Sheila & Beau GA & Jeddie GA
Very Active Member
The other night we had to evacuate my building because the building next door was on fire - an extra alarm fire. We decided it was a wise precaution because that building is about 15 feet from ours and the wind was blowing toward us.
I tell you that having to drop everything and pack up 4 cats and get them down stairs from the 3rd floor (no elevator) is NOT fun. I took Jeddie and Beau down first, because I could not catch Leanne or Ariel, and moved my car, which was right next to the section on fire with just about 6 feet and a chain-link fence separating it. I could feel the heat. Then I went back up to get the other two and realized I had left the carrier in the car! I ended up putting them in pillow cases. That was after catching them. They were both freaked out. Luckily it wasn't our building on fire or they would never have survived because it took too long to catch them.
All's well that ends well - for us. A large section of the other building was destroyed. All the people are fine, and I hope the pets that lived there all got out too.
However, I was not prepared. I have to have a plan for getting myself and all four cats out at once in 5 mins or less and down the stairs from the third floor. I am planing on getting a hand truck and bungee cords and a folding crate or carrier I can put two cats into, strap it and my large carrier with the other two in it onto the hand-truck and wheel it out. I still have to catch them, so I have to plan that better. You can't think in an emergency like that and seconds count. I will come up with a way to herd them into one room where they can't get under a bed or dresser. Close off rooms. I may even get a net of some kind. My biggest problem is furniture they can get under and I can reach them.
I will come up with a plan and write it down, maybe even practice it. And I urge all of you to do the same. Especially those with multiple cats/pets. You may get only one chance. Firefighters, once they arrive on the scene, will clear the building and they will NOT let you stay for ANY reason including catching a hiding pet. They will pound on your door,scaring your animals even more. Their job is to get YOU and other humans out safely. I know this from a fire in my (different) apartment building about 15 years ago. It was a small kitchen fire two floors above me, no smoke even in the stairwell, but they would not let me stay to get my other cat who was terrified by all the shouting and banging. Luckily, the fire was put out in minutes and my apartment was fine.
Please, think up a plan and make sure you have what you need to get your cats (dogs, birds, etc) out safely.
I tell you that having to drop everything and pack up 4 cats and get them down stairs from the 3rd floor (no elevator) is NOT fun. I took Jeddie and Beau down first, because I could not catch Leanne or Ariel, and moved my car, which was right next to the section on fire with just about 6 feet and a chain-link fence separating it. I could feel the heat. Then I went back up to get the other two and realized I had left the carrier in the car! I ended up putting them in pillow cases. That was after catching them. They were both freaked out. Luckily it wasn't our building on fire or they would never have survived because it took too long to catch them.
All's well that ends well - for us. A large section of the other building was destroyed. All the people are fine, and I hope the pets that lived there all got out too.
However, I was not prepared. I have to have a plan for getting myself and all four cats out at once in 5 mins or less and down the stairs from the third floor. I am planing on getting a hand truck and bungee cords and a folding crate or carrier I can put two cats into, strap it and my large carrier with the other two in it onto the hand-truck and wheel it out. I still have to catch them, so I have to plan that better. You can't think in an emergency like that and seconds count. I will come up with a way to herd them into one room where they can't get under a bed or dresser. Close off rooms. I may even get a net of some kind. My biggest problem is furniture they can get under and I can reach them.
I will come up with a plan and write it down, maybe even practice it. And I urge all of you to do the same. Especially those with multiple cats/pets. You may get only one chance. Firefighters, once they arrive on the scene, will clear the building and they will NOT let you stay for ANY reason including catching a hiding pet. They will pound on your door,scaring your animals even more. Their job is to get YOU and other humans out safely. I know this from a fire in my (different) apartment building about 15 years ago. It was a small kitchen fire two floors above me, no smoke even in the stairwell, but they would not let me stay to get my other cat who was terrified by all the shouting and banging. Luckily, the fire was put out in minutes and my apartment was fine.
Please, think up a plan and make sure you have what you need to get your cats (dogs, birds, etc) out safely.