5 Tips that Could Save Your Life and Those You Love
The cooler winter months tend to bring with them more home fires than any other time of year, so I’ve invited firefighter, Jake Steele, the hero of my new release, Identity Withheld to share his top five fire safety tips that he wished every family would implement.
Because the actions you take before firefighters arrive is what will save your life.
- Maintain working smoke detectors outside all bedrooms in your home and a carbon monoxide detector on each level of your home.
Did you catch the maintain part? That means:
- vacuum the dust from them regularly
- install fresh batteries in them TODAY
- Plan your escape route in case of fire. Practice it. Designate a specific place outside your home where family members will meet.
- Keep bedroom doors closed at night to slow the spread of fire.
- Do not leave candles or cooking unattended. Fires can flare up in an instant.
- Check that your chimneys and vents are clear to allow proper ventilation of deadly gases.
Do you fight the fire or flee?
If the fire is confined to a small area such as a frying pan or trash can and is not spreading, the room is not filled with smoke, and/or you need to move past it to escape, then attempt to extinguish it by an appropriate method:
- A lid on a frying pan to deny the fire oxygen.
- Water on solid fuels such as paper, wood or cloth, but never on oils, gases or electrical fires
- Baking soda or fire extinguisher for class B and C fires.
If the fire extinguisher runs out, smoke fills the room, the fire begins to spread or firefighters arrive, leave immediately.
Your Turn:
Have you implemented Jake’s tips?
Identity Withheld
Kara Grant’s in Witness Protection after blowing the whistle on an illegal adoption ring, but killers track her down and torch her place.
Enter Jake Steele, the handsome firefighter (and widowed dad) who rescues her, then suspects she’s the arsonist. Can she risk spilling her secrets to him before the bad guys finish the job?
Fire Image courtesy of Sailom at FreeDigitalPhotos.net



I test my smoke detector at least once a week when I burn something on the stove. It works very well. 🙂 Great tips, Sandra.
LOL, not a good way to test. Seems we both have trouble with #4. 😉
We don’t sleep with the doors closed every night. I’m going to have to rethink this. I do have to say that the main reason is we have two cats who love to sleep with us. We do have a plan and smoke detectors that we check when we change our air filters. That amounts to about once every three months.
That’s very good. And thanks for the reminder! Our furnace filters are probably in desperate need of changing!
Thank you for the great tips, Sandra! And Identity Withheld sounds like a great book!
You’re welcome, Alexa. And thank you!