Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Basic first aid supplies. Extra month of prescriptions.
I bought a small battery-powered radio & batteries. I have some foods that don’t need to be heated.
Fill up gas when tank gets half full.
What are you prepping for? Sounds like you think a hurricane may hit DC.
Just good things to have on hand for variety of scenarios.
Also cash.
So you never let your car go lower than a half a tank? Like ever in your life? This is really impressive. My car is screaming at me every couple weeks for being so low.
I’ve also lived in DC almost 20 years and never lost power, so maybe I just don’t get the preppers. Even during snowmageddon (2009 maybe?), we never lost power and you could still find groceries.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Basic first aid supplies. Extra month of prescriptions.
I bought a small battery-powered radio & batteries. I have some foods that don’t need to be heated.
Fill up gas when tank gets half full.
Insurance doesn’t permit stocking up on prescriptions…
Pay out of pocket. Our prescriptions are generic & cheap.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Basic first aid supplies. Extra month of prescriptions.
I bought a small battery-powered radio & batteries. I have some foods that don’t need to be heated.
Fill up gas when tank gets half full.
Insurance doesn’t permit stocking up on prescriptions…
Anonymous wrote:Basic first aid supplies. Extra month of prescriptions.
I bought a small battery-powered radio & batteries. I have some foods that don’t need to be heated.
Fill up gas when tank gets half full.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Basic first aid supplies. Extra month of prescriptions.
I bought a small battery-powered radio & batteries. I have some foods that don’t need to be heated.
Fill up gas when tank gets half full.
What are you prepping for? Sounds like you think a hurricane may hit DC.
Just good things to have on hand for variety of scenarios.
Also cash.
So you never let your car go lower than a half a tank? Like ever in your life? This is really impressive. My car is screaming at me every couple weeks for being so low.
I’ve also lived in DC almost 20 years and never lost power, so maybe I just don’t get the preppers. Even during snowmageddon (2009 maybe?), we never lost power and you could still find groceries.
Anonymous wrote:Corn and wheat will go ip since Ukraine is a larger producer of both. Everything else will go up proportionally to given rising costs of fuel.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Basic first aid supplies. Extra month of prescriptions.
I bought a small battery-powered radio & batteries. I have some foods that don’t need to be heated.
Fill up gas when tank gets half full.
What are you prepping for? Sounds like you think a hurricane may hit DC.
Just good things to have on hand for variety of scenarios.
Also cash.
So you never let your car go lower than a half a tank? Like ever in your life? This is really impressive. My car is screaming at me every couple weeks for being so low.
I’ve also lived in DC almost 20 years and never lost power, so maybe I just don’t get the preppers. Even during snowmageddon (2009 maybe?), we never lost power and you could still find groceries.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What has you panicking and stocking up on food, OP? My family of three and a dog is not stocking up - normal supplies in the house. We’d run out of food we like to eat in a week and could survive on the cans in the back of the shelf for another couple weeks, I’m sure.
The grocery store is open and there is food on the shelves. I don’t think that is changing in the coming weeks.
You might be right. I hope you are. But rising gas prices coupled with war in Europe could easily have an impact on the availability of shipping, what gets shipped, and, certainly the costs of shipping, which will be reflected in what’s on the shelves and what’s not.
Anonymous wrote:What has you panicking and stocking up on food, OP? My family of three and a dog is not stocking up - normal supplies in the house. We’d run out of food we like to eat in a week and could survive on the cans in the back of the shelf for another couple weeks, I’m sure.
The grocery store is open and there is food on the shelves. I don’t think that is changing in the coming weeks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wait, are you guys all worried about a nuclear attack? I’m not, but if you are and you want to plan for it you need a goodly stick of food that needs no heating or cooking and water (a month). If that happens you’ll be in your basement with no electricity and no way to make a fire, because you won’t be able to vent it to the outside (all cracks etc need to be sealed with plastic to prevent radiation getting in).
That’s a whole other level of planning and worry! Unwarranted, I think.
I *think* think OP was worried about inflation? (If so, I’m not sure she understands inflation). The other preppers seem worried about something else. Though I’m not sure what.