MAY
26
10 Things You Can Do Right Now To Become a Better Prepper or Get Started
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Trav­el­ing again this week and short on time, but want­ed to put some­thing togeth­er for you… I was going over ways in my head to help me re-align some goals and thought I would share a few of them with you…  These are in no par­tic­u­lar oder

  1. Plant a gar­den , any gar­den.Go get some pots from Lowes or Home Depot, pick up seeds or sprout­ed veg­etable plants and trans­plant them into the pots.  Take care of them this sum­mer and reap the ben­e­fits of “learn­ing how to gar­den.”  Grow some pep­pers, toma­toes, herbs, and oth­er veg­eta­bles that you enjoy if the pots are large enough to hold them…  You nev­er know when that Bug Out Loca­tion is going to have you as a long term inhab­i­tant and whether or not you will need a gar­den to sur­vive.
  2. Get out of debt.I know this can be a pain in the ass and painful to pay off those debts, but if I can do it, any­one can.  I for­get where I heard it, but Dave Ram­sey mar­kets a book with a fan­tas­tic plan, as does David Bach .  Both have mar­ket­ed mul­ti­ple pro­grams and books that make sense in help­ing to invest in your own future.  Pick them up and read them.  Even if you know what you are doing you might learn some­thing new.
  3. Put togeth­er a per­son­al or fam­i­ly emer­gency plan.Some time ago I wrote this post on cre­at­ing a fam­i­ly book for each dis­as­ter sit­u­a­tion called “ ‘ Your Home Cri­sis Guide­book for a Sur­vival Sit­u­a­tion or a SHTF .”  You could even put this togeth­er for work and make it a stan­dard part of the hir­ing pro­ce­dure in the event there is an emer­gency dur­ing work­ing hours.  In additi0n, plan by prob­a­bil­i­ty based on geog­ra­phy.  i.e. Neigh­bor­hood, Town or city, region, mul­ti-state, nation­al, etc… Start with the small­est first (neigh­bor­hood) and work your way out from there.
  4. Build your Bug Out Bags for your­self and for each mem­ber of your fam­i­ly.Make sure you don’t just copy some0ne else’s bag because every­one’s needs are dif­fer­ent because of demo­graph­ics, geog­ra­phy, med­ical needs, etc.  If you are won­der­ing where to start, how­ev­er, here are the con­tents of my Bug Out Bag .  Here is anoth­er list that I found that might help you as well:   http://goo.gl/egXQa
  5. If you have not already, get start­ed prep­ping food and water by adding five gal­lons of water  by buy­ing a five gal­lon water con­tain­er , and get your food stor­age start­ed by buy­ing a day’s worth of food for each per­son in y0ur house­hold.  Aim to have 30 days of food stored for one per­son or the whole fam­i­ly in the next 60 days.  It’s okay to start slow­ly…
  6. Start get­ting in bet­ter shape.Even I fail at this one quite a bit because I go to the gym in spurts.  The truth is, being com­mit­ted to a health­i­er lifestyle makes you a bet­ter prep­per because you can think faster on y0ur feet, you are in bet­ter con­di­tion to bug out, you pro­long your life, and the list goes on.  Not unlike debt, it can be painful to get start­ed, but once you are on a roll, it is eas­i­er to main­tain than start and stop like I rou­tine­ly do for a myr­i­ad of rea­sons…
  7. Under­stand dis­as­ter com­mon­al­i­ty.  This one is not mine.  It is Jack Spirko ’s over at The Sur­vival Pod­cast .  Here is the link to the pod­cast on this mat­ter:   http://goo.gl/zPK3A I think it will make more sense once you lis­ten to the show.  It will help you pre­pare your thoughts on prep­ping, gear , and the dis­as­ters you might face.
  8. Think about look­ing for a Bug Out Loca­tion or retreat and get it ready in case you had to go there for 30 days or so if you and your fam­i­ly absolute­ly had to.  Land and prop­er­ty has come down in price because peo­ple do not have the mon­ey to buy right now… I only advo­cate doing this if you have paid off your debt first how­ev­er.  Pick up a copy of M.D. Creek­more’s new book, Dirt Cheap Sur­vival Retreat to learn how M.D. did it.  It may or may not be for you, but at least you will get some per­spec­tive on how to do it and save mon­ey at the same time…
  9. Learn some basic First Aid because it is my the­o­ry too many peo­ple focus on all the oth­er stuff, but for­get to have the basic skills to save a life.  Check out the Red Cross site here for class­es in your area:    http://goo.gl/o3uAd
  10. Get start­ed on at least two of the above items today…  There is no time like the present to get the ball rolling

 

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5
COMMENTS
By: suburban
sep
15

Great website and tips. I’m starting a preparedness site as well. Just starting out, hoping to be a resource to the community. http://www.bugoutbasics.com

By: Bug Out Tips
mar
27

Great website and tips. I’m starting a preparedness site as well. Just starting out, hoping to be a resource to the community. http://www.bugoutbasics.com

By: Bug Out Tips
mar
27

Great website and tips. I’m starting a preparedness site as well. Just starting out, hoping to be a resource to the community. http://www.bugoutbasics.com

By: suburban
may
26

Joe — I agree completely… This was in no particular order… But as a prepper, I agree, number five is probably the least expensive way and easiest way to start. Planting the Garden is also pretty easy if you want to just go to your local garden center and pick up pre-sprouted tomatoes, peppers, onions, etc.

By: Joe
By:
Joe
may
26

Great list! I’d highly recommend that people begin with number 5, buying a little extra food with each trip to the store. Find whatever is on sale or that you have coupons for, or both and buy an extra can or two. Web sites like thegrocerygame.com can help with that, but it’s a subscription service.

Joe

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