I also have renter's through State Farm. Auto through Geico. I had auto through State Farm for a few years, but Geico was cheaper when I got my new car. Haven't had issues with either.
Spike's Bitches 45: That sure as hell wasn't in the brochure.
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risqué (and frisqué), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
I'd grab my pets over anything else in a heartbeat. I'm thinking you all could have guessed that though.
The evacuation plans I keep in my head, involve grabbing whichever cat is at hand, both if possible, and squishing hell out of 'em trying to carry them both down the fire ladder in my closet. I think I should take the soft-sided carrier upstairs. It's got a lovely shoulder strap, that would leave my hands free, and I can, in a pinch, shove both of them in it.
I think I should take the soft-sided carrier upstairs. It's got a lovely shoulder strap, that would leave my hands free, and I can, in a pinch, shove both of them in it.
Good plan. Dooooo eeeeeet noooooooow.
For me, emergency evacuation involves the three Ps, in order: 1. people (if unable to evacuate themselves) 2. pets 3. purse (which has most of the useful post-emergency stuff--ID, credit card, phone, address book, occasionally some money)
Everything else is gravy.
The evacuation plans I keep in my head, involve grabbing whichever cat is at hand,
I learned exactly how ours would work in December, when we had our smoke alarm/burning dust in the vents episode.
I evacuated the dogs to the backyard, got both kids up, shoved them in my car, shoved the cat in his carrier, put him in my car, shoved my laptop and the folder with important documents into the trunk, drove my car into the cul-de-sac at a reasonable distance from the house.
Had it been necessary, I would have been able to access one of two gates on either side of the backyard to get the dogs out and put them in Lewis' car.
Lewis said I kind of scared him, how efficiently I managed to execute the plan.
It's funny, there was a time where I would have grabbed photos. But now I've got digital backups of most of them, so it's not as pressing. Cool.
I want Barb in charge of any evacuation situations I might find myself in.
The problem I had with State Farm is that they are agent-centric.
I had renter's insurance (on this place), years ago, through State Farm and had a LOT of trouble with the agent. He made a bunch of mistakes and was really difficult to reach. I knew something was wrong when I got a super-bad, scary vibe off of him. Before long, though the company would not go into detail, it came to pass that he was no longer a State Farm agent due to some criminal activity. I was glad to be shut of him and never blamed State Farm for his behavior...but when it became financial difficult to maintain the policy, it wasn't hard to let go.
Which is why I'm even more appreciative of Vortex's recommendation.
In an emergency evacuation situation, assuming Pete didn't need my help, I would grab 1)cats 2)Clovis 3)purse.
Huh, I don't have a plan that involves important papers, and boy do we have some papers that would be necessary. Not that I'd have a chance to do anything, Hubby would probably be throwing me out a window in an evacuation setting.