Fireless Cookers and Solar Lighting
Oct. 16th, 2007 01:13 pmTwo things:
1)
oakmouse has an excellent post on fireless cooking. I highly recommend it: Fireless Cooking. Thanks Oakmouse!
2) Was at the post office at Ingleside Mall yesterday and next to it is Christmas Tree Shops. So I poked through their stuff briefly, and came across their collection of solar lights. These are meant to be used outdoors, but some have flat bases, and one type was even attractive-looking, for not too much money. It reminded me of the emergency preparedness question someone had, about lighting and cooking that didn't have flames (allergy/asthma concerns). For lighting, these solar lights could possibly be the answer... set them in a window during the day, and have at least enough light to move around by at night -- good way to extend the life of any battery-powered lights you may have, since you wouldn't need those for ambient lighting.
Also, while the haybox cookers (see #1) still require you to have something else to start the cooking on, I'd think that only having to use a camp stove (with ventilation) for 15-30 minutes and then finishing up the cooking in a haybox could be an excellent way to minimize exposure to cooking fumes, and also stretch out how long the fuel would last. Or again, depending on what type of natural disaster struck and the time of year, one could do some of the cooking outdoors and/or in a sheltered porch.
1)
2) Was at the post office at Ingleside Mall yesterday and next to it is Christmas Tree Shops. So I poked through their stuff briefly, and came across their collection of solar lights. These are meant to be used outdoors, but some have flat bases, and one type was even attractive-looking, for not too much money. It reminded me of the emergency preparedness question someone had, about lighting and cooking that didn't have flames (allergy/asthma concerns). For lighting, these solar lights could possibly be the answer... set them in a window during the day, and have at least enough light to move around by at night -- good way to extend the life of any battery-powered lights you may have, since you wouldn't need those for ambient lighting.
Also, while the haybox cookers (see #1) still require you to have something else to start the cooking on, I'd think that only having to use a camp stove (with ventilation) for 15-30 minutes and then finishing up the cooking in a haybox could be an excellent way to minimize exposure to cooking fumes, and also stretch out how long the fuel would last. Or again, depending on what type of natural disaster struck and the time of year, one could do some of the cooking outdoors and/or in a sheltered porch.