Extreme Cold Weather Precautions

The National Weather Service is warning of cold temperatures for much of this week. Wind chills will be below-zero at times and could be colder than 20-degrees below zero Wednesday night into Thursday. Those temperatures have the potential to pose a danger to health and property.

Some steps to take to keep yourself, your family, your pets, and any elderly or homebound neighbors safe during cold weather:

* Monitor weather reports.

* Be a good neighbor. Check with elderly or disabled relatives, neighbors, and friends to ensure their safety.

* Minimize outside activities, particularly the elderly and very young. Also, consider your pets and limit their time outdoors.

* Dress in several layers of loose-fitting, lightweight clothing, rather than a single layer of heavy clothing. Outer garments should be tightly woven and water repellent. Wear a hat, mittens and sturdy waterproof boots, protecting your extremities. Cover your mouth with a scarf to protect your lungs.

* Excessive exposure can lead to frostbite, which is damaging to body tissue that is frozen. Frostbite causes a loss of feeling and a pale appearance in extremities, such as fingers, toes, ear lobes or the tip of the nose. If symptoms are detected, seek medical help immediately. Slowly warm the affected areas as you await medical assistance.

* Hypothermia can occur in extreme cases. The warning signs are uncontrollable shivering, memory loss, disorientation, incoherence, slurred speech, drowsiness and apparent exhaustion. If the person's temperature drops below 95 degrees, seek immediate medical care. If medical assistance is not available, slowly warm up the person, body core first, wrapping them in a blanket or using your own body heat. Do not warm the extremities first, for this drives the cold blood towards the heart and can lead to heart failure. Do not give the person alcohol, coffee, tea or any hot food or beverage. Warm liquids are best.

* Ensure you have sufficient heating fuel, as well as emergency heating equipment in case you lose electricity. If you need information on heating assistance you can call Vermont 211.

* If you lose power or heat and need a safe place to stay call 2-1-1. 2-1-1 can tell you if any warming shelters have been established in your area or connect you with the Red Cross, which can provide safe shelter to those in need.

* Test smoke and Carbon Monoxide (CO) detectors, and change their batteries regularly. Malfunctioning heating equipment can produce harmful levels of CO, including: fuel-fired furnaces or boilers (nonelectric), space heaters with pilot lights or open flames (for example kerosene heaters, wood stoves, or fireplaces), and gas stoves or ovens - especially those with pilot lights. Cars, snowmobiles, trucks, and other vehicles run in a garage can also be sources of CO poisoning, which can be deadly. Never operate a vehicle or generator indoors; they should only be run be outside and away from the home so CO cannot vent inside living areas.

* If you lose power or heat, try to keep pipes from freezing. Leave cabinet doors around them open to allow as much heat as possible to reach them. Wrap them in insulation or layers of newspapers, covering the newspapers with plastic to keep out moisture. Allow a trickle of warm water (if available) to run from a faucet that is farthest from your water meter or one that has frozen in the past. This will keep the water moving so it cannot freeze. Learn how to shut off your water if a pipe bursts.

* Make sure your car is properly winterized. Keep the gas tank at least half-full. Carry a Winter Emergency Car Kit in the trunk including blankets, extra clothing, flashlight with spare batteries, a can and waterproof matches (to melt snow for drinking water), non-perishable foods, windshields scraper and brush, shovel, sand, towrope, and jumper cables.

 

 

 

 

 

Don't Have Time to Be Sick: Flu Prevention

Coughs or sneezes spread flu virus into the air, and then onto surfaces. You can take measurers so you don’t spread the virus to others, or so others don’t spread it to you.

 You can reduce your chances of getting the flu by Cover and Wash:

• Cover your mouth and nose every time you cough or sneeze. Use a tissue and throw it away. Use your arm (not your hand).

 • Observe regular cleaning habits if someone at home has the flu. Pay special attention to doorknobs, faucets, refrigerator handles, and phones.

 • Vaccinate. The Centers for Disease Control recommends that everyone six months of age and older should get a flu shot. Flu vaccines are available in a number of locations, including your provider’s office. To find the closest place for a flu shot, go to HealthMap Vaccine Finder.  

 • Every time you use a tissue, throw it in the trash and then wash your hands.

 • Remember not to share anything that goes into the mouth.

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Wash your hands often and well. Use soap and water for at least 15 seconds.

 • Avoid contact with sick people.

 • Stay home when you are sick.

 Have alcohol hand sanitizer on hand if you don’t have access to soap and water.

 Giving a boost to your immune system can help to reduce the chances of getting the flu and/or reducing severity. This is particularly important for those who can’t take the flu vaccine.  Things like laugher , being physically active, or having a strong social network can boost immunity. Studies of Tai Chi and Qigong have found that they can significantly improve immune response in older adults after only five months of practice

 People who practice  Mindfulness meditation have been shown to reduce the incidence, length and severity of respiratory by as much as 50%. These results were nearly as effective as flu shots. "Meditation or exercise for preventing acute respiratory infection: a randomized controlled trial." Ann Fam Med. 2012 Jul-Aug;10(4):337-46.

 Call your health care provider if you think you have the flu. Flu symptoms can often be confused with the common cold, but the flu usually comes on more suddenly and is more severe.

 Symptoms of flu may include: fever (usually high); headache;  tiredness and weakness (can be extreme); dry cough; sore throat; runny or stuffy nose;  body or muscle aches; nausea; vomiting, and diarrhea (much more common among children than adults).

 A person who is sick with the flu is contagious. That means they can spread viruses. Adults can be contagious from one day before having symptoms to seven days after getting sick. Children can be contagious for longer than seven days.

 If you start to get flu symptoms:

- Get plenty of rest.

- Drink plenty of liquids.

- Don't use alcohol or tobacco.

- Stay home from work or school to protect others from catching your illness.

- Cover your mouth and nose with a tissue every time you cough or sneeze.

Take medication to lessen the symptoms of flu, but NEVER give aspirin to children or teenagers who have flu-like symptoms, especially fever, without first checking with your health care provider.

 

To learn about the flu go to the CDC Flu site http://www.cdc.gov/FLU/

 

Recycle Your Cavendish Christmas Tree

Trying to figure out what to do with your real Christmas tree now that the season is over? 

Real trees are biodegradable, which means that can be easily reused or recycled for mulch and other purposes. Never burn your Christmas tree in a fireplace or wood stove. Pines, firs and other evergreens have a high content of flammable turpentine oils.  Burning the tree may contribute to creosote buildup and risk a chimney fire.

According to Mary O’Brien of the Southern Windsor/Windham Solid Waste Management Christmas trees make excellent habitat for birds and other wildlife if left outside after the holidays. If you have land enough, leave your tree out to decay naturally over time. If you know anyone with goats, talk to them--goats love to eat Christmas trees!

 So after you've e moved the tinsel, lights and decorations consider the following:

• Take it to the Cavendish Transfer Station during normal business hours.

 • Cut it up for mulch in your garden or a neighbors. Needles dry quickly and decompose slowly, making them an excellent moisture- and mold-free mulch for ground-covering crops, such as strawberries, to rest on.

 • Save the a large base to support a large planter. Cut thin slabs off the trunk, sand them smooth, and apply a thin coat of polyurethane to keep the sap off tables and glassware.

 • Set it up for the birds. Spread small branches with margarine or peanut butter and dip in birdseed.

 • Even if you live on a small property, you can place your old Christmas tree at the edge of your yard. This makes a small wintertime wildlife habitat for rabbits, birds, and squirrels. Some may even build their nests in the pine boughs!

 • Cut up and save for an outdoor fire pit. Never use for indoor fires.

 • Make a sachet with the tree’s needles and store in various rooms in your house that could use a Christmas pick me up.

 • Large branches have a natural curve. Because of this, they can be stacked to save perennial flowers including, but not limited to, rose roots and berries. This will help protect these tender plants during this winter's icy storms! Can also use them for indoor plants.

 • Cut off boughs and lay them over perennial beds to protect them from snow and reduce frost heaving.

Cavendish Update 1/2/15 News/Events

                             Happy New Year from Cavendish Connects.

Ring in the New Year by pledging to support Cavendish Connects for 2015. 

 THE 1/2/15 EDITION OF THE CAVENDISH UPDATE

1. Cavendish Related News

2. Volunteers Needed for CTES Snow sports Program

3. Yankee Thrift-Avoid “Winter Skin”

2. Events

1. CAVENDISH RELATED NEWS

• Christmas Shoebox Recipients: Many people in town participated in the Cavendish Baptist Church’s Christmas shoeboxes. It was recently learned that the shoeboxes went to the Ukraine  and to Columbia.  Thanks to all those who were able to help out this year.

• From the Vermont Journal

-       Greven Field’s New Ice Rink 

-       Black River Good Neighbors Fundraising Project 

 • VT Yankee Ends Operations: The nuclear plant stopped sending power to the New England electric grid at just after noon Monday, Dec. 29, after 42 years of producing electricity from Vernon. Bill Mohl, the president of Entergy Wholesale Commodities, said economic factors, especially related to the natural gas market in the Northeast, were the primary reason for the shutdown. VPR 

 • New Laws in Vermont Go into Effect: With the arrival of the new year, changes take place in various Vermont laws including a change in the minimum wage; liquid nicotine containers must be sold in child-resistant packaging; rifle season will now be required to run for at least 16 consecutive days; insurers cannot pay optometrists and ophthalmologists differently for the same service; and homeowners will pay second home property tax rates if they don't spend 183 days in-state. WCAX 

 • Okemo Debuts Junior Snowmobiling Track: The track is a specially designed course located at the base of Jackson Gore on Paleo Field. The terrain is mostly flat and kids can drive the mini version of a regular snowmobile with the gas on the right and brake on the left for 15 minutes, led by an adult riding a full-sized sled. Riders must be between the ages of 5 and 12, no taller than 5 feet 4 inches and weigh no more than 120 pounds. Helmets are required and provided for riders.  Each tour is $29 and reservations are recommended. FMI: 228-1600 or  on-line .

 2. VOLUNTEERS NEEDED FOR CTES SNOW SPORTS PROGRAM: Snow sports On-Mountain Volunteers Needed: CTES's Okemo Ski and Snowboard program begins on Tuesday, January 6. We are in search of 4 more instructors on the mountain to make the program happen. If you know anyone who would be available from Noon-3:45 on Tuesdays to volunteer as an on-mountain instructor, please contact Jarrod Harper at jharper@velco.com or call him at 802-228-7925. Each time you volunteer, you earn a full day Sunday lift ticket.

 3. YANKEE THRIFT-AVOID “WINTER SKIN” : It’s now officially winter and with it comes dry cracked skin, lips etc. If you live in Vermont, you know about Bag Balm and the wonders it can do for your skin. However, there is a lot you can do to avoid “winter skin” then lathering on a thick coat of BB before going to bed. Learn more ways to protect against “Winter Skin” at The Dish. 

4. EVENTS: The Brendan Taaffee Concert is on January 4 (Sunday), while January 7 (Wednesday) is the return of the Cavendish Community Luncheon at noon, Gethsemane Church. For more information on these and other upcoming events, go to

• Cavendish Connects Calendar 

•  Okemo Valley Calendar