She’s talking truth waking everyone up!
(youtu.be)
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Austin is still on a boil water notice. A ton of people without water. The worst hit are those in apartments. I just heard more people lost power again in Williamson County. All the stores lost power so they had to throw away all of the refrigerated and frozen items. Delivery trucks just started to come in today. The local authorities aren't doing anything. I always have back up food and water but hardly anyone preps. people are out of food and water. The stores are empty. People are pissed. This could get real ugly. Thank God the snow and ice mostly melted today! This has been completely crazy!
Apartments are rough, but stackable water makes it easier
https://www.amazon.com/Gallon-Stackers-Gallons-Emergency-Storage/dp/B00S1RACNY/ref=sr_1_8?dchild=1
https://www.amazon.com/WaterBrick-Tan-Gallon-Portable-Stackable/dp/B01MZDLKPV/ref=sr_1_27?dchild=1
$5 a gallon sucks, but you buy once and cry once and then never think about water again. Just find a corner and you're set.
I have five waterbricks. They work well and are stackable for storage.
Ordered me a set of the blue ones. I’m on a well. No power means I have no potable running water. I didn’t have running water due to the freeze. I had bottled water to drink and cook with, but taking a pan bath using pool water isn’t the best.
These will be great for hurricanes, freezes, and if the well pump dies which will happen eventually. I’ve seen two of my neighbors have pump failures over the years. It will eventually be my turn.
I've had the blue, or their exact equivalent, for almost ten years and they have all faired perfectly. Good choice.
We keep reverse osmosis then filtered through Alexapure water in old vinegar jugs, at least 50 gallons all year around. Trust me, I live in a bungalow it's small with a half basement we store jugs in the kitchen and some in the basement. We find a place for them as water is essential for life. We have a year of storage food. We preppers who were called crazy just a few years now seem pretty smart. People have to take responsibility for taking care of themselves. You'd think after Katrina people would be more self sufficient, sad but nope. Funny thing is, where we live we have it pretty good as far as no major catastrophe but it can always happen.
Rice, dried beans, dried vegetables. A 50 gallon water storage barrel, water purifier for when you run out of that and a rocket stove. Add a small wood stove to heat a room and you are set.
Yikes, but why would refrigerated and frozen food go bad in cold weather in the stores? Isn't it still cold enough?
Sure they might be cold but after a few days without power they won't be below freezing inside. A lot of ppl I know immediately hit up drive thrus when they opened up and got hit by food poisoning.
You would think so but everything spoiled. They also have to follow whatever guidelines are set for food. You would think they had generators.