07/30/2018 / By Zoey Sky
When SHTF, you need to be prepared for all sorts of scenarios: from long-term outages, societal collapse, to even escaping a sinking car. Here are four common situations and proper escape tactics for each of them. (h/t to PreppersWill.com)
High voltage power lines, which can be found almost everywhere, carries high power from plants that produce electricity and transformers that send the power to users. Power lines can come down without warning. If you’re in your car when this happens, stay in your grounded vehicle where it’s safer. If the wire falls directly onto your vehicle, don’t touch anything and stay put until help arrives.
Quicksand is “a mixture of sand and water, or sand and air, that looks solid.” However, it turns unstable when disturbed by any additional stress. But unlike its portrayal in movies, if you know what to do, you can still escape from a quicksand pit.
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Most quicksand-related deaths occur due to exposure or drowning in the incoming tides, not from being “sucked under.”
Even if you’re a very careful driver, it won’t hurt to know how to escape from a sinking vehicle. You don’t even have to be near an ocean to drown while trapped in a sinking car. In most cases, victims in sinking vehicles have been trapped in small farm ponds that are only ten to twelve feet deep.
Most sinking car-related deaths in the U.S. occur when the victims panic. Panicking will only waste energy that you could’ve used to try and escape. Go in a “brace position” so you can survive the impact.
A riptide or rip current occurs when water rushes through a low point in a sandbar. When waves keep propelling more water into the depression between the sandbar and the beach, a rip current can continue for a couple of minutes or several hours.
The strongest part of the rip current is often the direct line between the water’s edge and the sandbar opening. The current can pull in water from either side of the depression, which will pull you parallel to the beach before you’re sucked outward to the open sea. (Related: Are you prepared for a natural disaster? 3 Emergency first aid skills you need to know.)
When SHTF, your presence of mind will help increase your chances of survival. Learn more tips at Disaster.news.
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Tagged Under: crisis scenario, disaster, escape tactics, how-to, powerlines, preparedness, prepper, prepping, quicksand, rip current, riptide, SHTF, sinking car, survival, survival skills, Survival Tips, survivalist
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