Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In case of what? Really. What do you think will happen that you will need 124 servings of freeze dried meals?
1- it isn't really 124 servings. It's more like 80.
2- if you have a family of 5 (with three teenage boys) its about 10 days of food.
3- remember what it was like getting food and domesstic goods at the beginning of the pandemic (as a UMC, privileged person in a wealthy well served neighborhood)?
Consider those and then understand how incredibly easily it could have been 10 times worse.
This isn't about fighting zombies or intubating your neighbors with Bic pens. This is about having calories to function if/when the supply chain gets shut down. Not disrupted or marginally interupted, but SHUT. DOWN.
A couple hundred bucks in Montain House meals is a life saver. Worst case scenario? Take a couple camping trips to use it up each yaer.
Serioulsy. Be prepared.
3. I remember that most food was in stock, just not a few things. Pasta and canned soups went quick. With my shopping lists, I was usually able to get 90% of the items. It might not have been my preferred brand, but it was the same product.
Mountain house meals are high sodium, and some kids may not like them.
Honestly, it’s best to just have extra of the food you actually like.
Sure, but OP specifically asked about kits. Hence the 5 gallon bucket of dehydrated food. 80 cans of chunky soup is a hell of a lot more difficult to be mobile with than one 20 poiund bucket.
And no one gives a shit about salt when you're talking about survival. Ever look at the salt contenet in MREs given to frontline troops? You don't want to know. Theg oal is getting calories into bodies. Salt and sugar taste good, so they are loaded with that so they eat them.
MREs are high salt for a reason. Soldiers are extremely active, sweating a ton with flak jacket, helmet, etc.
If goal is mobility, dehydrated goods make sense, as long as you have access to water. But given it’s DC, how easy will it be to actually evacuate? Be realistic. Look at evacuations from Houston with hurricanes and how people say on the highways for days.
And no one starved to death
Nobody likes an ignorant contrarian. But you already knew that.![]()
Do you still have your Y2K stash?
Are you a helpless old lady that mooches off the labor of neighborhood husbands? How come you can't get your own man?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In case of what? Really. What do you think will happen that you will need 124 servings of freeze dried meals?
1- it isn't really 124 servings. It's more like 80.
2- if you have a family of 5 (with three teenage boys) its about 10 days of food.
3- remember what it was like getting food and domesstic goods at the beginning of the pandemic (as a UMC, privileged person in a wealthy well served neighborhood)?
Consider those and then understand how incredibly easily it could have been 10 times worse.
This isn't about fighting zombies or intubating your neighbors with Bic pens. This is about having calories to function if/when the supply chain gets shut down. Not disrupted or marginally interupted, but SHUT. DOWN.
A couple hundred bucks in Montain House meals is a life saver. Worst case scenario? Take a couple camping trips to use it up each yaer.
Serioulsy. Be prepared.
3. I remember that most food was in stock, just not a few things. Pasta and canned soups went quick. With my shopping lists, I was usually able to get 90% of the items. It might not have been my preferred brand, but it was the same product.
Mountain house meals are high sodium, and some kids may not like them.
Honestly, it’s best to just have extra of the food you actually like.
Sure, but OP specifically asked about kits. Hence the 5 gallon bucket of dehydrated food. 80 cans of chunky soup is a hell of a lot more difficult to be mobile with than one 20 poiund bucket.
And no one gives a shit about salt when you're talking about survival. Ever look at the salt contenet in MREs given to frontline troops? You don't want to know. Theg oal is getting calories into bodies. Salt and sugar taste good, so they are loaded with that so they eat them.
MREs are high salt for a reason. Soldiers are extremely active, sweating a ton with flak jacket, helmet, etc.
If goal is mobility, dehydrated goods make sense, as long as you have access to water. But given it’s DC, how easy will it be to actually evacuate? Be realistic. Look at evacuations from Houston with hurricanes and how people say on the highways for days.
And no one starved to death
Nobody likes an ignorant contrarian. But you already knew that.![]()
Do you still have your Y2K stash?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In case of what? Really. What do you think will happen that you will need 124 servings of freeze dried meals?
1- it isn't really 124 servings. It's more like 80.
2- if you have a family of 5 (with three teenage boys) its about 10 days of food.
3- remember what it was like getting food and domesstic goods at the beginning of the pandemic (as a UMC, privileged person in a wealthy well served neighborhood)?
Consider those and then understand how incredibly easily it could have been 10 times worse.
This isn't about fighting zombies or intubating your neighbors with Bic pens. This is about having calories to function if/when the supply chain gets shut down. Not disrupted or marginally interupted, but SHUT. DOWN.
A couple hundred bucks in Montain House meals is a life saver. Worst case scenario? Take a couple camping trips to use it up each yaer.
Serioulsy. Be prepared.
3. I remember that most food was in stock, just not a few things. Pasta and canned soups went quick. With my shopping lists, I was usually able to get 90% of the items. It might not have been my preferred brand, but it was the same product.
Mountain house meals are high sodium, and some kids may not like them.
Honestly, it’s best to just have extra of the food you actually like.
Sure, but OP specifically asked about kits. Hence the 5 gallon bucket of dehydrated food. 80 cans of chunky soup is a hell of a lot more difficult to be mobile with than one 20 poiund bucket.
And no one gives a shit about salt when you're talking about survival. Ever look at the salt contenet in MREs given to frontline troops? You don't want to know. Theg oal is getting calories into bodies. Salt and sugar taste good, so they are loaded with that so they eat them.
MREs are high salt for a reason. Soldiers are extremely active, sweating a ton with flak jacket, helmet, etc.
If goal is mobility, dehydrated goods make sense, as long as you have access to water. But given it’s DC, how easy will it be to actually evacuate? Be realistic. Look at evacuations from Houston with hurricanes and how people say on the highways for days.
And no one starved to death
Nobody likes an ignorant contrarian. But you already knew that.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In case of what? Really. What do you think will happen that you will need 124 servings of freeze dried meals?
1- it isn't really 124 servings. It's more like 80.
2- if you have a family of 5 (with three teenage boys) its about 10 days of food.
3- remember what it was like getting food and domesstic goods at the beginning of the pandemic (as a UMC, privileged person in a wealthy well served neighborhood)?
Consider those and then understand how incredibly easily it could have been 10 times worse.
This isn't about fighting zombies or intubating your neighbors with Bic pens. This is about having calories to function if/when the supply chain gets shut down. Not disrupted or marginally interupted, but SHUT. DOWN.
A couple hundred bucks in Montain House meals is a life saver. Worst case scenario? Take a couple camping trips to use it up each yaer.
Serioulsy. Be prepared.
3. I remember that most food was in stock, just not a few things. Pasta and canned soups went quick. With my shopping lists, I was usually able to get 90% of the items. It might not have been my preferred brand, but it was the same product.
Mountain house meals are high sodium, and some kids may not like them.
Honestly, it’s best to just have extra of the food you actually like.
Sure, but OP specifically asked about kits. Hence the 5 gallon bucket of dehydrated food. 80 cans of chunky soup is a hell of a lot more difficult to be mobile with than one 20 poiund bucket.
And no one gives a shit about salt when you're talking about survival. Ever look at the salt contenet in MREs given to frontline troops? You don't want to know. Theg oal is getting calories into bodies. Salt and sugar taste good, so they are loaded with that so they eat them.
MREs are high salt for a reason. Soldiers are extremely active, sweating a ton with flak jacket, helmet, etc.
If goal is mobility, dehydrated goods make sense, as long as you have access to water. But given it’s DC, how easy will it be to actually evacuate? Be realistic. Look at evacuations from Houston with hurricanes and how people say on the highways for days.
And no one starved to death
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In case of what? Really. What do you think will happen that you will need 124 servings of freeze dried meals?
1- it isn't really 124 servings. It's more like 80.
2- if you have a family of 5 (with three teenage boys) its about 10 days of food.
3- remember what it was like getting food and domesstic goods at the beginning of the pandemic (as a UMC, privileged person in a wealthy well served neighborhood)?
Consider those and then understand how incredibly easily it could have been 10 times worse.
This isn't about fighting zombies or intubating your neighbors with Bic pens. This is about having calories to function if/when the supply chain gets shut down. Not disrupted or marginally interupted, but SHUT. DOWN.
A couple hundred bucks in Montain House meals is a life saver. Worst case scenario? Take a couple camping trips to use it up each yaer.
Serioulsy. Be prepared.
3. I remember that most food was in stock, just not a few things. Pasta and canned soups went quick. With my shopping lists, I was usually able to get 90% of the items. It might not have been my preferred brand, but it was the same product.
Mountain house meals are high sodium, and some kids may not like them.
Honestly, it’s best to just have extra of the food you actually like.
Sure, but OP specifically asked about kits. Hence the 5 gallon bucket of dehydrated food. 80 cans of chunky soup is a hell of a lot more difficult to be mobile with than one 20 poiund bucket.
And no one gives a shit about salt when you're talking about survival. Ever look at the salt contenet in MREs given to frontline troops? You don't want to know. Theg oal is getting calories into bodies. Salt and sugar taste good, so they are loaded with that so they eat them.
MREs are high salt for a reason. Soldiers are extremely active, sweating a ton with flak jacket, helmet, etc.
If goal is mobility, dehydrated goods make sense, as long as you have access to water. But given it’s DC, how easy will it be to actually evacuate? Be realistic. Look at evacuations from Houston with hurricanes and how people say on the highways for days.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In case of what? Really. What do you think will happen that you will need 124 servings of freeze dried meals?
1- it isn't really 124 servings. It's more like 80.
2- if you have a family of 5 (with three teenage boys) its about 10 days of food.
3- remember what it was like getting food and domesstic goods at the beginning of the pandemic (as a UMC, privileged person in a wealthy well served neighborhood)?
Consider those and then understand how incredibly easily it could have been 10 times worse.
This isn't about fighting zombies or intubating your neighbors with Bic pens. This is about having calories to function if/when the supply chain gets shut down. Not disrupted or marginally interupted, but SHUT. DOWN.
A couple hundred bucks in Montain House meals is a life saver. Worst case scenario? Take a couple camping trips to use it up each yaer.
Serioulsy. Be prepared.
3. I remember that most food was in stock, just not a few things. Pasta and canned soups went quick. With my shopping lists, I was usually able to get 90% of the items. It might not have been my preferred brand, but it was the same product.
Mountain house meals are high sodium, and some kids may not like them.
Honestly, it’s best to just have extra of the food you actually like.
Sure, but OP specifically asked about kits. Hence the 5 gallon bucket of dehydrated food. 80 cans of chunky soup is a hell of a lot more difficult to be mobile with than one 20 poiund bucket.
And no one gives a shit about salt when you're talking about survival. Ever look at the salt contenet in MREs given to frontline troops? You don't want to know. Theg oal is getting calories into bodies. Salt and sugar taste good, so they are loaded with that so they eat them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In case of what? Really. What do you think will happen that you will need 124 servings of freeze dried meals?
In case of unforeseen disaster.
What kind of unforeseen disaster do you think would happen that would make impossible for you to find food for several days/weeks?
I’m not sure I want to survive any such disaster.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In case of what? Really. What do you think will happen that you will need 124 servings of freeze dried meals?
1- it isn't really 124 servings. It's more like 80.
2- if you have a family of 5 (with three teenage boys) its about 10 days of food.
3- remember what it was like getting food and domesstic goods at the beginning of the pandemic (as a UMC, privileged person in a wealthy well served neighborhood)?
Consider those and then understand how incredibly easily it could have been 10 times worse.
This isn't about fighting zombies or intubating your neighbors with Bic pens. This is about having calories to function if/when the supply chain gets shut down. Not disrupted or marginally interupted, but SHUT. DOWN.
A couple hundred bucks in Montain House meals is a life saver. Worst case scenario? Take a couple camping trips to use it up each yaer.
Serioulsy. Be prepared.
You don’t need three giant meals per day to survive. Look- there isn’t a disaster that is going to happen that will make you eat through your
Entire pantry then starve to death. It just can’t happen. I had zero issues buying food through the pandemic. Zero. If you had a had time finding enough food survive during the past two years because of
Supply chain issues I don’t know what to tell you
Wow. You truly are an idiot. My grandparents survived the holocaust on smuggled potatos.
You think that is going to happen in the US? Sorry but it is impossible. And if by chance it does your 10 day food
Bucket isn’t going to move the needle much
And yet it happened in Germany within my father's memory.
You'll be among the first to die.