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UK Government recommendations

  • Consider what supplies you and your household might need during an emergency lasting a few days, such as a power cut or water outage, or situations where you are advised to stay at home or to leave your home (evacuate) for safety reasons.
  • It can be helpful to keep these items in one place in your home and ideally somewhere easy to find if the lights aren’t working – if you are escaping your house due to a fire you should not take anything with you at all. You could consider keeping items you might need to take with you if asked to leave your home quickly in a spare bag – you might hear some people call this a ‘grab bag’.
  • You should ensure you have enough of the medication you need to keep you going for several days.
  • Pack a few essential items in your car boot to make sure you’re ready in case of getting stuck in wintry weather – this can include a torch, in-car phone charger, warm clothes and blankets, high-visibility clothing, jump leads, food and drink, and a shovel for snow. It can also be helpful to keep a first aid kit in your car.

Put together an emergency kit of items at home

This could include:

  • Battery or wind-up torch – torches are safer than candles.
  • Portable power bank for charging your mobile phone.
  • Battery or wind-up radio to get updates during a power cut – a car radio can be used, however in severe weather it might be safer to stay inside. 
  • Spare batteries for torches and radio and a backup battery for any medical equipment you rely on.
  • A first aid kit (or some first aid items) including items such as waterproof plasters, bandages, a thermometer, antiseptic, eyewash solution, sterile dressings and gloves, medical tape for dressings, and tweezers.
  • Hand sanitiser and wet wipes for hygiene purposes when the water is off.
  • Bottled water – there is no standard figure for this as emergencies can vary in duration and people use different amounts. A minimum of 2.5-3 litres of drinking water per person per day is recommended by the World Health Organisation for survival. 10 litres per person per day will make you more comfortable by also providing for basic cooking and hygiene needs. Additional water might be needed to make up baby formula, for medical devices and for pets.
  • Non-perishable food that doesn’t need cooking, such as ready-to-eat tinned meat, fruit or vegetables (and a tin opener). As with water, how much you need will vary based on your own circumstances. Don’t forget food for pets.
  • Baby supplies such as nappies and baby formula – ready made or ‘ready-to-feed’ formula is best as you may not be able to boil water or sterilise bottles.

Rather than buying all the items at once, you could just add to your emergency kit when you are able and build it up over time.

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Stay Warm

This is a classic and surprisingly effective DIY emergency heater that uses tealight candles and terracotta pots to radiate heat. Let’s go step-by-step with a diagram and explanation for clarity.---

🔧 Materials Needed4–6 tealight candles (unscented are best)1 metal or ceramic tray (to hold candles safely)2 terracotta flower pots:Small inner pot: ~10–12 cm diameterLarger outer pot: ~15–20 cm diameter1 long metal bolt with nuts and washers (or a short metal rod)1 small piece of metal or ceramic stand (e.g., bricks, tin cans, or a trivet)Optional: aluminum foil (to reflect heat)---

🔥 How It Works1. Heat source:The tealight candles produce a small, steady flame (each about 30–40 W of heat).2. Airflow & convection:The candles warm the air inside the inner pot, creating convection currents. The hot air rises and escapes through the central hole (if present), drawing in cooler air below.3. Thermal storage:The terracotta absorbs the heat from the candles. Because terracotta has good thermal mass, it stores warmth and then releases it slowly.4. Radiation of heat:The outer pot radiates the stored heat into the room, functioning almost like a small ceramic radiator.5. Safety buffer:The air gap between the two pots prevents the outer surface from overheating too quickly and helps distribute the warmth evenly.---

⚠️ Safety TipsNever leave unattended.Use on a non-flammable surface.Keep pets and children away.Ensure ventilation — tealights consume oxygen and produce CO₂ and a bit of CO.Don’t enclose candles too tightly; airflow is needed to prevent smothering.Avoid touching the pots — they get extremely hot.---

💡 Efficiency TipsSurround the setup with foil or reflective panels to direct heat into the room.Raise the candles slightly off the surface using a metal grate for better airflow.If using for emergency warmth, place it close to where you sit rather than trying to heat a whole room.