Personal insurance right in your trunk

December 22nd, 2011 - Joe Duarte

Opinion: Nobody plans to get stranded, but you can prepare.

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Illustration by KEVIN GROULX/QMI AGENCY

Opinion: Nobody plans to get stranded, but you can prepare

One of the things experts recommend you carry in your vehicle during winter driving is an emergency kit.

Do you have one of those packed away in your vehicle? It should have things like candles and matches, a blanket and socks, water bottles and energy bars. You can even buy them pre-packed and ready to go into your trunk.

I don’t have one.

I like to think I don’t need it, doing most of my everyday driving in and around town(s) where the farthest I’d have to walk in the snow in case of a breakdown would be to a phone booth … if I didn’t have my BlackBerry or it couldn’t get a signal.

But the other day I drove about 400 km to pick up my son at college and it occurred to me after the uneventful drive, what if it hadn’t been uneventful?

I was driving on highways the entire time, through forested and rocky, sparsely populated regions and not always in traffic. What if I’d had a temporary lapse in attention and spun out into the trees scant metres from the roadway? What if nobody had come by for several minutes, after the snow had settled?

I could have been lost for hours or days, if I were badly hurt and unable to get back to the road to flag down a passing motorist. Or worse – what if I’d been dragged from my car by Kathy Bates?

I bet those people who got caught in the freak snow squall in southwestern Ontario in December didn’t think anything that bad would ever happen to them. Some 400 of them were stranded in their cars for hours as a lake effects streamer caught them off guard. Cell phone batteries and fuel quickly ran out after vehicles were forced to a standstill in white out conditions and then were unable to get going again. Police, firemen, volunteers and military personnel searched by snowmobile, ATV, helicopter and farm machinery, as conventional rescue vehicles were unable to navigate conditions.

Some were stranded for 24 hours but in the end, there were no casualties.

It is unknown how many had emergency kits, but there were the usual stories of people melting snow to stay hydrated and running their vehicles to keep warm until rescuers arrived. Some were told to pool their resources in order to hold out longer, should the need arise.

I would bet a lot of them now carry emergency kits. I will – not all the time, especially since I switch test vehicles every week and it would just be one more thing to carry from one car to the next.

But, I will put one together for the next time I escape my cozy suburban world and venture out through the inhospitable high-speed wilderness.

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