The Story
Yesterday my car battery died. Thankfully I was in the driveway and could ask my neighbors for a jump. Neither set of neighbors knew how to use jumper cables and thought I was 'just so handy' for knowing how and owning a pair. (Whats up with people and jumper cables? Is it just me that thinks everyone should own a pair?) Well my battery was completely dead so jumping it didn't work. My neighbor offered to call me a tow truck but I told her it'd be much more helpful if she'd give me a lift to Auto Zone to buy another battery. She was thinking I'd need to take it to a mechanic to have them put in a new battery, she had no idea
Showing posts with label preparedness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label preparedness. Show all posts
Thursday, June 27, 2013
Thursday, June 20, 2013
Putting the car kit together
The end result, I need to get another container to put it in, but for now the bucket works. |
Today I started putting together the emergency kit for my car. I added a few items to my previous list including a siphon, tarp, oil pan, cold pack, and reflective belt.
Tuesday, June 18, 2013
One Kit At A Time
We're slowly working on our family preparedness one kit at a time. First, we started with water. Next we moved on to the 72 hour kit and now we're tackling the car kits. We used to have well prepared car kits but in the last two years they've been picked over and items haven't been replaced. Last week when I was visiting my folks a pair of jumper cables was needed by the neighbors and out of 5 adults with cars I was the only one with a pair, this made me realize that a.) my family and friends aren't even prepared for everyday emergencies and b.) my car kit really needs some work.
Here's what I plan on putting in my car kit:
Here's what I plan on putting in my car kit:
Sunday, May 26, 2013
Why We Prepare
When most people think of preparedness or 'prepping' they think of shows like Doomsday Bunkers and people of that ilk. Well, that's not us. We don't have a secret underground bunker or pallets of ammo (even though Papa would love to have a ton of ammo, we do enjoy shooting for sport), or 5 years worth of freeze dried food. We do however, have provisions, a plan, and three reasons why we prepare.
Saturday, May 11, 2013
What should we prepare for?
Mama
and I talk a great deal about scenarios in which our preparations would
come in handy. Along with that conversation ultimately comes the
discussion about how far those situations go, and when they are
considered over. Many preppers call this scenario The End Of The World
As We Know It or TEOTWAWKI. If any of you have viewed or participated in
the communities in which this scenario is discussed you may have
realized that they almost always talk about the initial fall out of the
event, or the collapse. For the purpose of this blog I will refer to the
different stages of TEOTWAWKI as The Event, The Collapse, The Panic,
The Reform, and The Rise.
The
Event is whatever emergent situation happens that would cause
preparations to be necessary. Let us take the basic and scifi example of
a zombie apocalypse as our example. The Event is the initial period or
the outbreak, starting from Patient Zero (the first infected person) to
the fall of the first few cities. Within this time infrastructure will
begin to be closed, and people will begin to stay home. Accompanied by
this is the security threat of hordes of zombies. Many people view this
is the actual apocalypse, but it is just the seed. This is the most
dangerous time in which the most loss of life will occur. This example
can be applied to nearly every scenario, from a mass EMP, to a cyber
attack, civil war, etc. We would do well to plan for this as it is the
greatest threat, but if your goal is to thrive rather than just survive
we should look past this phase.
The
Collapse occurs when the infrastructure starts to fail. Using our
zombie apocalypse as an example this is when the folks that work at the
electric plant (or any other utility facility) do not go to work, for
whatever reason, be it quarantine, infection, they choose to stay home,
or the power plant is over run. The power plant will stay on for a
period of time and supply power to its grid due to automation, but after
a period of time it will fail and the lights will go out. This is when
The Collapse begins, when our modern way of life goes away. This phase
can occur 3 days to 3 weeks after The Event due to the automation of our
infrastructure, or lack thereof. The most rapid and frightening aspect
of The Collapse is going to be the unavailability of food. Most people
keep between 2-7 days worth of food in their house. When that food runs
out they make a trip to the store. Most stores have between 1-3 days
worth of food on their shelves based on how much food is sold out of
their store in the period. That means in 3-10 days the stores will be
completely out of food. It is within those 3-10 days that rioting and
looting will occur. By the time The Collapse is in full effect about
13-21 days will have passed depending on how quickly The Event happened.
The
Panic will overlap with the The Collapse because it is the phase that
is completely driven by human emotion. When people realize that there is
no food, and the lights might not come back on, people begin to riot,
to loot and pillage. It is within this phase that we will see the most
brutal of human behavior. It is this phase that many of the serious
preppers have planned for, they have food for 3-18 months, they have a
safe place to weather the storm (a farmhouse or a bunker or some similar
safe haven), they have ammunition to provide security and they have
taken some tactical training course. These preppers may even have a plan
with a group of friends or a network of other preppers to meet and form
some kind of organization after The Collapse.
The
Reform is the period after The Collapse. It is when most of the people
have died, all the food is gone, the lights are off, the water won’t
run, and the internet is dead. This is the time in which any of the
survivors come out of their shelter and work together, or kill each
other. This is when society will be rebuilt and we will see order
restored once again. This period is when those that survived will plant
gardens, scavenge for supplies and debate the future of their government
and their towns. This is also one of the most difficult phase to prep
for. The reason that this is so difficult to prep for is because it
requires having the skills, knowledge, references and materials to
rebuild a town or society.
The
Rise is the final phase in which things are getting back to a sense of
normalcy. This is the phase in which everyone has plenty to eat, towns
are secure, there are medical professionals again, and the time in which
a normal economy is emerging with a currency and a governing body to
serve the people. This is the goal that everyone that is involved in The
Collapse should be working for.
The questions that we should be asking ourselves is this “Am I prepared to deal with these situations, and what can I do to be better prepared?”.
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