I am sorry to hear this but I am thankful that nobody was injured. While I am fortunate enough to not know fire, we experienced a very large flood about 15 years ago. 5 feet of water does some damage.
Just remember that it's only stuff. Your insurance company will probably work with a 3rd party restoration firm that will either clean or disposition items as a loss and you'll negotiate values. My coworker had a fire and they went item by item remediating smoke damage from things like china and offered replacement values on others.
As a flood "victim" if you will, I would suggest picking up a gallon cans of WD-40 and getting your metal tools washed off to prevent rust. If they sit in water logged drawers, they will start to rust. Grab an aluminum half tray, pour in WD-40, get some rubber gloves and a tooth brush and just scrub your sockets and wrenches. Sort them out later. Let insurance handle any electric power tools. They are probably a loss after the water.
Just remember that it's only stuff. Your insurance company will probably work with a 3rd party restoration firm that will either clean or disposition items as a loss and you'll negotiate values. My coworker had a fire and they went item by item remediating smoke damage from things like china and offered replacement values on others.
As a flood "victim" if you will, I would suggest picking up a gallon cans of WD-40 and getting your metal tools washed off to prevent rust. If they sit in water logged drawers, they will start to rust. Grab an aluminum half tray, pour in WD-40, get some rubber gloves and a tooth brush and just scrub your sockets and wrenches. Sort them out later. Let insurance handle any electric power tools. They are probably a loss after the water.
