Thursday, May 30, 2019

Learn a little about Bug Out Bags

 5 Supermarket Items That Sell Out Instantly in a Crisis


 Let’s look into a worst-case scenario!

 Disaster preparedness can be a
difficult topic to explore, but it can also be very
empowering once you start to take action.

In this and the next few newsletters, we are going to dig
deeper into the prepping mindset and look at the specific
items you will need to buy now before it's too late.

But before you go any further, I implore you to check out
this short (and jaw-dropping) video that will show you
exactly how quickly essential items will sell out
following any crisis.

This is scary stuff, but you need to understand it to
survive when all hell breaks loose.

We are starting today with the top five grocery items that
you can't keep putting off.

These are the items that sell out instantly in a crisis,
and if you wait until you know that a crisis is coming,
chances are that you will find the shelves bare.

Remember, though, that these items alone will not get you
through every emergency situation. They are simply the
items people who do not prep will desperately want.

They are also items that you can forego in certain
situations if you decide to prepare differently. We will
talk a little bit about that too.

Even if you ultimately decide to do things differently,
understanding this list will make you a better prepper
because you will better understand your needs.

Let's get started!

1. Bottled water

Most people can survive for three weeks without food. But
go for three days without water and you'll be, generally
speaking, dead.

In our day-to-day lives, we don't often have to stop and
consider water. It's just there in the tap, all day every
day. It's cheap, and it is abundant. Not to mention it's
clean.

It doesn't take much for the water supply of an entire
city to spoil, however.

A flash flood or a hurricane can drive all sorts of
impurities into the water, and there's no telling the
catastrophic chemical damage an industrial accident could
do.

Did you know that the World Health Organization recommends
5 gallons of water per day per person? If it's shocking
to read now, just imagine only learning this when the
supply runs dry!

That is just for drinking and the very most basic hygiene.
If you hope to cook food, wash more thoroughly,
or do laundry, that number multiplies.

That is why water is the first thing that supermarkets run
out of when shit hits the fan. And that is why you need to
keep a significant supply of water.

It doesn't have to be the pre-bottled stuff. If you prefer
to buy food-grade containers and fill them with your own
water, that works just as well. But you will need water
and plenty of it.

2. Canned foods

Upon hearing warnings about impending doom, most people
will immediately think of canned foods. Why?

While it is quite possible to prep without any canned
foods at all, for example, using only dried foods or army
rations, most preppers like to stock canned food.

Canned food is brilliant for survival. It has a very long
shelf-life is easy to store and can be eaten cold and
uncooked if need be.

It is also possible to store canned foods without
subjecting your family to the toxic coatings found inside
these metal canisters, but it is more work.

To avoid those toxins, you would have to buy food canned
in glass or to can food yourself.

Remember that even canned food has an expiration date, and
be sure to buy things that your family is willing to eat.

Ten containers of the corned beef hash will do you no good if
you can't stand the stuff!

3. No-prep-necessary dry foods

In those relatively short-term emergencies, in particular
those deriving from extreme weather, dry ready-to-eat
foodstuffs disappear from the supermarket shelves in no
time.

Foods in this category would at any other time just be
considered snacks. In a crisis, however, they get promoted
to a full meal since they require no cooking or special
storage, such as a refrigerator.

This includes biscuits, crisp bread, dried nuts, rusks,
crackers, muesli bars, trail mix, and shortbread.

You may also include in this category those vacuum-packed
cakes and muffins which have hardly a natural ingredient
in them yet an astonishing shelf-life.

The reason that people run out and buy this is because
they aren't preppers. When unfortunate things happen, they
don't have the tools to cook or heat food.

You, on the other hand, are a prepper. You do not strictly
speaking need to survive on potato chips and the kind of
"blueberry" muffins without a single blueberry in them.

If you want to, though, go ahead and stock up on some of
these things anyway. Little snacks go a long way toward
raising spirits and providing an energy boost.


* Bread

Bread and all of its relatives, from humble hamburger buns
to fancy croissants, are quick to sell out for the same
reason that dry ready-to-eat snacks are.

Although its shelf-life is often quite short, bread needs
no preparation and offers a lot of energy. White bread in
particular doesn't provide much in the way of nutrients,
but that doesn't matter much in a crisis.

Bread is great if you have no other food storage and no
way of preparing food, but the average prepper won't need
to run out and buy bread.

And given its short shelf-life, there is no real reason to
stock bread either.

* Beer

Given that it is essentially liquid bread, it is quite
appropriate that beer flies off the shelves in any
emergency.

Beer contains plenty of calories, making it very easy to
stock up on energy by drinking a few bottles.

On the other hand, alcohol makes you drowsy so if you
were hoping to actually feel more energized, you had
better stick to light beer.

The real reason that people stock beer in a crisis
probably has more to do with comfort than calories. If
that's something you sympathize with, by all means stock
beer!

Even if you don't drink much beer yourself, beer is
excellent for bartering with your neighbors for other
valuable goods.

Now that you know what you'll need to buy to keep your
belly full in an empty-shelves situation, in the next
post we'll look at the strategies you can use to




Thursday, May 23, 2019


Supermarket Shortages


Make no mistake, shortages come about very quickly when an
emergency looms on the horizon.

Most people aren't preppers. As a result, they are not
equipped with the tools to handle most emergency
situations. When one arises, they panic.

That panic generally translates into fleeing or shopping.
Not leisurely shopping, of course, but intense, highly
focused sprees with the intent to grab whatever might be
needed to get through declining circumstances.

But regardless of what they do in the aftermath, non-
preppers are exposing themselves to situations where they
might be out of electricity, heat or water, and they
won't be set up to handle that.

When the news breaks, they flood the supermarket aisles,
leaving the shelves empty of anything that could possibly
be useful to you and your family in the coming crisis.


Are you equipped to handle an emergency scenario, or will
you be amongst those who feel the panic mounting as you
find shelf after shelf bare?

If you think that you might be one of those unprepared
persons, make a choice today to change.

Choose not to be part of the panicked masses.

Prepping is not just for people in tin foil hats and
bunkers, hiding from the government, aliens, communists
and zombies.

Prepping is for everyone who doesn't want to be left
standing in an empty supermarket with no way to feed a
family if the electricity goes out in the coming storm.

Prepping is for everyone who want to stay comfortable and
in good spirits through five days of being snowed in.

Prepping is for everyone who doesn't want to risk not
getting their child or spouse to the hospital soon enough
because of a sudden allergic reaction.

And, seeing as you've signed up for this newsletter,
chances are that prepping seems right to you.

* If you were a prepper...

What would a crisis look like?

Instead of rushing to the supermarket in the face of an
emergency scenario, you would be focusing on "bugging in,"
a survivalist term meaning to shelter in place.

Instead of shopping, you would be breaking out your heat
and light sources, your cooking equipment, your food and
your hygiene supplies, and you would be securing your
property to minimize damage.

Or maybe you would have a dedicated plan in place, meaning
that you weren't forced to stay and weather the storm.
Instead you would "bug out," meaning to shelter elsewhere.

Instead of shopping, you would grab your bug-out bag, put
your family in the car, and drive to a safe location.

And if you had to stop on the way, it wouldn't matter that
all hotel rooms are already taken because you'd have a
comfortable tent, a seasonal sleeping bag and food to
keep you going.

* If you aren't a prepper...

How differently could this scenario play out?

I'm not here to make you feel bad, or scare you for no
reason, but I want you to think about what would happen if
you got to the supermarket to find there was no food left.

You know that extreme weather is coming. You might be out
of heat. You might be out of electricity. Your gas supply
will be cut off. The water mains may be polluted.

The supermarket is out of bread, crackers and canned
foods. Everything available will have to be cooked
somehow. The looters have taken everything down to the
last package of hot dog buns.

The aisles are all out of water, milk, juice, beer and
carbonated beverages. Even expired items are becoming a
hot commodity.

There are no candles and no lamp oil. The flashlights are
gone, but that doesn't matter much since so are the last
of the batteries.

If stores had once stocked blankets and camping gear,
there is no sign of that now.

Where do you go from here? What about children? And pets?

When you prep, you ask these questions while life is still
comfortable so that you never have to live through that
panic and fear.

* How to get started

So, you want to be prepared, but you don't know where to
start?

There are many strategies to prepping. Stay with us, and
we will discuss a few of them in the coming posts.

But if you are impatient to get started - and who wouldn't
be? - best begin with the basics. Start by making a list
of who you are prepping for.

It's such a simple thing, but many people overlook this
step. Instead of making sure that they have supplies for
all family members and pets, they wing it. Preppers never
wing it; preppers consider all the details.

Now that you have a list of all the people, and pets, you
will be prepping for, start with the easy everyday things.

Do you have a sufficient first-aid kit? Does it really
cover all of your bases? Is there enough for the amount of
people in your household? Do you lack pet-specific health
care items?

What about a brief heating failure on a cold day? Do you
have enough extra blankets to keep all of your family
members warm throughout the night?

What about your car? Is there a small but mighty first-aid
kit in there? Are there warm clothes or rain ponchos for
everyone in case of a breakdown in bad weather?