Juno wrote:One thing that preoccupies me, and I suppose this is a question for all preppers, is just how dire an eventuality do you prepare for? One thing I immediately liked about this forum is that everyone is preparing just as much for the "everyday" things going wrong as for the apocalyptic things. And in reality, the thing I'd need to prepare for at work is the trains being out of action - so perhaps my preps should be more like finding out how I'd get home by bus. It seems to me that the chances of every form of transport being out of action are so remote that I should prep for the more likely stuff first. How do people approach that?
It's a really good question ... 7/7 killed 52 people (wikipedia says 56, but that counts the suicide bombers, I think). Transport all over London ground to a halt - I asked for stories on here about people who'd been affected, when I was writing my kindle book, and a few walked 10 miles or so to get wherever public transport was still running, even if it wasn't in their direction of travel, and eventually managed to get home from there.
Or the Bishopsgate bombing in 1993 - only one person was killed, I think, though the damage was extensive - it was on a Saturday, so no huge numbers of casualties. Broken glass over half a mile or so of London.
Certainly, though, we all need to prepare in a "graduated" way - flooding often stops trains but buses and coaches can make diversions more easily and get through, for instance, yes. Leaves on the line! Whoever thought we'd have to prep for autumn leaves on the line
Any big terrorist event, though, will shut down all public transport - and as with French attacks in the last couple of years (and the Boston marathon bombers) the terrorists themselves may still be at large, they may kidnap people so they can use their transport, or kidnap them as hostages. It's very fluid.
If you get caught up in something like that, it *feels* like the end of the world, for sure, but it isn't - prepping for the most likely stuff first, as you say, is absolutely the way to go
ETA - talking of likely stuff, the weather warning that Yorkshire Andy highlighted is interesting:
http://www.metcheck.com/UK/warnings.asp Huge areas of the country with a 60% chance of "thunderstorms, flash flooding, large hail, tornadoes". Good grief!