Showing posts with label Food & Water. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Food & Water. Show all posts

Saturday, August 5, 2023

Sustainable Meal Planning - Lunch

Part of our long term sustainable survival must be meal planning.  A bottoms up approach considering how many men, women, children and livestock we will need to feed is essential to planning our food supply.  Calories, nutrition, variety and desirable taste (spices) are all important. 

We have covered Breakfast; So lets look at Lunch.

 Without reviewing details covered in our Livestock series, the easiest animals to raise are Chickens, by far, followed by Pigeons, Rabbits and Goats; possibly Ducks and Fish if you have ample surface water.  Bees are easy to raise and honey is the easiest most natural sweetener you can find.  Nuts are also a good source of protein and preserve well. 

 
With this in mind, a sustainable life style Lunch might be as follows:

  1. Egg or Egg Salad Sandwich with Lettuce & Tomato
  2. Meat Sandwich
  3. Loaf of home baked bread
  4. Perhaps a glass of goats milk
  5. Maybe some garden grown vegetables like beans, corn or peas.
To achieve this Lunch, we will need:

Eggs
  1. Eight laying hens per person.
  2. About 200 lbs of chicken feed per person (per year)
  3. Four 50 lb size sacks to package and store the grain
  4. About 0.25 acres of land to raise this feed 
Bread
  1. Baking Soda, Baking Poweder or Yeast or sour dough bread mix
  2. 300 lbs of grain per year per person.
  3. Six 50 lb size sacks to package and store the grain
  4. About 0.50 acres of land (per person) to raise these grains.
Meat
  1. About 650 lbs of feed per person (per year)
  2. Thirteen 50 lb size sacks to package and store the grain
  3. About 1.5 acres of land to raise this feed 
Milk
  1. One nanny goat that is milked daily
  2. About 400 lbs of feed per person (per year)
  3. Eight 50 lb size sacks to package and store the grain
  4. About 1.0 acres of land to raise this feed 
Totals
  1. Pounds of grain - 1,550
  2. Feed Storage Sacks - 31
  3. Acres of land - 3.25

 These are the requirements  per person, per year, for one meal - Lunch.  Based on heirloom crops with limited fertilizer, but rotating the crops and resting the land every other year.

So as you can see, sustainable living is not easy.  The Prepper Handbook available on Amazon Kindle for $4.99 has a Sustainable food model shown to help develop your own meal plan.

For more information:

Blog Table of Contents
Top Rated Prepper Handbook Posts of all time 
Complete Sustainable Living Plan


Sustainable Meal Planning Series


Or click on a label below for similar topics.

Friday, December 30, 2022

Prepper Vehicle Supplies

 Most survival scenarios are solo or small groups, short term, with only what you carry with you, also know as your EDC or Every Day Carry items which may at times include what you have in pocket or in your car, suggesting you should have your car well supplied.

Reading this, you may be interested in what is probably the Best Prepper Transportation.  Below are some links you may find worth reviewing. 

  1. Best Prepper Transportation

  2. Prepper Livestock - Horse

  3. Best Prepper Retreat

  4. Red flag warnings its time to Bug Out

For our discussion here, we will presume that you have a car or truck like most people and we are looking at more common survival scenarios.

What to carry in your car

  1. Ethanol Free Fuel (EFF) -Gasoline- enough to get home. Never run below 1/4.
  2. Siphon Hose for borrowing gas when stranded.
  3. Jumper cables, and/or charged Jump Starter, large or small, both can serve as a phone charger with the appropriate charging cable(s).
  4. Case of bottled water (rotated every year)
  5. Water filter 
  6. Stainless steel water bottle
  7. 2 Qt Pot to cook and boil water in
  8. Fire Building materials
  9. Rifle with military ammo can full of the appropriate caliber(s).
  10. Back Pack 
  11. Machete & Hunting Knife
  12. Water proof poncho or tarp for shelter
  13. First Aid Kit
  14. Long shelf life snack foods like beef jerky, granola, raisins or canned goods
  15. Cell Phone, solar charger & water proof case; power off when not needed
  16. MURS Radio and solar charger for communications
  17. Motion Detecting, Solar Powered Lights &/or Alarms for Intruder Detection
  18. Fishing - net, line & lots of hooks; extra line for security trip wires
  19. A Thermal Scope will give you superior night vision for night travel
  20. A regional Map for Survival or Atlas, plastic coated or in a freezer bag for navigation, along with a compass.
  21. Coats, blankets to stay dry and warm or even a Power Outage Heater
  22. Also carry basic EDC Survival items on your person like a pocket knife.

Know when it is time to get home with our Bug Out Red Flag Warning Signs.

What you carry in your car can make a huge difference, so plan ahead.  Sound crazy?  Think of it as potentially life saving insurance.

For more information visit our related links below: 
 
Alone Season 1 Pack List
Alone Season 2 Pack List
Alone Season 3 Pack List
Alone Season 4 Pack List
 

Survival Pack (Security Patrol or Bug Out pack)  
Greenbriar (catbriar) 
Top 10 List of Prepper info
Top Rated Prepper Handbook Posts of all time
Top Rated Prepper Website
Top 15 Prepper Movies or Shows
Or click on a label below for similar topics.

     

Thursday, December 24, 2020

Emergency Food Calculator

While our Rule of 3 demonstrates that we can die quicker without security, air, shelter, and water, Food is still a key survival component and one that we will likely need some day. But how much do you need?

Our handy calculator will assist you.  In this case we want to have enough for two (2) adults to survive for seven (7) days.  Because we require water to restore dehydrated foods, we have also included it. By typing input in to the model's blue fields, we can calculate, plan and provide for our needs.

Sign up to follow our page for an excel version of this model.

In the water section above, we need 14 gallons of water, but our plan only provides 13 as noted by the #13 being in red.  By adding an additional 1 gallon jug to our plan we would have sufficient water.

On our Emergency meal plan, we need 42 servings, and have 57 planned, for a safety factor of 15 extra servings. In addition, the granola cereal is considered a supplement to your diet, since many of these servings are small, and represents only about 800 calories per day and would maintain a sedimentary life style.  I would triple this for an active life style, and quadruple it for an active lifestyle in very cold weather.  

This is just the tip of the iceberg, and there is much more to consider below.

For more information visit our related links below: 



Why we are ALL Preppers (for skeptics) 

Training – Children:

Home Schooling for Preppers

Advanced Prepper Resources:
 






 
Green briar (cat briar)



Disaster Preparations:



Firearms and security:

Investing for Preppers (Financial Security)
Security Patrol Pack (or Bug Out pack) 






 

Shelter:


Prepper links for skeptics:
Why we are ALL Preppers (for skeptics) 

 
 
Medical:

 
    

Wilderness Survival:

Survival Pack (Security Patrol or Bug Out pack)
Green briar (cat briar)

Other:
 

Political: