I like a bit of EDC gear and I've found low scale prepping very useful in the past but I've never taking it very seriously, at best it's just made my life more convenient and my living costs cheaper. I've even rolled my eyes at some of the 'urban prepper' stuff I've seen thinking it to be a bit over paranoid. I guess a lot of this stems from my situation where I work in the countryside and live in a small town. If I can I avoid cities and rarely travel abroad.
Then yesterday I got a call from my wife, she was leaving university in Newport at about 3pm and walked out of the doors to be faced with armed police. You may have missed the news but a suspicious vehicle was found and the bomb squad called in to deal with it. The local area was evacuated and the car park where she'd left the car was locked off. I won't over dramatise here as it was a false alarm but the all clear wasn't called until nearly 9pm. The reaction was a bit overblown (if you'll excuse the pun) after the Manchester incident earlier this week.
My wife is a tough cookie and can look after herself but along with the rest of the crowds she was funnelled into the seedier parts of Newport and left to her own devices in an unfamiliar town. I always thought that in this type of situation people would be evacuated somewhere safe rather than just left to find somewhere to wait it out. Apparently there were a surprising amount of drunk people about and anyone vaguely muslim looking was getting an earful. The roads were gridlocked across the city, the bus station was evacuated and there was no way I could get there to pick her up. She's 6 months pregnant and it was the hottest day of the year so I was getting quite worried about her. Modern technology came to the rescue in the form of live news updates and google maps. She ended up abandoning the car for the night and walked across town to the train station to get the first train to somewhere I could pick her up.
In this case it was all a happy ending, she was fine, no one got blown up and I didn't even get charged to get the car out of the car park this morning. It does make you realise how bad things could get though and how vulnerable our infrastructure is. My wife has a handbag like Mary Poppins, full of useful stuff but no backup battery for her phone, she didn't have enough cash to pay the train fare if they didn't take cards, all her warmer waterproof clothing was in the car. Maybe these paranoid urban preppers are onto something afterall...
Then yesterday I got a call from my wife, she was leaving university in Newport at about 3pm and walked out of the doors to be faced with armed police. You may have missed the news but a suspicious vehicle was found and the bomb squad called in to deal with it. The local area was evacuated and the car park where she'd left the car was locked off. I won't over dramatise here as it was a false alarm but the all clear wasn't called until nearly 9pm. The reaction was a bit overblown (if you'll excuse the pun) after the Manchester incident earlier this week.
My wife is a tough cookie and can look after herself but along with the rest of the crowds she was funnelled into the seedier parts of Newport and left to her own devices in an unfamiliar town. I always thought that in this type of situation people would be evacuated somewhere safe rather than just left to find somewhere to wait it out. Apparently there were a surprising amount of drunk people about and anyone vaguely muslim looking was getting an earful. The roads were gridlocked across the city, the bus station was evacuated and there was no way I could get there to pick her up. She's 6 months pregnant and it was the hottest day of the year so I was getting quite worried about her. Modern technology came to the rescue in the form of live news updates and google maps. She ended up abandoning the car for the night and walked across town to the train station to get the first train to somewhere I could pick her up.
In this case it was all a happy ending, she was fine, no one got blown up and I didn't even get charged to get the car out of the car park this morning. It does make you realise how bad things could get though and how vulnerable our infrastructure is. My wife has a handbag like Mary Poppins, full of useful stuff but no backup battery for her phone, she didn't have enough cash to pay the train fare if they didn't take cards, all her warmer waterproof clothing was in the car. Maybe these paranoid urban preppers are onto something afterall...