Friday, October 7, 2016

Protect yourself from unseen forces in enclosed environmental spaces.

My dad was headed to professional baseball before he was drafted in World War II as US Army/Air Force airplane mechanic. After the war he married my mother, Betty Jean Crecilius, and worked as a lineman for Public Service of Indiana. 

 

He lived his life by example of many things.  He once told me:  "Do not crawl under a house with an extension cord and take care of with electricity only to test by the back of the hand which will keep one from grasping a electrically hot line with no hope of release when gasped directly."  


I now have a circuit tester that flashes and make an alert sounds that make the physical touch obsolete.  I am happy with this because I never liked a electric sock even if my muscle contractions would pull my hand away if touch by the backside of the hand.  I even have a device that will tell me the hot or cold condition of an electrical line and other things without touch.  


Currently, I have the need to treat molds and odors in an enclosed crawl space.  What to do?  The best thing in an enclosed space is the need for an oxygen source device because no matter how good a filtered device is it will not produce the oxygen needed if the space is enclosed.  So, a good idea for you and I is to take oxygen with us, cover exposed flesh with protective clothing and use a product that will kill the molds and odors without killing us.  


Good resource:

Two Letters Re: Gas Masks, Fire, and Chlorine Gashttps://survivalblog.com/letter_re_gas_masks_fire_and_c/





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