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Guest on PBN; https://www.youtube.com/live/vjxX1Sz3AeU?si=mS1rqy60ey4EHPzU
The forecast isn’t teasing flakes; it’s promising days of freezing rain, sub‑freezing highs, and a real chance of extended power outages. We break down a practical, affordable game plan to keep your home warm, your pipes intact, and your food safe when the grid goes quiet and the cold sets in.
We start with the risk picture for Central Virginia and parts of the Plains—why ice is the real threat, how fast indoor temps can crash, and what matters most over the first 48 hours. From there, we map out a heat strategy that actually works: using a kerosene torpedo heater with proper ventilation to push warm air where it counts, closing foundation vents, insulating pipes, and staging blankets and layers. We also get specific about generator readiness—test starts, safe placement to reduce theft and fumes, CO shutoff considerations, and realistic watt budgeting for essentials like lighting and internet.
Food and storage come next. A new full‑size fridge is great until the power blinks, so we lean on a 12‑volt compressor fridge, the natural cold outside for sealed bins on a shaded deck, and smart habits to keep a chest freezer cold as long as possible. We talk about the supply crunch already visible in propane lines and grocery aisles, and offer alternatives when stores are picked over. Communication ties it together: local emergency text alerts, satellite internet with a modest power draw, and clear, low‑bandwidth ways to stay connected with neighbors and get reliable updates without draining batteries.
Along the way, we share notes from a recent guest spot on the Prepper Broadcasting Network, answer common winter prep questions, and keep the focus on simple steps that punch above their weight. If you’re staring down sleet, ice, and bitter cold, this walkthrough helps you act now—before the outage—so the next seven days feel controlled, not chaotic. If this helped, subscribe, leave a quick review, and share this with a neighbor who could use a calm plan before the storm hits.
Support the show
Have a question, suggestion or comment? Please email me at [email protected]. I will not sell your email address and I will personally respond to you.
By Keith Vincent4.5
1717 ratings
Send us a text
Guest on PBN; https://www.youtube.com/live/vjxX1Sz3AeU?si=mS1rqy60ey4EHPzU
The forecast isn’t teasing flakes; it’s promising days of freezing rain, sub‑freezing highs, and a real chance of extended power outages. We break down a practical, affordable game plan to keep your home warm, your pipes intact, and your food safe when the grid goes quiet and the cold sets in.
We start with the risk picture for Central Virginia and parts of the Plains—why ice is the real threat, how fast indoor temps can crash, and what matters most over the first 48 hours. From there, we map out a heat strategy that actually works: using a kerosene torpedo heater with proper ventilation to push warm air where it counts, closing foundation vents, insulating pipes, and staging blankets and layers. We also get specific about generator readiness—test starts, safe placement to reduce theft and fumes, CO shutoff considerations, and realistic watt budgeting for essentials like lighting and internet.
Food and storage come next. A new full‑size fridge is great until the power blinks, so we lean on a 12‑volt compressor fridge, the natural cold outside for sealed bins on a shaded deck, and smart habits to keep a chest freezer cold as long as possible. We talk about the supply crunch already visible in propane lines and grocery aisles, and offer alternatives when stores are picked over. Communication ties it together: local emergency text alerts, satellite internet with a modest power draw, and clear, low‑bandwidth ways to stay connected with neighbors and get reliable updates without draining batteries.
Along the way, we share notes from a recent guest spot on the Prepper Broadcasting Network, answer common winter prep questions, and keep the focus on simple steps that punch above their weight. If you’re staring down sleet, ice, and bitter cold, this walkthrough helps you act now—before the outage—so the next seven days feel controlled, not chaotic. If this helped, subscribe, leave a quick review, and share this with a neighbor who could use a calm plan before the storm hits.
Support the show
Have a question, suggestion or comment? Please email me at [email protected]. I will not sell your email address and I will personally respond to you.

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