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Protect Your Valuables with a Fire Safe



If you're like I am, you probably think that getting all kinds of high security gadgets for your home is not a sign of prudence so much as one of paranoia. I live in the suburbs, and the biggest news we generally get is the cops being called to bust up a high school party, or perhaps a screaming match from the couple down the block. So, when my cousin, a security professional, got us a fire safe for Christmas, I simply thanked him and did my best not to chuckle. He seemed to pick up on what I was thinking. “Trust me,” he said, “with grandpa's coin collection, and those old baseball cards, you may thank me for this fire safe one day.”

I was blessed with many years of not having to thank him for the fire safe at all. If you think about it, how often does your house go up in flames? Well, as I was to find out, once is well more than enough. I had, over the years, put all sorts of valuables in the fire safe including wedding photos, our passports, titles to our cars, baby pictures, and a variety of important records. I seemed to know that something terrible would soon disrupt the perfect life that we were all living in our pleasant home.

According to the firemen, what happened was an electrical fire in the wall. The irony is that we were just starting to get the wiring redone, going from the upstairs to the downstairs. Apparently, the new wiring in some of the house increased the load on the old grid in the basement, resulting in a short in the wall. Fortunately, the firemen got there very quickly, and the house did not completely burn down, but the basement, with all my old paper records, was badly damaged. Everything, that is, except for the most important ones tucked away in the fire safe. The fire safe even protected our things from the water that sprayed out of the firemen’s hose to put out the fire. I never even considered that water would do more damage than the actual fire! So our fire safe not only kept our valuables protected from the fire, but it also protected them from the water used to put out the fire.

The fire chief said we were lucky to have a fire safe. He said that most people don’t have one. He also gave me a tip that the fire safe should be on the lower level of the house. When a house is on fire, it weakens the floors. So if you have a big, heavy safe upstairs, a fire may weaken the floor below it and the fire safe may come crashing down!

When my cousin came months later to check out the additions and improvements we had made repairing damage, my cousin was kind enough not to rub our nose in the fire safe business. Instead, he offered us a good rate on installing more fire safes in the basement and the bedroom, to protect both against the possibility of future fires and of burglaries. The house is back in shape now, and, thanks to the fire safe, our most precious possessions are intact along with our brand new rec room.



Fire Safe Tip

When buying a fire safe, keep in mind that even the smallest fire safe can be heavy. At the store, someone may be there to assist you with your new safe, but when you get home, keep in mind you may need someone's help to get it in your house!


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