do with the thread topic
Hmmm, didn't seem to bother you that it wasn't on topic when you posted.10
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