Saturday, February 5, 2011

Part 1 - Food and Water

Two of the most important factors of survival is how to get the basic necessities. For every person you will he supporting, you need at least three items of canned, dry or preserved food and at least a gallon of water for every day.

Long, long ago in one of my many horrible experiences in call service, I brought this up to a co-worker. She turned to me, and in all seriousness declared that she had three months of food stored in the freezer. I asked what she would do if she lost power. Her response is completely fitting to the common perception of worst-case scenario survival: "I'll make due".

If you have no way of acquiring new resources, how are you going to make due once half of your stores go bad?

1.1 - Food
The first option is simple enough. The Canadian and American military sell surplus millitary rations through various retailers. Growing up and being part of the Canadian cadets, we would get most of the rations that had outlived their 20 year shelf life, much of which would spend the next ~5 years in the basement of our training facility. These are made to last, and are simple enough to get your hands on, Here's some links, courtesy of Amazon.com
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The second, and much less preferable option is to keep a constant rotating store of canned materials. You can easily get most anything in canned or preserved forms these days, and most canned items last for at least a year or two. For safeties sake though, you should try and rotate items out at least once a year, or at least something each time you go get groceries. The best items for this are usually left up to your individual tastes.

The third, and best option however, is a combination of the above.

1.2 Water
As stated above, water is one of the most important resources you can have for survival. A decent sized person can survive several weeks without food, but at most you can only go a few days without water. So, what do you do when you run out?

Consider adding a large cold water resivoir in your basement, attached to the cold line. This will allow you to have a large store of water, and if you have a 60 gallon tank and use it sparingly, you can make it last 2+ months. But what happens when that tank runs out?

I'm you're still in your home, try draining your water tank. Be careful! The tank still has a lot of water pressure due to gravity, and water emerging from it will come out very fast. If used carefully, you can drain another ~30 gallons from your tank, giving you another month. After that, if you're desperate, consider draining your pipes for another ~3 gallons.

However, you need sustainability. Here, I shall reference you to a wonderful show made by the discovery channel called "The Colony", specifically season 1- episode 2. Here's a link to the entire first season:
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This episode has a simple, easy to make charcoal and sand filter. This is a much similar technology to that inside of most industrial filters, although as you can imagine much more refined. My personal suggestion is to do a multi stage filter, with six or seven stages and finally running through a regular filter. The best product for this application, and my personal favorite, is the PUR filter. They are durable, and live up to most of the manufacturer's claims. if you're just using it as a safety mechanism at the end of your purification cycle, this filter will last forever.
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Preface - Nuclear Survival and YOU

What do most people know about surviving a nuclear Holocaust? These days, it seems next to nothing. As kids, our parents were forced to learn the pure basics because of all of the threats of the cold war, but then with the fall of the Berlin wall and the "death" of Russian Communism, the basics of survival was seen as too much of a "violent" subject to teach our kids.

The government stopped promoting public nuclear safety. As a whole, we started worrying more about direct attacks from things like viral agents and explosive devices. Here's the kicker though: With the basics that we now teach, it truly and utterly is not enough.

Most of the same things that would happen under a viral pandemic would be the same good ideas under a nuclear attack or dirty bomb explosion. You would want to stay indoors, and keep most activity to the lower levels of your house if you do not have a bomb shelter built.

The really silly thing is that preparation in case of a nuclear, chemical or biological event is not as hard or expensive as most people think. Simple safety procedures(most of which would have to be followed anyway) are of the utmost importance no matter what your kit, warning or preparation.

So why am I writing this? Why am I not putting this in a book and trying to sell it?

I want you to be able to survive. If you are here, you're smart enough to put two and two together, and start preparation early. Will I ever publish this material in a book? Someday, maybe, but this is far too important for risk you not knowing.