I joke a lot about being prepared for the zombie apocalypse on here, but in a way, I'm being serious with you. If you're prepared for the zombies coming at you, then generally you're also ready for natural disasters. The same steps that you'd probably take for being ready for the zombies - food and water for two weeks for instance, would also help in case of a major snowstorm, or if a hurricane was hitting your area. Having a plan to evacuate your home in case of zombies pounding on your front door would also help if your home was on fire. Zombies make it a lot more fun than using "insert natural disaster of choice - even the CDC has caught onto that!
The one place folks generally lapse in their preparedness though is safekeeping their documents and important family photos. I've seen people leave for a hurricane with just a suitcase full of clothes and some toys. Folks, if something is coming at you hard enough that you are being told to evacuate, there's a big chance you're going to come back to your home in ruins. Don't leave your insurance papers (or your pets!!!!) at home - these are the items that should be loaded into your vehicle or backpack first, not clothing which is easily replaceable!
The folks over at SentrySafe sent me on over the specially-designed
Pink 1100 Fire Safe. During the month of October, a portion of the sale of this pink safe will be donated - SentrySafe will donate $1 from your purchase to The Breast Cancer Research Foundation, for a total of up to $25,000. I'm glad to know when my purchases help support a charity, especially a cause like breast cancer.

For all my work on being prepared, we actually didn't own a fire safe chest, so I was thrilled to receive this. I always kept a copy of major documents on a flash drive, as well as keeping them organized in a binder that would be easy to grab if we had to evacuate and had time. However, neither of those solutions would be helpful if our home caught on fire! It also wouldn't help me save important things to my family, like photos of great-grandparents and locks of hair. I immediately set into fixing that! Here it is with some of the important things in it:

I plan to keep it in the bedroom near the bed, so I can grab it and go in an emergency. (It's right next to our emergency bag!) The pink color is actually awesome, because the moonlight/streetlight actually catches the color. I normally tend to lean towards blacks, but in this case, the pink is the better choice! Now if you are trying to hide it from prying eyes, say in the top of a closet, then the black might work better for you. (
Walmart actually carries a Black 1100 Fire Chest which contributes to the Breast Cancer Research Foundation, and you can snag the
pink there too)
One of the things I really like about the Sentry Safe is the handle means in an emergency where I have a few minutes to evacuate - hurricane, wildfire, etc - I can just grab that handle and quickly load it or carry it with me. Even loaded with a bunch of documents and photos, it wasn't too heavy for me to carry. (I walked up and down the street and few times with it just to check) It's also the right size for a college student to keep things away from prying eyes, and even kids could use it as a treasure chest to keep their important things in - making it a great way to brooch fire preparedness with kids. (A fire is absolutely devastating to small children!)
Not sure you need a fire proof safe? Think again. You might need the deed to your home to prove it really is yours in case of returning back to your neighborhood after a natural disaster. Your local police officer might know who you are, but the National Guard who is brought in to help will not! Having all the paperwork available from that safe if a fire happens will make things a lot easier to prove you really owned an important item - and keeping those precious photo memories really is priceless. Anyone who has lost their belongings in a fire will tell you that. :( Here's a list of items you should keep in your SentrySafe:
*birth certificates (notarized)
*social security cards
*passports
*house deeds (if you own)
*any insurance documents - life, home, car,
*wills, etc
*copies of all your high school/college diplomas (originals if not on display)
*health records (including vaccinations records if it applies)
*pet health records (especially rabies records!)
*pictures of your house, outside and in, for insurance purposes, and any receipts that go along with the items (for instance, that TV or your wedding ring)
*important photos that you don't want to loose, such as of your children or wedding, or Aunt Erma
*any genealogical information you don't want to loose
*baptismal information, etc
*your CURRENT job resume for the moneymakers of the house
*older Family bibles
The inside of the safe is 12" wide by 3.5" high by 17.5 long. You might need to fold some of your documents in order to fit them in. The SentrySafe Pink Fire Safe Chest is backed by a UL-proven fire rating at 1,550° for up to 30 minutes to ensure your valuables will be safe in case of a fire - it also includes CDs, DVDs, memory sticks and USB drives.
By the way, if your SentrySafe is damaged by fire at any time you own it, Sentry Group will ship a replacement to you free of charge. Simply mail a copy of the model number, a photo of the burned SentrySafe, and a copy of the official report from the fire/police departments. Not a lot of companies would do this, so I think this is great!
The SentrySafe Pink FireSafe Chest retails for around $24.99, which I feel is a really good price. It comes with two keys, so my suggestion is that you keep one where you can easily access it, and give the second key to someone you trust who lives outside the home, such as a parent or sibling. This way, if you can't grab your keys during a fire (remember, you will have less than 60 seconds to get out!), you can easily access the safe using the other key.
I highly recommend the SentrySafe Fire Safe Chest as a practical gift this season for younger folks - most of us don't have one, and really don't think about owning one until it's too late. You can also say it's for in case of the zombie apocalypse, and they will probably think it's awesome!
One more thing though, while we are on the subject of zombies - the SentrySafe FireSafe Chest is NOT safe for guns and ammo during a fire, so don't even think about it. Purchase a proper gun safe for these items.
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I received the item mentioned above in order to try it out in my own home and share my thoughts on it. All opinions are my own.