To be prepared for a crisis, every Prepper must establish goals and make long-term and short-term plans. Steadily, we work on meeting our prepping goals. In this column, the SurvivalBlog editors review their week’s prep activities. They also often share their planned prep activities for the coming week. These range from healthcare and gear purchases to gardening, property improvements, 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 the Comments. Let’s keep busy and be ready!
JWR
I’ve been quite busy with writing, editing, and radio interviews in the past week. And of course there were the usual winter chores: firewood hauling, livestock feeding, and stock tank filling. The weather has been mixed, and generally colder. This winter, I don’t expect things to warm up until late February or even early March.
We’ve had a young stray (or full-on feral?) cat hanging around the Rawles Ranch for the past two months. It is so skittish that we can’t get within 50 feet of it. It has been freeloading cat food from the outdoor cat food bowl that we maintain for our two regular barn cats. (Those two cats are very friendly, since we raised them from from kittens. Truthfully, they’ve become beloved house cats.) I’m wondering if this new cat will stay, and if it does: will be a good mouser? If so, then he/she will be welcome to a share of the cat food.
Avalanche Lily Reports
Dear Readers,
For me, this has been the perfect winter weather week. Cold temperatures (between 2 and 26 degrees Fahrenheit) with fresh, fluffy, dry snow, and white all over. Beautiful!
I’ve been able to ski or hike for about five hours this week.
Eloise did some hiking in our driveway and on the county road with her Bugout backpack.
This week I accomplished these things from the list of things I wanted to do:
I did not sleep out in the tent in my Wiggy’s bag, as I had planned. However, I did snuggle in it outside on our porch swing for three daytime hours, wearing only my regular clothes (jeans and t-shirt, socks, and a wool sweater) a warm hat. I did so while searching the Internet and doing my duoLingo language lessons. The outside temperature hovered around 26 degrees F. The bag kept me comfortably warm. I imagine that I could stay in it all day and night outside and be fine. I was driven inside only because the wind changed direction and blew our woodstove smoke down to me. I waited patiently for the wind to change direction again but after 15 minutes, it hadn’t changed direction and I had had enough of it and went inside.
We acquired winter weight polyproplene long underwear for everyone in the family and they have passed the winter workout sweat test for warmth and wicking abilities. (Not that one should be sweating too much outside in the winter if you are going to be remaining outside.) I will continue using them from now on with my workouts. They were Wal-Mart specials. They are doing a great job.