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Doomsday Preparation. Things To Keep On Hand For Survival

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By doodlebugs


Survival Items To Keep At Home

Doomsday can mean different things to different people. For some it means the end of the world and for others such as those in New Orleans it can just feel like the end of the world. There are many scenarios that could occur in other parts of the United States that resemble Katrina. An explosion of Mt Rainer, large scale power outage, earthquake or dirty bomb could cause major urban areas to be disaster zones.

There are some steps that you can take to help prepare for a variety of disasters without having to become a survivalist nut with a cache of weapons buried in the back yard.

Assuming that you will be forced to stay put in your home for a long period of time until services and law and order are restored you should have the basics of survival. Fire, light, water, food, and a weapon.

A good all around weapon is a shotgun. Shotguns are cheap and are not subject to the strict laws that handguns are. You can use it for both protection and to kill game to eat if necessary. Keep one in a locked gun cabinet for the day that you might need it.

It is a good idea to keep on hand a few weeks supply of water. Plastic jugs tend to degrade and contaminate the water after a couple of years. A better way to store water is in the old fashioned glass water-cooler jugs. These can be found in wine making supply stores and hold six gallons. You should try to have at least a half gallon per person per day for at least a month and try to catch water off the roof as well.

A good supply of food is critical. You will need food that does not take a great amount of energy to cook such as instant rice, canned beans and spices to make it palpable. Beans and rice together can form a complete protein. Some spices to make them taste better are good to have.

Keep vitamins on hand, protein powder, instant milk, noodles and ramen and canned and dried fruits and vegetables. If you can afford it MRE's or meals ready to eat, as supplied to the military, will last for a long time.

For "fire" you will need to have on hand enough propane in an outdoor storage tank or a number of propane cylinders such as for a barbecue pit. An outdoor barbecue pit with a burner you can cook a pot over can serve as your outdoor kitchen.

A generator of at least 2000 watts can be handy to keep frozen foods for a few days longer until your gas supply runs out. Store gas in metal, vented jerry cans.

A generator that runs on propane can run for a couple of weeks on a large outdoor propane tank.

If you sense that your water supply is going to fail fill your tubs and any containers you can find. Later you can set up catchments such as cleaned trash cans under your gutters for toilet flushing and washing water.

You will need some light to cook and live by if you don't have a generator with a large fuel supply. Keep a good supply of batteries and wind up flashlights as well as many candles.

Have a good first aid kit and keep a few weeks supply of medicines that you may need for chronic conditions such as thyroid pills or heart pills. You can order extra from an overseas pharmacy.

One of the keys to surviving a breakdown of order in an urban area is to form alliances with your neighbors and start a neighborhood watch. In the event that something drastic does happen you will have those contacts already in place. You can use GMRS radios, which transmit up to ten miles or more, to keep in touch with like minded people.

Keep a shortwave - AM - FM radio for news. Consider a free to air satellite system which picks up free satellite broadcasts. See this article for more on how to get FTA, or free to air satellite TV at no cost:  Free To Air Satellite

Disaster Gear For Your Car

Think of keeping some of the things mentioned above in your car so you can be prepared for anything. Keep a backpack in your trunk with enough food for several days, some cash in case the networks are down and credit cards are useless. Keep your gas tank full at all times. Keep blankets and a small tent in the trunk along with a good spare tire, jumper cables, several gallons of water in a tough water jug. Consider a long range SSB CB radio for emergency communication. See the resources section for more info on long range CB radios.


Comments

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moonlake profile image

moonlake  says:
15 months ago

All good ideas and also a good radio. Enjoyed your hub. Hope that day never comes.

Pocket Survival profile image

Pocket Survival  says:
14 months ago

I second the radio idea. When there's no power, a hand crank radio-flashlight (2-in-1) is a life-saver. I picked up a pair of hand crank radio-flashlights (2-in-1) at CostCo.

Similar to this: http://www.amazon.com/Flashlight-Emergency-Prepare (no affiliate link so click away).

Enjoyed your hub as well!

marisuewrites profile image

marisuewrites  says:
7 months ago

excellent advice for us all!! Thank you! If we're prepared, we have more confidence.

ColdWarBaby profile image

ColdWarBaby  says:
7 months ago

You're a humanist doodlebug, whether you know it or not. You're doing something good for others and you're not even seeking a profit.

Well done.

Pete Maida profile image

Pete Maida  says:
7 months ago

Good suggestions. You did a good job of covering all of the bases.

Cow Flipper profile image

Cow Flipper  says:
3 months ago

Great ideas, really like how you show new ways around communication with free to air TV and also listing the s.w. radios so people can get broadcasts from outside their location. Awesome information. Thanks!

brandon  says:
5 weeks ago

i dont really think doomsday will happen.

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