Trying to get my prepping together in high gear.
Have maybe 1 month worth of food, which i don't think is enough.
Good sources of where to buy canned meat, other sources for prepping food? Tricks to keep costs down? Any other prepping tricks or advice is also welcomed.
I believe this is pretty important for all of us right now. The World Faggot Forum has warned of "big" things coming soon before Nov, which we all knew.
Guns, bullets and more bullets.
Medical supplies: I know someone who works in a hospital. (me)
Radio, flash lights and batteries
Generator, extension cords and half dozen 5 gallons cans of gasoline: keep the food in your freezer from going bad.
Stock pile flour, sugar: I repacked mine in mylar bags and oxygen absorbers. I have had flour and sugar stored in mylar since Obama was in office. I opened a bag the other day and it was fresh as new. This is how they offer you 25 year shelf emergency food.
Bottled water: or you can get something called a water bob, it goes in your bathtub, it is a 100 gallon bag you can fill up, it comes with a pump to pump the water out.
Places like Costco sells canned chicken, you can get 6 cans wrapped in plastic for a decent price. I had some that were expiring soon, the wife has been feeding it to the stray cats in the neighborhood.
I also stocked up on 25 year shelf life food from the site below.
https://www.mypatriotsupply.com/collections/case-pack-food-pouches
I got some of the basic stuff I knew my kids would eat. If you buy the bundles, it seems like you get a bunch of stuff you would never use.
I have tried these, the flavor is not bad.
Homestyle Potato Soup
Spaghetti
Honey Wheat Bread
Buttermilk Pancake
Mashed Potatoes
Creamy Chicken Flavored Rice
Creamy Stroganoff
Mac & Cheese Case
Last night I water bathed 10 quarts of salsa. Few days ago I water bather 5 quarts of dill pickles and 10 pints of sweet pickles. I cut the sweet pickles into thick chunks and added a little cayenne pepper, onions and peppers to give them a kick, they are so delicious.
I still have tomato sauce and spaghetti sauce that I canned from last year.
I have about 20 zucchini in my garage, I will start making blueberry walnut zucchini bread soon, I usually make like 20 loaves and freeze them.
I will pick my carrots and beets soon, peel, dice and freeze. Freeze them on a cookie sheet and then bag them, keeps them from sticking together.
I cut down all my kale few weeks ago, washed and crammed the leaves really tight into gallon size bags, prevents freezer burn. I cut off a piece and put it in my smoothies.
I make apple butter and apple pie filling from my apple trees.
I planted 2 more apple this year along with 2 peach trees, 2 blue berry bushes and a cherry tree. They are doing well, hoping they make it through the winter.
My corn is still not ready yet, I am hoping i got them in the ground soon enough. The first batch of corn I planted this year didn't come up, must have bought some bad seeds.
Been eating coleslaw from my cabbage plants, putting it in my smoothies as well. I have like 10 heads of cabbage this year. I don't remember planting that many.
I keep frozen sliced bread in the freezer. It will stay good for couple months, just rotate when you buy new.
Peanut Butter, jelly, noodles, dog and cat food, mayo, canned veggies.
I buy only chicken and beef that is vacuum packed, prevents freezer burn.
Frozen veggies.
I have 10 chickens also, they provide more eggs than I could ever eat. I am stocked up on 4 months worth of chicken food most of the time.
It takes a lot of work if you want to do it right and cover all the bases, good luck to ya!!!
Yea I have been prepping since 2017. My wife and I can our garden too. Pickles, salsa, tomato sauce, chili sauce, stewed tomatoes, corn, potatoes. Chop and deep freeze things like the onions and green peppers. Wife has one of those vacuum packers. I have tons of smoked salmon and make a lot of jerky. Last season I got a bear and jerkied the entire thing. My vanity project a few years ago was building my own smokehouse. Wish I had built a walk in freezer too but I have three freezers plus two refrigerator/freezers. I also have a generac that runs on propane with a dedicated 1500 gallon tank and because of my business about 30 150 pound tanks. We have multiple other generators, again because of my company, and a 400 gallon gas tank filled with rec fuel. And we have well water. I also put a hand pump in the pole barn to water my wifes animals. I have two woodburners in the house plus a real fireplace and two woodburners in the pole barn. Ive got shitloads of firewood plus chainsaws and axes but I also bought 500 pounds of anthracite coal and built a dripper to burn my used motor oil on one of the pole barn woodburners.
How do you keep your batteries fresh? Askin for a fren
Don't go down the prepackaged emergency meals road- unless you have money to burn.
Try Amazon or ebay for dried bulk beans and canned food. Free shipping is glorious. Beans store very well but look out for rodents.
Water- don't count on tap water or a well. If the grid is down so are city pumps. Get a big berkey water filter. Drink pool water. Creeks ponds.
Fire- some way to boil water. Firewood. Blocks, a cooking grate for pans and pots and 2 million waterproof matches.
Shot gun and a buttload of buckshot. Word gets out if you have food so buy tons of really cheap food to give away so you don't have to shoot everyone.
That's just starter advice. You can take it as far as you want.
I do have a 30 day MRE for four just for variety and supplemental.
667 free survival pdfs... https://seasonedcitizenprepper.com/preparedness-downloads/
Gain 50 pounds of fat. Lasts for a long time and you have it wherever you go.
Chickens, goats, cows.
Our hope is the SHTF doesn’t last years.
My fear in August is that the AC goes off. Damn it’s hot.
LOl…I’ve got the extra pounds already! I really don’t believe everything will be SHTF for long.
I find that Dollar General is where to locate your canned Roast Beef and Gravy. At one time this was the only store I could find it. It is also cheaper to buy the 2 or 4 can pack of chicken breasts at Walmart. Make sure to check all USED BY or SELL BY dates on the cans. I mark mine with a black Sharpie or Magic Marker before storing them in FIFO. Also Dollar Tree Shelf Stable Milk is as good a bargain as you can get (IF) you absolutely need that fresh milk taste. Again, check the Use By date and mark. For packaged goods like Muffin Mix, Gravy Mix, Instant Potatoes and such, I store those in a plastic seal tote for extra air tight seal. Again, don't forget to FIFO (first in first out) and mark the dates. Happy Prepping.
I made a spreadsheet to track several data points.
Maybe there's an app to do that, but I don't trust phones.
Here are some things I found from my spreadsheet:
It's worth checking "dollar" stores, restaurant supply stores
We don't that much protein? http://www.fatfree.com/FAQ/protein-myths
Download an offline copy of Wikipedia and other sites with Kiwix. https://greatawakening.win/p/140cNWK90K/kiwix-download-gutenbergs-public/ You may also want a pdf package like that linked by Dreadnought. You may have an old phone or computer to dedicate to this. Store it in a Faraday cage. Just get a small metal garbage can with a tight fitting lid and line it with an insulating material, maybe cardboard. Label it so you or others know that it's worth charging up that device.
Make sure you have plenty of WATER. And you need to have fuel to cook all the food. A pressure cooker can save fuel. And maybe some paper plates to avoid using water to wash dishes.
A somewhat overlooked aspect of prepping is drinking water. Buy yourself a collapsible rain barrel and some purification tablets as well as some means to filter the water. I bought a gazillion coffee filters for this. And make sure you can access firewood to boil water. Buy an axe, hatchet and machete at the very least.
I have 3 50 pound bags of rice I got at Costco. Noodles and ramen, spaghetti sauce. Peanut butter and crackers. I have a dutch oven for baking. Flour too. You can make sourdough bread and all you need is a fire and a stick to wrap the dough around.
As for meat, I have 2 chest freezers and a standup freezer. I am a hunter and fisherman too. I also have a smokehouse and make my own sausage. So meat for us isnt a problem. But I have bought about a months supply of canned tuna and chicken and some canned corn beef and spam (my wife likes these...yuck).
If you expect to do a bit of trading, stock up in tobacco, even, or expecially, if you don't smoke (if you don't smoke, the stash will last for a decade, no problem). It's amazing what people will happily trade for a some smokes.
Same with medical supplies: get extra supplies of everything, OTC or mail-order, some people (even family) might desperately need aspirin, or ivermectin etc.
Whey powder (Body-builders like it) is super compact and can be stored for a couple of years. This is useful when nearly starving, or sick. (it was used as a remedy for convalescence in Culpeper days, sometimes it is the only thing that will stay down). Find the one with no added soy or yuck sweeteners. You can get good clean ones, with chocolate or vanilla flavor, whih helps, as it is pretty tasteless otherwise. I dunno if this company will ship overseas, but shout out to https://www.nothingnaughty.kiwi.nz/. The product is made in the Waikato dairy country - grass-fed.
Pot seeds. Every person I know under 30 smokes weed. They will trade anything for some pot seeds.
Junk silver. Far easier to barter in small amounts than .9999 pure rounds.
And liquor.
With food and gasoline and other perishables, ROTATING STOCK (newest at the front) and culling the no-longer-reasonably-useful is a constant job.
Yup I do a big one monthly and the wife takes care of the daily.
I have a bunch of buckets from this source.
https://augasonfarms.com/collections/emergency-kits-coming-soon
Water is very important. I keep 6 months worth on hand for me, my wife, three dogs and two cats. You will want to make sure you're getting all the nutrients you need and too much of something from such a narrow diet. Freeze dried food is generally considered the most shelf stable and nutritious. It's expensive and requires rehydration. Canned might leave holes in your nutrient profile but it's cheap and lasts years. Maybe consider a multivitamin. Bags if beans and rice are cheap but maybe harder to store long term and very bland and again you'll become nutrient deficient from such a narrow diet. Only you can know your needs but in addition to six months of water we keep six months of dog and cat food. Nine months of freeze dried food buckets under beds. 12 gallons of alcohol fuel - it burns super clean and has an indefinite shelf life.
Our goal is to be able to lock the gate and stay home for 6 months in a grid down scenario. Think about how long you'll be on survival resources, in what conditions and calculate how much each individual needs. The longer you go the more money you need. Start right now, prepping is a process and you will need to budget, buying a bit each pay check or monthly.
Camping water filters (with extra filters). I have a big ass pool in the back yard.
Aldi's has some great affordable canned foods. Also CostCo
Food 4 patriots, fuel and a penny, real money, security tools and a network of like minded people. But mostly... study God's Word amd believe it. Best prep of all.
Matt 6:34
Take therefore no thought for the morrow: for the morrow shall take thought for the things of itself. Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof.
1 Timothy 5:8
But if anyone does not provide for his relatives, and especially for members of his household, he has denied the faith and is worse than an unbeliever.
Excellent. Thank you. Yes: we should rely on the Lord, while also doing all we can ourselves.
I didn't mean to advise not to prep, but rather share advice that can be overlooked as we sometimes get mired down in the world.
Chickens, garden/green house, pool.
Check out “Field Craft Survival” on YouTube.
Take your daily life right now and stock up on it for at least a 2-week time frame. Canned goods, dry good, cooking oil, fuel, batteries (I get the 100 pack AA and AAAs), propane bottles for a grill like 4 bottles, yes guns and ammo for self-defense, also a couple of radios and at least one that has shortwave/SSB single sideband capabilities. Any emergency that will have widespread outages will only last a few weeks. I'm not prepping for the apocalypse because I don't think that's a realistic scenario, and if that does happen it's a whole new ballgame. If it's a cyber thing, I would suggest you have 30 days of ready cash because CC processing will not work, nor will ATM's.
Buy Spam, love me some Spam