Anonymous wrote:I would get several large drums of gasoline and store them in your garage. Also make sure you have plenty of fire making ability.
Buy a side of beef and put it in a deep freezer. You’ll want cartons of cigs and cases of whiskey for barter.
I’d also recommend a good 12 gauge combat shotgun.
Anonymous wrote:I have my 3 day supply. A few weeks ago I started stocking up. Refilled all my staples- things like coffee, flour, sugar, etc. Cleaning supplies and paper products. Now I am just grabbing extras when I grocery shop. Basically making sure we have extra of all our regular items. If I am buying a box of cereal, I grab 2. I usually do a week or two of “clean out the pantry/freezer” meals- but I will put that off until later this year. Keeping everything fully stocked.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
This is what I’m worried about. I’m in LA and gas is $6-7 here right now. Food prices just keep going up. I’m trying to get ahead of it and buy some things before food goes up again, due to gas prices.
If you live in LA, you could try to vote down those gas prices. I mean, prices are higher everywhere but they're really high in states that asked for them.
Anonymous wrote: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.
This is what I’m worried about. I’m in LA and gas is $6-7 here right now. Food prices just keep going up. I’m trying to get ahead of it and buy some things before food goes up again, due to gas prices.
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:I don’t know anyone who went hungry in March 2020.
Anonymous wrote:if you are rich and seriously don't care; stop reading.
If you are concerned, for anything, prepping is done in rules of 3. 3 days, 3 weeks, 3 months of food, water, shelter, light.
Start with 3 days b/c we could have a bad wind storm and stuff goes out or protesters could block up roads. Sure, you can survive on what's in your pantry but would it be balanced? If water stops flowing or is "bad" for whatever reason, a single mom and a kid would need 6G. Just go buy that. The three days should not require cooking so think of canned things you like, get a box of shelf stable milk or similar for breakfast. DOn't forget the canned fruit/veg.
1 person uses 1G of water a day. <-- really important.
I'm prepping for the grid, electrical, digital, to go down. Also, we will have food shortages again because of what Russia did to the Ukrainian farm fields and they might not adequately farm theres. Also, Russia supplies a lot of world oil so that might inflate many prices.
So, like in covid, we need to prep for there to be lots of pasta sauce on the shelves, but no pasta.
Inflation is coming too. If you are not wealthy and your food budget is tight, invest in large quantities of what you might need. If you like beans and rice, get 20 pounds of both.
Yes, I'm prepped. 3 months. That's b/c we live in DC. We are a target for a current war even if that is a cyber war. But we are also in DC. Civil unrest might lock us in our houses. Who knows. I like to be ready and don't think I"m paranoid.
That said, I did live most of my life in a region where we were often cut off b/c of weather events so the 2 week prep was just how I was raised.
Happy to answer questions but y'all be nice. None of this might happen. Then you'll be right. In fact, you are right right now!
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.
Insurance doesn’t permit stocking up on prescriptions…
Pay out of pocket. Our prescriptions are generic & cheap.
My doctors wont authorize advance stock ups.