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Indestata > Debt > The ‘Jackpot’ Snowstorm Arrives Tonight: 7 Critical Steps to Take Before the Sun Goes Down
Debt

The ‘Jackpot’ Snowstorm Arrives Tonight: 7 Critical Steps to Take Before the Sun Goes Down

TSP Staff By TSP Staff Last updated: January 24, 2026 8 Min Read
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Image Source: Shutterstock

The waiting game is officially over. The forecast models have locked in, the watches have been upgraded to warnings, and Winter Storm Fern is actively knocking on the door. For millions of Americans in the Northeast bracing for over twenty inches of snow, and for those in the South facing a catastrophic ice threat, the window for preparation is no longer days—it is hours.

By tomorrow morning, roads across the Eastern Seaboard will likely be impassable, and widespread power outages could leave thousands in the dark. If you have not finished your snowstorm preparations yet, you need to act immediately. Here is your essential survival guide to ensuring your home and family are ready before the first flake falls tonight.

1. Secure Your Home Against the Freeze

Your first priority right now must be protecting your home’s infrastructure from the bitter cold trailing this storm. A burst pipe is the most common and expensive disaster during a winter event, but it is preventable if you act now. Locate your main water shut-off valve immediately so you can turn it off instantly if a plumbing emergency occurs.

Go through your kitchen and bathrooms and open the cabinet doors under the sinks. This simple trick allows warm air from your heating system to circulate around the pipes, preventing them from freezing when the temperature plunges tonight. If you lose power later this weekend, remember to keep a slow drip of warm water running in faucets located on outside walls to keep the line moving.

2. Preserve Your Food Supply

With power outages predicted to be a major factor in this storm, you need to strategize your food safety immediately. Go to your refrigerator and freezer right now and turn the dial to the coldest possible setting. This “super-cools” your food, creating a thermal buffer that can keep groceries safe for hours longer if the electricity cuts out.

While you are in the kitchen, fill empty Tupperware containers or water bottles and shove them into the freezer. If the power dies, you can move these blocks of ice into the fridge to act as improvised ice packs, saving your milk and eggs from spoiling.

3. The Final Pharmacy and Cash Run

If you are reading this on Friday morning, you have a sliver of time left to make a final supply run, but you must prioritize. Your absolute first stop should be the pharmacy. Road crews are warning that travel could be impossible for 48 to 72 hours, so if you have a prescription running low, refill it immediately.

Do not forget to grab over-the-counter painkillers like Tylenol or Advil; shoveling heavy, wet snow is a leading cause of back strain, and you do not want to be in pain without relief. While you are out, stop at an ATM and withdraw cash in small bills. When the power goes down, credit card terminals fail, and cash becomes the only way to buy supplies from a corner store or pay a neighbor to plow your driveway.

4. Strategic Heating and Gas Prep

Before you park your car for the weekend, head to the gas station and fill the tank completely. This is not just about driving; a full tank prevents your fuel lines from freezing in the Arctic blast following the storm. More importantly, your car can serve as an emergency lifeboat. If your house loses power and heat, your vehicle becomes a backup charging station for phones and a source of warmth in ten-minute bursts.

Just be absolutely certain to clear any snow from the exhaust pipe before starting the engine to prevent carbon monoxide poisoning. Speaking of carbon monoxide, if you plan to use a generator or space heater, test your detectors this afternoon. Never run a generator in a garage, even with the door open; keep it at least twenty feet from the structure.

5. Prepare Your Water Reserves

If you rely on well water, an electric pump failure means you will lose water pressure the moment the power grid fails. You should fill your bathtub and several large buckets with water immediately. This isn’t for drinking, but for hygiene. You can use a bucket of this water to manually flush your toilet, ensuring your home remains sanitary even during a prolonged outage.

6. Charge Your Secondary Technology

You likely know to charge your phone, but that is not enough for a long-duration event like this. Spend the next few hours charging every piece of technology you own, including laptops, rechargeable flashlights, and portable power banks. A fully charged laptop can actually serve as a massive battery to recharge your cell phone via a USB cable if the power is out for days. You should also take a moment to download movies, games, or books onto tablets now so you have offline entertainment ready for the kids when the internet inevitably goes down.

7. Check Your Perimeter and Neighbors

Finally, take a walk around the outside of your house before the snow gets too deep. If you have a high-efficiency furnace that vents out the side of your home, make a mental note of where it is and ensure it stays clear of snow drifts. A blocked intake vent can shut down your entire heating system or force deadly exhaust back into the home. Before you lock the doors, make a phone call to your elderly neighbors or relatives. Ask if they have enough food and heat. They are at the highest risk for hypothermia if the power fails, so make a concrete plan to check on them again tomorrow morning.

The time for watching the forecast is over; the time for action is now. Stay home, stay warm, and ride out Winter Storm Fern safely.

You May Also Like…

  • 8 Ways to Prepare for Mid-Winter Home Repairs on a Tight Retirement Budget
  • 9 Winter Upgrades That Slash Heating Costs
  • Utility Companies Are Adding “Infrastructure Fees” to Senior Bills This Winter
  • 10 High‑Inflation Winter Costs Seniors Can Still Control
  • 10 Winter Home Tasks Seniors Should Outsource Instead of DIYing

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