To be prepared for a crisis, every Prepper must establish goals and make long-term and short-term plans. In this column, the SurvivalBlog editors review their week’s prep activities and planned prep activities for the coming week. These range from healthcare and gear purchases to gardening, ranch improvements, bug out bag fine-tuning, and food storage. This is something akin to our Retreat Owner Profiles, but written incrementally and in detail, throughout the year. We always welcome you to share your own successes and wisdom in your e-mailed letters. We post many of those — or excerpts thereof — in this column, in the Odds ‘n Sods Column, and in the Snippets column. Let’s keep busy and be ready!
Jim Reports:
I’m still in California, where my brother, sister, and I are working together to clear out our late mother’s suburban home, to prepare it for sale.
As we’ve been working our way through the house, we have seen much evidence that our mom was a dedicated prepper. She was a widow with a limited budget, so her preps were by necessity on a modest scale. She was of the “Howard J. Ruff School” of 1970s-style preparedness. The key portions of her preps included 400 pounds of stored wheat, a wheat grinder, a water filter, numerous canned goods, a water bath canner, several 5-gallon buckets of rice, more than a dozen cases of NeoLife long-term storage foods, dozens of 2-liter bottles of chlorinated water, kerosene lamps and lanterns, 10 gallons of kerosene, two charcoal barbeques and several bags of charcoal briquettes, a solar oven, more than 50 pounds of assorted candles, a down sleeping bag, two rolls of Visqueen, two 30-watt PV panels, a Trace inverter, a compact 12 VDC refrigerator, a gun vault that was built in 1985 by Hall’s Safes, two Baygen radios, four Baygen flashlights, a half-dozen standard flashlights, a “Russian Pumper” flashlight, and a Sony ICF-7600 multiband radio. That was an admirable level of preparedness for a woman living alone, widowed at the age of 54. Even after she qualified for Social Security, her income after the death of my father never exceeded $30,000 a year. She had 20% of her liquid net worth in precious metals–mostly silver–and all stored in her home vault. Thankfully, she lived in a house that was sheltered from all but very gradual tax rate increases by California’s Proposition 13. Otherwise, she might have been gradually bankrupted by property taxes.
My mother died peacefully at home with two of her children at her bedside. She owned her home without a mortgage. She had no debts, whatsoever. She never had to utilize any of her preps. I suppose that is every prepper’s fondest dream.
Now, over to Lily…