Since the majority of my family lives in Wisconsin, hurricane weather is something we've never experienced, however, as my daughter pointed out, there are other weather related disasters that our family of four may encounter. At school, she learned about the importance of being prepared for an emergency, and since she has a tendency to come home, hang up her backpack, and leave it unattended for lengthy periods of time, I was gratified when she asked me if I would help her with a project.

My oldest daughter is in the sixth grade this year. Although she's been a nature lover for as long as I've known her, and interested in meteorology from a young age, lately she's shown a greater interest in things like hunting, and archery. When we went shopping for winter boots, she found a pair of green camouflaged Carhartt pants, and decided that a pink camo John Deere shirt would be the perfect tee to pair it with. Since that purchase, the shirt rarely, if ever leaves her. She sleeps with a hat on, and wears either her red school hat, or the pink double layered Columbia one we bought at a sporting goods store.

For the most part, I view my daughter as a fairly average eleven and a half year old. She's popular at school despite neglecting to thoroughly, or regularly comb and brush her mop of wilderness hair. She's very petite, she plays soccer, and others have defined her behavior as aggressive, and spunky. I think there were eight questions on the list she asked me to review with her. This well intentioned list described the minimum of emergency supplies that a household ought to have on hand, just in case disaster strikes.

While my youngest daughter's handwriting is almost alarmingly neat, we sometimes struggle to read things that my oldest has scrawled. I was rather touched when she asked if I would help her write a list of things that we needed for her assignment, she thought my handwriting was neater than hers, but I also reminded her that this was her homework. She nodded, shook her tangled Grizzly Adams curls, and said that we needed to implement our emergency plan, so the list was actually for my benefit, not hers.

Passion is hard to resist in adorable youngsters that you have had tentative relationships with in the past. It is also a good idea to have a plan, just in case something would happen. My aunt and uncle in New Jersey were affected by the hurricane. The last time I talked to them they had been without power for almost a week, and we do live in tornado alley, not to mention that I can remember being snowed in several times, once as recently as two years ago. So while my daughter drew a map of our home to determine escape routes for our one story ranch home, I found myself writing out a list of things we had, and another of items to procure.

I thought I was doing an exceptional job putting down items such as flashlights with extra batteries, toiletries, and a first aid kit when my daughter, who was standing next to me announced that what our family really needed was a bomb shelter. She wasn't kidding either. That announcement, and I give myself credit for not laughing at her, led to an involved detour where Google showed us many types of bomb shelters that were out there. This led to a discussion of how likely a bomb raid was, and how terrible war can be for soldier, and civilian alike, but eventually we were able to return to our preparedness list.

Whenever a new L.L. Bean catalog arrives, my oldest daughter pores over it. Much time, and considerable thought is given to each item, and questions such as whether the royal blue or Hawaiian ice duffle would be better are contemplated at length with the inevitable consultation of her parents. This year she found an emergency radio that had two power sources, although she wasn't sure whether the red one would really be better than the gray. She told me that we really needed several LED flashlights, and mentioned excitedly that they float so we would be able to retrieve them in our inflatable raft. She added that to my list since it was an item I had overlooked.

When I was in grade school, the town my grandparents lived in was flooded. There are pictures of my dad paddling a canoe through the streets of town. There were eleven feet of water in some areas, and the damage suffered by some was significant. By this time, my daughter's school book has been cast aside, my list now covers both sides of the sheet I had been writing on, and we had returned to Google in search of a greater depth of understanding as to what exactly we would need in the event of severely inclement weather.

I found a site that suggested a compass, my daughter practically yelled at me for not having this critical item on my list. I had also forgotten guns, ammunition, 250 feet of rope, back packs, sunscreen, dental floss, boric acid, money, and maps of our area that illustrated where spring water could be obtained. We divided food into canned goods, and dry goods. As I wrote I started to wonder, how long would three hundred pounds of rice last? Years ago I had belonged to a food coop, so I had seen fifty pound bags of rice, popcorn, and wheat. I added popcorn to the list, scratched the wheat since no one in my family can eat it anyways, but added it back after reading that our chickens could be fed sprouted wheat, ignoring the fact that my family does not currently raise poultry.

Chicken raised on wheat will grow to eight or nine pounds according to a source I read. They are a source of protein, and we could use the feathers for making our own pillows if it came to that. That started a new chain of thought, maybe ducks would be better than chickens since they could swim. The chicken versus duck debate became heated, but I insisted that ducks were the better option. We have four sleeping bags, although the girls have thin child sized versions. Fortunately for us, LL Bean has an enticing array of flannel lined bags, although I made a note to check out our local Army surplus store.

Sardines are a cheap protein source. My daughter normally doesn't care for them, but nodded gravely when I put them on my list of canned goods. We would need lighters, she mentioned that we could get some from my mom who smokes. I said nothing, but added them to my growing list. I put down things like tea, honey, and realized that no one in my family has any real botanical knowledge about the herbs that can be used to treat certain ailments. My daughter made a face when I put down brandy, but I explained that it could be used to disinfect minor wounds in the absence of professional medical care.

Rat traps were an inexplicable suggestion until I read that they could be used to capture small mammals such as squirrels. When my oldest daughter was a toddler, my husband lost his job. Being reduced to a very meager income suddenly meant that I had to resort to things such as reconstituted dried milk. She thought that powdered milk was an astonishing invention, and when you don't have any other options, you quickly become thankful for the things you do have. We added games, and playing cards to our list. A copy of the Bible was another entry, and I'm ashamed I didn't think of it earlier.

I knew things had gone way past where they should have when we simultaneously read 'musical instruments', and my daughter eagerly exclaimed that she could play her hated clarinet for us while we were without power, heat, or running water. I'm not going to reveal what time my daughter went to bed that night. It was much later than normal, and we still had much work to do according to her. An interesting thing I observed, after she took over my list, the items she added had been neatly printed in a way that made me proud.

Probably the best thing that has come out of me and my husband taking a parenting class has been the advice to really heap praise on children in areas where they excel. My daugther and I probably went a bit overboard composing our list, however it highlighted the sobering thought that my family could be much better prepared for the possibility of a time where we may not have many items we daily take for granted. We're going to start small, but after listening to my daughter beg for inexpensive canned and dried goods that she wouldn't eat normally at the store yesterday, I drove home thinking that surviving a hurricane might be just as adventure filled as parenting a tempestuous, strong willed, life loving junior Doomsday Prepper.