YOU ONLY LIVE ONCE...MAYBE TWICE!
It may seem like Monday morning quarterbacking, but we want everyone to think about what happened recently in the SE United States to prepare. When you prepare and plan ahead you limit the number of bad things that can happen to you and your family when a major storm or event hits your area.
The Urban Survival Center sent out an email prior to the storm reminding everyone to be prepared, but we know that everyone is very busy and the email was easy to over look or not read immediately. So we thought we would cover the topic in a little more detail and provide some information you may find helpful.
There have been two major winter storms over the past few weeks that created tremendous problems in the eastern United States. Even those living in Florida were affected by the cold, freezing rain and some snow. In each of these storms people were trapped in their cars for hours. In some cases, it took people almost 18 hours to transverse what was a 1 hour drive under normal circumstances. It was amazing to me how many people blamed the government for the travel problems and yet they showed no signs they were any better prepared for the winter storm.
There are many things you can so to prevent yourself from suffering when these winter storms occur. As with all prevention methods, planning is the key to success.
Thus, the first step is to have a Get Home Plan.
Listed below are five vital elements of being prepared for a natural disaster or storm. Naturally, this is an abbreviated version, but the key topics are covered.
1. If you feel there is an impending storm, whether a winter or summer storm. Especially, if the weather sources are warning of a potentially dangerous situation in the near future. Thus, you have several days notice of the impending event. Then do not go out . Stay home and hunker down. This includes weather systems like severe thunderstorms, hurricanes, winter snow storms and ice storms.
2. If you do need to go out to work, school or for any reason then you need a Get Home Plan. As mentioned, in my article on Urban Survival, you should have several safe havens . Thus, as part of a good plan you should have access to several safe havens.
This means you and your family need to know the locations they can go to for safe haven. Whether it is your mom and dad’s house, brother or sister’s place, your office or even a friend’s home. These are locations that you have the key and permission to enter during times of emergency. This also makes it easier for family members to locate each other.
3. you need to communicate with your family. It is imperative, that you let them know where you are and your plans. This is vital. The extra strain of a family worrying and even taking the chances of going out and looking for you, places more people at risks.
4. If you get upset about your situation, then you will make bad decisions. It is very important in these untoward situations that you do your best to remain relaxed and think about your actions. For example, in the most recent storm in Atlanta, it took many people extended hours to travel very short distances. That can be very frustrating and cause you to be hurried and anxious. All which can lead to distractions and cause you to make incorrect decisions.
5. Finally, you need to have a Get Home Bag in every vehicle. This is essential to your safety in a natural disaster or storm, in particular when you might be trapped in your vehicle for an extended period of time.
Your Get Home bag can be a backpack, duffel bag or an overhead luggage case. It should be a container you can easily wear or carry if you need to be mobile. These all can be placed in the truck of your vehicle.
For your convenience I have listed the twenty essential contents of you Get Home Bag.
1. Season appropriate clothing including shirt, sweater, pants, socks
2. Work gloves
3. Plastic rain poncho
5. Hat
6. Sunglasses
7. Rope 50ft
9. Compass/GPS/Local map
10. Flashlight with extra batteries
11. Lighter
12. Water/Gatorade/Juice x3
13. Snacks/Candy bars/Gum
14. Knife
15. Multitool
16. Prepaid credit card($100)/Cash ($50)
17. Personal Protection supplies
18. Two days of medications
19. Toilet paper
20. Wet wipes
We hope this information will be of value to you and help you avoid being caught unprepared in an incidence like this again.
The best to all of you and be safe,
Tags:
Actually guys ... you don't need any of these, is your home you'll find what you'll need, anyway . You'll not live your life there right? You''ll need only a knife, which you can find in your house, some food, from your house too, and some clothes that you can move freely, again, from your home . You need to go out there and search for survivor,weapons and etc, not do die in your house ;) . I know that sounds crazy, but that's the reality, you will be forced to do that, you can't stay in your house forever ... ;)
the plan is not to so much stay in the house forever. that is a death sentence. but the communication helps in case its needed. and if you do jam. your gonna need more then a blade. your gonna need other things then just some food and clothing from ones own home. you have to think in the long run. and some of this stuff you need to get in advance because the looters and last minute raiders will be grabbing at random. so when you leave. you will find tons of survivors. but weapons and other things needed will be hard to find if not non existent all together. but i do understand where you are coming from.
dude the idea is to have what you need to get home to your main supply's and bug out bag. what if your away from your house when the dead start to rise. at work or what ever. and unless your fucking Dave Canterbury, you aint gonna last long with only a knife some food and sweats. you didn't even mention water or a way to purify it. or a way to start a fire so you can cook that food and stay warm, and not die of hypothermia. what about a compass so you know where the hell your going. it takes a lot to survive, right now it takes millions of people all over the world growing your food, making your heat. telling you where to go and how to get there all while keeping you safe. and after the world ends all of that then falls on you. survival aint easy so if you hope to do it you better be getting prepared now.
I know where you guys want to get, what I wanted to say is that you need a start from where you can go and either leave, if you know what I mean, if you stay to organize all kinds of luggage and supplies, how much time you think that will be until they finish? And eventually you'll be forced to go out and look for other supplies and especially survivors, don't tell me that you will be forced to carry for you a huge backpack filled with 100 things you do not ever get to use them and lose them at some point . You don't need a list with things you will need, if you are prepared, well that's very good, but be smart prepared ;) . Anyway, excuse my english, I am from a different country with different language, so it's pretty hard for me :D
Great list I need to get my stockpile up Komradz.
Note the difference between a Get Home Bag vs a Bug Out Bag. A Bug Out Bag is a full size backpack a lot bigger than a Get Home Bag. A Bug Out Bag can typically carry enough goods to survive for a week or more in the wilderness, and could weigh fully packed anywhere from 60 - 100 pounds.
The focus of this article is on a three-day Get Home Bag, one you'll carry in the trunk of your car or keep in your office or apartment in the city, as well as one you should consider giving to your children and even your elderly parents.
Compared to a Bug Out Bag, a Get Home Bag is much smaller, light weight, and will allow you to evacuate an area and not slow you down. The Get Home Bag is made for people who need to get somewhere in a hurry and want to make do with the least amount of supplies as possible.
"Bug Out Bag" has it's word origins in the military. It's a term originally used to describe a bag carried by pilots that contained food, water, and supplies to keep them alive should they crash, especially behind enemy lines.
Like the original use of the term Bug Out Bag, having a Get Home Bag means you're ready to flee at a moments notice and won't be empty handed, having food and water and essential survival supplies to last you the next 3 days, at the minimum.
If you're serious about survival, and serious about being ready for disaster, why not take your Get Home Bag the extra mile -- take a lesson from modern day mountain climbers as well as elite special forces from around the world and make a few modifications to it.
Every item in your Get Home Bag must have an important use -- if it doesn't have an important use, don't bring it. You can quickly pack too many items in your Get Home Bag, some of it you may never actually use, or perhaps don't even need to bring when you can make the tools you need out of items in your environment.
That handy folding shovel that weighs 10 pounds -- that's 10 pounds of dead weight on an already over-loaded back pack. You don't need the folding shovel -- learn how to make a shovel out of a sharp rock or tree limb or hub-cap right off a car.
About that rock, tree limb or hub-cap -- go practice digging (don't just not pack a shovel) and trying different size rocks with different edges as well as different size branches (break them down to smaller pieces). Get a feel for how these things can be used to dig dirt -- you'll get an idea of what a good rock or tree branch looks like (or hub-cap) and you'll have experience actually knowing how to dig with something other than a shovel.
Mountain climbers, especially those going on multi-day hikes covering vast distances, have learned to pack lightly -- but not sacrificing quality for the lighter-weight. The last thing you want to have happen is an essential piece of survival equipment breaking on you / falling apart in route.
If you have the time and initiative to put together a Get Home Bag consider the weight of every item and then figure out how to find the lightest or smallest item that will perform the same job. Think like a survivalist.
For example, a hatchet is a nice tool ... but you're not going camping. You can simply break tree limbs, you don't need to chop them down, and you don't need to chop firewood. Instead of a hatchet consider a small folding saw (of good quality) that backpackers carry. This thing weighs a 1/3 of what the hatchet weighs (plus it makes a lot less noise when it's being used -- if you're concerned about alerting people to your location then you don't want to bring anything that makes noise).
These are just suggestions. If you love your hatchet, hold on to it. I'm just giving examples of where you can really trim down on weight to the bare essentials and make do with improvised tools in your environment.
The weekend-warrior from Suburbia, USA is likely to have one of everything. The experienced mountain-man or previous century Native American who lives off the land is going to carry less and be able to do more with it. Make it a goal to become a lot more like that Native American or Mountain Man and able to make do with less.
First, let's talk about your camp stove. A typical camp stove calls for bottled propane -- too large an item typically to pack in your Get Home Bag. Here's a better idea:
Check out Solo Stove. Solo Stove is a small, specialized wood-burning camp stove that is compact, light in weight, and useful in just about any environment. It burns a small fire within the stove and the way the stove is constructed (the shape of a medium sized coffee can) it focuses heat on a small area where the top opens, allowing food over the flame to cook quickly, or water in a small pot to come to a quick boil.
How easy is it to get a fire going in a Solo Stove?
That depends on how good you are with a lighter (or wooden matches) and getting a fire started out of dry (or even damp) tinder. This is Camping 101 we're talking about and something even a child can light a fire in safely. (A Solo Stove should make any Cub Scout or Boy Scout's birthday wish list for the outdoors. It's a proven survival tool for both kids and adults alike.)
To aid with fire starting, your Get Home Bag should have a few Bic lighters.
Bic Lighters are small, efficient, light weight, and it would be smart to have more than one. I suggest you pack 5 -- keep 3 in your pack and two in your pants pockets (that way, if you have to make a run for it at any point, and you are separated from your backpack, you will still have two Bic lighters on you as back up).
Why a Bic lighter? The fact is you don't have to be a Bear Grylls and work yourself into a frenzy trying to get wet tinder started with your bare hands using only a primitive bow drill. Starting a fire from scratch is a great skill to know but it takes a ton of practice, and then it's still not guaranteed -- especially in a wet climate. Your lighters are a constant source of fire. Protect them. Care for them. Carry several into the backcountry, keep a few in your home and in your vehicle. Not only will you have more than one as back up, but you can also pass out a few extras to anyone else in need of a fire source (which, in a major disaster, could be several people you come across).
In addition to including 5 Bic lighters, be sure to pack an emergency candle ("emergency" rated candles burn longer than normal candles) such as this 55 hour emergency candle made by Sterno.
Not only can you use a reliable emergency candle as a light source -- within a small, enclosed shelter an emergency candle also gives off heat (be sure to leave a small opening at the top of your shelter for candle smoke to escape from). BE VERY CAREFUL with your candle placement so that you don't knock it over and set your shelter on fire while you sleep. Placing this candle in a small coffee can and or just setting several rocks around it can do the trick.
You can also use your candle use as a fire-starter: I've discussed this in other articles: placing a lit candle under your damp tinder is a great way to get your damp tinder to eventually start burning. Be sure to pull the candle away before the heat from the burning tinder melts the top of your candle (so keep the tinder at a distance even if you have to build an elevated platform to start your fire). You can get the next 20-30 fires going with just one good long burning emergency candle.
What to do: Create a small pyramid of rocks and or wood that enables you to set your damp (or dry if you have it) tinder above the lit candle. Once the tinder bundle is lit, transfer it to a larger area of tinder and kindling and you should have a roaring fire going in no time.
We've covered fire -- which means that light, heat and cooking are accounted for.
Now, let's look at water -- water for drinking.
Consider a stainless steel water container (water bottle) for water. Make that two stainless steel water bottles, the ones I'm recommending aren't that big. You can easily boil water in one of these bottles and not risk melting it as can happen easily with a plastic or aluminum bottle. The choices for what is safe for high heat are limited though. Some have plastic liners which means you can't boil water or you're going to leach plastic liner right into your water when it melts.
Check out Klean Kanteen Stainless Steel Water Bottle (consider the 40oz size, which is largest, and that means you can carry more purified water at any given time). With some light-weight metal wire you can hang it over a fire - you don't need a grill to stand it on (a grill is another item you don't need in your Get Home Bag). (Note: Do not boil water in a Klean Kanteen with an insulated design. Only boil water in the simpler models that specify in the product description (see link) that it's safe to put over a flame. Always take the cap off first. It's plastic and might melt from the high heat, plus the steam from boiling water may cause it to simply break apart.)
Most areas people are going to flee to are near a body of water, such as lakes, creeks, and rivers. If that's the case, you may simply want a backcountry water filter like a Lifestraw rather than loading up with a ton of water before hand.
With a backcountry water filter you won't need to carry as much water in your Get Home Bag, because you can quickly pump water through your filter right out of a stream or lake and fill up your water bottles as they empty.
In addition to your stainless steel water bottle, pack a large empty jug or 96 ounce Nalgene bag (which you can use to carry water that has not been boiled or filtered yet and then only use as needed later in the day).
Next, we need to look at food, clothing, shelter, maps, communications, self-defense, artificial light, and first aid.
That's a lot for one small backpack.
Now you understand the challenge to putting together a great Get Home Bag and why items such as weight and quality and necessity are all important to consider when creating a Get Home Bag.
So you've packed food for 3 days. Good job. Now guess what? With some new eating habits you can make that food last 6 days. It's time to start cutting calorie intake. Not what you wanted to hear? This is survival. People are dying. Your life is in danger. It's time to come out of your comfort zone and push yourself to new limits. Most Americans love their food. Most eat too much. The fact is, you can comfortably survive on a fraction of what the typical American eats on a daily basis. You'll be healthier, you'll live longer, and you'll be a lot quicker on your feet if you're not packing extra pounds.
If you're a typical American eating the typical American diet then it's time to learn how to live off a lot less calories.
If you don't learn how to eat a calorie restricted diet now it's going to make a survival situation a lot more traumatic than it has to be. Start teaching yourself how to fast from foods (fasting means to go without food completely). Don't swear off food completely -- begin with a partial fast (which is advised if you're new to fasting). Over time condition yourself to go without food for up to 3 days (that way you'll also know what it feels like and having experienced it you won't be in for such a shock if you ever have to go without food for a lengthy period of time). Remember, humans can go without food for up to 8 weeks. Yes, you'll be skin and bones by the end of those 8 weeks but it's a reminder that you're not going to die of starvation in the early days of survival when you start restricting your calories to make your 72 hour supply of food last a few days longer. Make sense?
Considering this is a Get Home Bag and it's main purpose is to get you out of the danger zone in the first 72 hours of a widespread disaster.
I'm going to make choosing your survival foods really simple by recommending standard trail-mix, natural beef jerky, and shelled sunflower seeds or another nut like almonds or pistachios. Each is light weight and has a decent shelf-life. Throw a couple chocolate bars in there as a morale booster. Fact is, this will easily get you by for three days, if you have just enough. If you're more health conscious, then go for the energy bars. Either way, you're only surviving off this food for a short term; when you pack your Bug Out Bag (which is a lot bigger than a Get Home Bag) that's when you should pay a lot more attention to nutritional content of food items.
What about packing coffee in your Get Home Bag? If you're a coffee drinker like a lot of people in the world I recommend some caffeine pills. You don't need to bring an entire bottle. Throw 30 pills in a Zip-Loc bag and you'll take up very little space in your Get Home Bag. One thing that's going to happen when you start cutting calories is you may find yourself a bit tired -- especially if you're not used to cutting calories. The caffeine pills will be a boost of energy and another morale booster for your life in the days following disaster. Realize this: There's a good chance you may be short on sleep or even having to walk, run, or hideout and unable to go without sleep during the entire ordeal. Caffeine can help you stay awake when you need to stay awake.
If you're in the city when disaster hits, or heading home from work, or anywhere, there's a chance you're going to be wearing clothing that you wouldn't wear out in the weather. If you're not in immediate danger take a few moments to strip out of the clothes you're wearing and put on the clothing you'll have packed in your Get Home Bag. Please note -- you don't need to have a change of clothing for every day you're on the run. Be ready to spend the next two weeks in the same set of clothes if you have to. Often soldiers on mission, deep in the jungle or forest and behind enemy lines during wartime can go without a change of clothes for several days at a time.
At most you'll only have two outfits, two sets of underwear, two pairs of socks -- the reason for having two outfits is so that everything can be layered in case of cold temperatures the first few days of a disaster. Finally, you'll have rain gear (pants and jacket) to wear over the top of everything.
A summary of essential clothing to include: Wool socks, wool cap, waterproof jacket with hood, rugged work gloves, cold weather work gloves, and base layer long underwear (the type made specifically for the cold from materials other than cotton -- cotton is a bad choice for cold weather -- cotton retains moisture, and in the cold that can kill you); also on this list I recommend pants to wear over your base layer long underwear, and then also rain pants to wear as a third layer to combat cold temperatures, chilly nights, and of course rainy weather.
Note: Rain pants typically make loud noises, crinkle, pop, and swish when you wear them. Nowadays manufacturers of hunting gear are making rain pants with a fabric on top so they're a lot quieter; consider going with one of these brands or simply wear some nylon workout pants over the top of your rain pants and that will eliminate the swishing noise as well.
If your Get Home Bag is stored in your trunk, you can also have a good pair of high top tennis shoes (cross trainers with thick tread patterns for dirt) that may do you better than traditional trail hikers next to it. With tennis shoes you can run faster, climb fences easier, and you have less danger of your shoes coming untied when you have to make a run for it. Most boots don't have typical eye holes for shoe laces near the top, like tennis shoes. Go with the high top tennis shoes and you should get the same "high top" protection for your ankle as you would with the hiking boots. One area where hiking boots can have tennis shoes beat is that some makes are waterproof, and some do lace up through eye holes all the way to the top of the boot: Combat boots. They can also hold up better after long durations of travel on foot and make it easier to carry a heavy load over long distances (make sure to break in your boots well before hand to help avoid getting blisters).
Depending on the climate of the area you live, if there's rain, mud, sewage (yes, sewage, which can contaminate an area after a disaster strikes), shallow streams, or river banks, you may do a lot better with the waterproof boots.
Note: If there's any chance you'll be in a wet environment, it's a good idea to learn how how to care for your feet. In a wet environment there's a danger of "trench foot" taking place when you wear shoes or boots in wet conditions for an extended period of time. (Here's how to help avoid trench foot).
This is a Get Home Bag. By definition it's too small to carry a shelter, such as a tent. If you want to be a survivor and make do with a Get Home Bag you're going to have to rely on actual survival skills and build your shelter along the way.
The good news -- shelter building isn't that difficult. Not when there are abandoned cars and trucks you can sleep in, or when you can come across shelter-making materials either in an area devastated by a natural disaster, or in the woods, where you can build yourself a simple lean-to out of tree branches, or find a place to bed down under a fallen tree, a stump, or a small cave. What you can have in your Get Home Bag is both a medium sized tarp folded up to take very little space and also 2 or 3 large heavy duty 55 gallon garbage bags -- check your local hardware store. These bags are a lot bigger than household garbage bags, a lot stronger, and make a great instant shelter. If you happen to have dry leaves or grass handy fill the bag and use both as insulation. Crawl inside and bed down for the night. But before you do that, cut a hole in the top of one of the other contractor bags and put it over your head like a poncho. You'll have your feet in one bag, and your torso in the other. Other than your head, the rest of your body will be completely covered. Which only leaves your head... That brings us to...
Mosquitos, ticks, and other biting insects are common at different times of the years and in different regions. Mosquito netting is compact, extremely light-weight, and takes up very, very little space. It's a great add-on to your Bug Out Bag and an item overlooked by a lot of people. I gave mosquito netting a go in recent years and it was a life-saver in sweltering heat on multiple occasions, giving me relief from biting mosquitoes while sleeping outdoors.
You can buy mosquito netting cheaply by the yard and then with just some duct tape and scissors cut it into custom lengths for however you need to use it. Let's say you bed down in a car or truck, but it's 90 degrees out and the dead of summer. Role the windows down and tape up mosquito netting so you don't die of heat stroke in the hot vehicle. Or lets say you're in the forest, under a fallen tree, and bedding down in a large garbage bag as described in a previous paragraph. Your head will be exposed so build yourself a custom "mosquito hood" (again out of duct tape and a section of mosquito netting) and wear it over your head. You can sleep exposed to the elements without getting bitten by bugs. Of course just purchasing a mosquito head net is an easier way to go about this.
Considering the maps for a Get Home Bag, your chief need for these maps is for evacuation purposes using little known roads, urban and backcountry trails and even railroad tracks or routes that travel under powerlines. Should disaster strike and you need to flee the area, you'll want a map that details city and county streets, as well as a map that details gravel roads and outlying forest service roads (a lot of times these are gravel roads and sometimes gated -- which may mean that if you're able to make your escape by car you may have to turn around after a long drive down a forest service road if you come to a gate unexpectedly). Get to know your forest service roads well in advance. Check with the forest service about which roads are gated, which roads are washed out by floods (if any), and even which roads follow rivers and make their way completely through and over the mountains (or desert or prairie or grassland, etc).
Finally, you'll want an up to date map that details actual trails, as well as records elevation changes in the terrain. Fact is, if there are other people who will be making the escape with you, you're going to want to study your maps and choose the easiest trail rather than choosing a trail that may be more popular with mountain climbers. Your goal isn't to climb to the highest peak. Your goal is to get you, your family, your friends safely out of the area as quickly as possible, knowing that many of them may not be cut out for a long hike up and over a steep mountain. If you can find a route that skirts a mountain (rather than climbs it) and makes its way through a valley, it's likely to be a much easier hike, especially if you and your party are carrying excess gear.
You don't need the "ultimate" survival compass in your Get Home Bag, whatever that is. You just need a simple compass and some experience using it. That can't be said enough. Plus, you need to be sure that your compass has been tested in the field and works ok and can stand up to being shaken around in your bag. Don't spend a fortune but also don't be cheap here. You may think that you've got everything under control just by knowing how to read your maps; but if something unforeseen takes place and you have to veer off course, crossing farmland on foot, or even attempting to short cut your way through the woods, before you know it you can lose all sense of direction and find yourself lost and many miles off course. With experience using a compass correctly to get your bearings you can stay on course -- follow your route on your map -- even if you have to go off road and possibly even off trail. Once off trail you'll appreciate having a map of the terrain (mentioned above) because if you look at the elevation changes it will also help you monitor your course by comparing the elevation changes on the map by what's around you. Your compass and that map of elevation changes will be your best friend, after God that is.
In a widespread disaster there's a high probability that internet, land-line phones, and cell phones are all going to be knocked out. We may be able to pick up AM-FM radio signals though and at least get news on just how bad the disaster is and if and when it's safe to return to a particular area.
An AM-FM radio is good for one thing: to bring you the news as it's happening. Specifically look for an emergency radio that's going to carry several news and weather stations simply because bad weather may be what's in store, especially if major storms are striking and if any sub-zero cold temperatures are coming your way. You'll want to prepare your shelter for a freezing night in advance, rather than have to suffer an uncomfortable night in the cold.
In a worst case scenario, what if the news you're looking for pertains to a nuclear attack somewhere in the region? News stations may tell you what direction the winds are blowing so you know which way not to flee so as to avoid nuclear ash and radiation being carried by any strong winds.
The radio at this link has both a hand-crank and rechargeable battery. That means that you re-charge the battery with the hand-crank and never need electricity or a back-up battery. It is also a two-way radio, which means you can communicate with others on many different frequencies.
Sam Coffman, Army Green Beret and survival instructor at TheHumanPath.com, suggests:
"The best advice for a Get Home Bag where we are considering the car as a part of the overall gear we can use, is a CB radio. Yes, shortwave and Marine Band have a greater range. CB is limited to 4 watts (or effectively a little more than twice that using single side band technology). However, in terms of 'Get Home' practicality, installing a CB radio in your car is a very simple, affordable thing to do, and can give you more than line-of-sight depending on the time of day/night and the current solar flare cycle. Right now, we are in a peak time of the 11-year solar flare cycle, which means it is possible to 'shoot skip' much further than line of sight at times since the CB operates across 40 channels in the 27 MHz band. This is the upper portion of High Frequency, and for a 12V powered system that is working on channels that truckers and other people on the road are on, this is not necessarily a bad choice for a 'Get Home' plan. Additionally, you can easily invest in a good CB antenna which will boost your practical line of sight.
While HAM (amateur) radio is undeniably a must-have for the post-disaster, serious prepper, CB is a cheap, easy and quick method of 2-way radio communication that can at least be in the car to help you find out what else may be happening on the road, or listen in on conversations that may have been relayed from further away, even."
What if you have to abandon your car due to the condition of the roads? Remove the CB radio from the car, take the antennae, and stash the entire system in your Get Home Bag. You can set it up in another vehicle later in your trip.
This is a small light weight device that boosts the range of your cell phone. While there's a good chance that cell phone service will be down in several regions in the event of catastrophe, there's also the chance that for the first few hours and possibly days of the disaster some cell phone networks will still work. If you evacuate an area on short notice you can quickly be out of cell phone range and your phone is useless. With a good cell phone booster though (one highly rated and proven to work well many miles from a cellular tower) you may still be able to send and receive calls, or even just text messages if you're really far out. (Please note: Even if you can't send or receive a call due to a poor signal, you may still be able to send and receive text messages just fine.) Buy a cell phone booster that can be used in both a vehicle's cigarette lighter as well as an electrical outlet inside a home or building or even from a generator (fuel powered generators have electrical outlets for plug in devices -- generators can be found in hardware stores, industrial shops, and construction sites across America).
Your extra pants packed inside your Get Home Bag can be turned into additional storage compartments. This calls for carrying paracord or just string in your pack. Lay your pants out flat and then tie the bottom of each pant leg with string. Now, to make room in your backpack, remove your clothing items -- as clothing would be best for packing inside your pants -- and stuff down into each leg hole. As a last step, run more string through the belt loops at the top of your pants "bag" and cinch tight and tie a good knot. It's not going to look pretty but at the least you just created a secondary bag for carrying supplies. Tie it to the top of your backpack, so it hangs off the back.
This one's really easy. Pack a small headlamp, which is a type of flashlight traditionally worn by coal-miners and underground explorers but nowadays available in most sporting goods stores that sell camping / hiking equipment. With a headlamp your hands are free -- making travel through the darkness easier. (Be sure to pack a few extra batteries for each headlamp.)
Save room in your Get Home Bag and only bring the necessities, and don't bring the plastic bin that store bought first-aid kits typically come in. Get rid of the bin and pack your first-aid items in a Zip-Loc freezer bag or other small waterproof container.
Pack Ibuprofen -- Ibuprofen brings down fevers (though not everyone can take it); in the case of illness or infection, it's a band-aid that may buy you a couple more days when antibiotics are needed. Pack multiple size bandages for mid-size cuts to severe lacerations; adhesive tape to keep these bandages in place; also include self-adherent wrap, which may work even better than adhesive tape as it's flexible and allows movement; cloth wrap commonly used for sprains; finally, pack antibiotic ointment, anti-itch ointment for bites and stings, and include something for wound-cleansing and disinfecting.
Surprisingly things like hydrogen peroxide, rubbing alcohol, and iodine are not the best items to include, they are said to hurt cells when used in cuts and impede healing. See this article. It turns out that clean water is the best way to cleanse a wound, then apply first-aid ointment such as Neosporin, then your bandage. What if there's no clean water? Go with the rubbing alcohol. Rubbing alcohol -- though not the best choice for wound cleaning as it can damage cells -- will still cleanse the wound of bacteria when no clean water is available. Rubbing alcohol is commonly used in hospitals to clean the skin prior to any needle puncture as well as to sterilize medical equipment and even for tick removal.
First-aid in a disaster can take on many shapes -- for people badly injured you simply won't have most items needed in a Get Home Bag. Instead have a knowledge of emergency medical care for a disaster: Know how to tie a tourniquet to stop the bleeding when an artery has been cut, how to make a make-shift splint or sling for broken limbs, know when an injured person is safe to be moved, and what kind of injury may be too dangerous for moving a person, such as a broken back or broken neck.
You may come across wildlife or loose, dangerous dogs that now pose a danger as well as crooks with bad intentions. You're on a Christian website and we encourage people to grow in their faith in God and seek his hand of protection on your life -- you don't need to carry any weapons if God is going before you. But if faith in God is not your thing quite yet, or if God is leading you to arm up for a specific purpose he has in mind, then do what it is you've been called to do.
In your Get Home Bag pack a reputable handgun and of course a concealed carry license. This handgun is a last resort when threats are closing in and it's the only way out. Learn how to shoot, how to re-load in a hurry, and how to care for your weapon.
An important question to ask yourself is this: In the heat of the moment, will you keep your wits about you and even be able to get to your gun in time to make a difference? This is where law enforcement and veteran military have an advantage over the average citizen who hasn't been through psychologically challenging situations when it comes to firearms. A good course on firearms as self defense can help you through that learning curve and be more ready for firearm self defense should you ever need it (and one day you just might).
Now let's talk about your knife: In a Get Home Bag, a big, bad Rambo style survival knife can have it's place, especially if you have to pass through an area of a city where rioting and looting is taking place. Keep it tucked away and only use it as a last resort. Held in an aggressive and threatening manner, a bowie knife (as more commonly called) can scare away crooks and would-be rapists. For actual usefulness though, keep a second, smaller survival knife on hand.
Unless you're retired, or you work from home, or you're disabled and rarely leave your home or apartment, there's a good chance you and the people you love are going to be away from home when disaster strikes. People go to work. People go to school. Children go to child care. Etc. That is exactly when a major event or disaster may take place and a chief reason why each person should consider a good Get Home Bag to help get each person by for the next few hours or in a worst case scenario, a few days. Food, water, and medicine may be in short supply in a region that has been struck by a disaster.
Each person's Get Home Bag should have the bare essentials as gone over above and include things like extra medicine and an extra pair of eye glasses should a person need prescription medicine for health purposes or glasses to see.
Your children should have emergency information in a waterproof container and kept inside their backpacks with instructions on what they should do in the event of a catastrophic disaster. In the event of emergency, children should stay where they are, if they have that option -- school or child care for example -- because you can go to them easier than they can go to you.
So, have a plan, and don't be afraid to bring it up in conversation.
It's an important topic and each person in your family should be on the same page
there are alot of ways to approach this problem, and there isn't a standard set of items that are set in stone due to the needs of every individual being different based on their experience, location and more importantly, lack of experience.
I am an actual prepper, not a dreamer. And the #1 thing i always encounter on websites like these are people who can't tell the difference, and put way too much faith in their "dreaming" capabilities than in what they can ACTUALLY do/know.
basically, it's one thing for everyone on here to say the KNOW how to start a fire with sticks.... but be honest with yourselves, how many of you have actually done it? now imajine trying to figure it out when your life depends on it, and that "perfect" stick-fire-starting situation that you read about doesn't exist... your tinder and sticks are wet. the sticks you have aren't the right type. too hard, too soft.... you never before tested the angle of your divot or air flow on your fire bow pivot...
bottom line is, those people who pretend to know it all, and try to brag about it on online forums are only fooling themselves and will get THEMSELVES killed.
posting WRONG information that has been untested will get OTHERS killed. and why? because of someones personal ego and need to participate in some online dick measuring contest....
Humility is key. understanding the truth of your limitations is vital. because you're only fooling yourselves when you tell people that you "only need a knife" magically you know everything else you need to handle every situation... *scoff*
in addition to this arguement, there is also an arrogance in assuming that because you CAN (unlikely) survive without carrying anyhing, that you feel it's ok to NOT CARRY ANYTHING AT ALL. Why spend 3 hours making a stick fire... wasting all those calories... when a simple prepping and carrying of a lighter or tinder kit would save you time, energy, and resources?
SURVIVAL IS NOT ABOUT BRAGGING RIGHTS, LOOKING COOL, OR EVEN ABOUT CHALLENGING YOURSELF! IT IS ABOUT SURVIVING BY ANY MEANS NECESSARY. and that means making things as easy as possible for yourself when it happens.
learn everything you possibly can about how to replace every single item in your EDC (every day carry) your BOB (bug out bag) or your INCH system (i'm never coming home). AND THEN CARRY IT ANYWAY.
your EDC should have the 10 C's of Survival in it, and then you have the knowledge to "rough it" if it gets really bad, without looking like a confetti covered asshat.
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Greetings Everyone, Well it's been awhile. As things go, life carries us all in different directions from time to time but you always find your way home sooner or later. Well, life ain't all fun and games, but right now, things are going good. I have restarted my writing on my book again, and as I learn more about about some of the ROle-playing games I have gotten into, I am seriously thinking about rying to create an actual Zombie Survival Role-playing game. But have not set any time…
ContinuePosted by Jessie W. Garrett III on May 22, 2024 at 12:32am — 1 Comment
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