FBI statistics indicate a home is robbed every 13 seconds and since not
all police departments report their statistics to the FBI is is probably
more frequent than that.
The key to strong security is more than a good Security Plan, you must include regular assessment and testing of your security systems. Any decent robbers will study your patterns for weaknesses and possibly even probe your security by approaching under some false pretense.
Burglars do NOT like lights, loud sounds (like barking dogs) nor company. They prefer dark, quite places to rob, preferably when no one is at home. But what if a burglar doesn't realize that you are home, and quietly comes in while you are sleeping; would you detect an intruder? Imagine waking to the sound of breaking glass. What would you do? Do you own a gun for personal protection or home defense?
Predictability is the biggest weakness behind no security at all, or not having a good weapon. During hurricanes and modern day disasters, looters and gangs start rioting and robbing within the first 3 days. So being prepared is important. The wealthier your neighborhood & more Modern your Home is, the more attractive target you are.
Here are some simple and affordable things you can buy that will help protect your home.
Outdoor solar powered lights can add highlights to your yard, and keep it lit up, even when the electricity is off for less than $6.50 each. If you get the type that uses AA batteries, they can double as solar powered battery chargers.
Something as simple as motion lights or alarms or even a big dog bowl by the back door can deter burglars.
Another good deterrent are light timers. They make it look like you are home, even when you are away. By
plugging a timer in to a timer, you can add an element of randomness
that prevents burglars from realizing you are really gone and just
using a timer that is on/off at the same time each day.
If you can't afford a home security system add a good motion detecting game camera which will take pictures when movement is detected around your home. Some will send the pictures to your phone for $10/month.
In a serious event, city dwellers need a neighborhood watch plan while country folk have less neighbors to depend on but also less neighbors to pose a threat to your safety. But there will be mass hoards of people evacuating the cities when their food and water runs out.
For additional information see the following links:
Blog Table of Contents
Top 10 List of Prepper info
Top Rated Prepper Handbook Posts of all time
Top Rated Prepper Website
Night Vision vs Thermal Vision
The Best Gun
Best Handgun Selection Criteria
The right amount of Ammo
Country Home Security Plan
Home Invasion Response Plan
Guns in plain sight
Intruder Detection
Riot Preparations
Double Barreled Defense
Modern Home Security
Sustainable City Survival
BB Gun
Top 5 Combat Rifles
Best Prepper Dog
Random Security
Modern Defensive Shotguns
Active Shooter
Top 10 AR-15s
Ballistic Tip AR Ammo
AR Optics
Best Survival Knife
Click on the labels below for similar topics
Saturday, November 17, 2018
Tuesday, November 6, 2018
Top 3 EDC Survival Knives Under $50
Regardless of your budget, you need a
good survival knife as part of your bug out bag. If you’re like most preppers,
you want the best knife you can get for your money – but you also have to
consider balancing out how much you can spend on any single item when you’re on
a tight budget.
You may want a cheap (inexpensive) edc
knife, but that doesn’t mean you need a cheap (quality) knife.
Most high-quality knives easily run
$150 and up, with custom options going above and beyond even $500. While that’s
nice if you can afford it, chances are you need a few knives around, one for
your main bag, another for your get home bag. And they need to perform if the
need arises.
Quality
When looking at quality edc knives at an affordable price, we wanted good knives, made by
manufacturers with a reputation for great knives. This isn’t the place to find
cheap knockoffs; we wanted options you could use in the field and be proud of.
Size
We wanted to look at knives that were
right in the middle on size. There are much smaller knives (less blade
material, less production cost), but they often lacked the minimum amount of
blade necessary for a “general use” survival knife. Each of these every day
carry knives feature a blade 4.1″ to 5.2″ in length which is a great size for a
medium knife. While bigger knives were available in the same price range,
comparing survival knives to machetes just isn’t a proper apples to apple
comparison.
Affordability
The knives that made the list are all
under $50 on Amazon, which should be affordable for any prepper or budding
survivalist. While there are a lot of good knives in the $50-100 range, we stuck
to a firm $50 limit for this list as we wanted 3 knives that were all within
about $17 of each other.
The least expensive of the 3 knives,
the Mora Bushcraft is a great first survival edc knife for a beginning prepper,
or the perfect backup knife when paired with a more expensive primary knife.
This Mora knife is shorter and has a thinner blade than other comparable knives.
Not to say this knife isn’t of high quality – there are few stories of people
managing to break a Mora.
Its 4.3" blade made of
high-quality stainless steel and 0.10" (2.5 mm) thick. The knife features
plastic made high-friction grip handle and with a belt clip sheath. The
Morakniv Bushcraft full length 9.1" weight only 5.0 oz as well as comes
with limited lifetime manufacturer’s warranty.
The only major complaint about this
particular knife is the rounded spine, which doesn’t seem to take well to use with
Ferro rod fire starters. I take that complaint minimally, as most starters come
with their own striker, and I’d prefer NOT to use my blade if I don’t have to.
The Schrade SCHF10 comes in with our
biggest blade at 5.2″ and is all around a good, meaty knife that performs well.
The micarta handles is molded well to provide great grip, even in wet
conditions. Also, it has a lanyard hole. The 1/4″ thick blade makes for a solid
knife that can take a beating but is still fairly well balanced and capable of
accurate cuts as well as more bruising tasks. It has all the features you’d
expect in a good edc knife under 50 dollars.
To protect this 10.5" knife
Schrade provides a heavy duty Nylon sheath with an additional pouch for a
sharpener, Ferro rod, tactical flashlight or other accessories. Most
importantly the manufacturer offers a limited lifetime warranty for this
Schrade SCHF10-BRK Fixed Blade Survival knife.
The negatives are this knife’s alleged
sharpness from the factory. Having not tested other Schrade knives, we don’t
know if that’s just a shipping standard with the company or just a bad run.
That said, you should always sharpen your new knife prior to use anyway – so we
think it’s a stupid complaint.
The SOG SEAL Pup knife is another great
every day carry knife with a proven history of use by Special Forces operators.
It has a 4.75” AUS-8 stainless steel made quality thick blade which is
partially serrated and powder coated. You would be surprised to know that this
inexpensive knife’s blade made of SOG’s patented cryogenic heat treatment
method.
The ergonomic finger grooves handle of
this knife made out of Glass-reinforced nylon. There is a lanyard hole bottom
of the handle. This SOG SEAL Pup Survival EDC Knife comes with MOLLE-COMPATIBLE
SHEATH and limited lifetime warranty. The full tang knife has 9” overall length
weight with sheath 5.4 ounces.
My only issue with this knife is only
because the model looked at under $50 had the partially serrated edge blade.
For about $10 more on Amazon, you can move up in the knife to a slightly longer
blade that is a plain flat blade without serration. I would buy the better
model if I had the extra $10, but this list was only looking at the sub-$50
models.
Conclusion
You can’t go wrong with any of the
knives mentioned here. They are all high-quality knives under $50 from manufacturers with a
reputation for great knives that will perform. If you’re looking for a
secondary knife for your bag or a good, inexpensive knife for a secondary bag –
these are the best of the group.
For more information visit our related links below:
Survival Pack (Security Patrol or Bug Out pack)
Wilderness Survival Pack (Video)
Dual Purpose Items
EDC For Women
EDC For Men
EDC Survival
Best Survival Knife
Primitive Shelter
Best Campsite Selection Criteria
Acorn Flour Pancakes
Emergency Water
Prepper Gift List
Bear: Fire Arm or Spray?
Noodling for fish
Primitive Fire Building
Bear Attacks
Nomadic Prepper Strategy
Catch your own live bait (for fishing)
How to make clay pots
Quickly craft stone tools
3 Odd techniques for catching fish
Survival Fishing
Step by Step Prepper Plan
EDC For Women
EDC For Men
EDC Survival
Best Survival Knife
Primitive Shelter
Best Campsite Selection Criteria
Acorn Flour Pancakes
Emergency Water
Prepper Gift List
Bear: Fire Arm or Spray?
Noodling for fish
Primitive Fire Building
Bear Attacks
Nomadic Prepper Strategy
Catch your own live bait (for fishing)
How to make clay pots
Quickly craft stone tools
3 Odd techniques for catching fish
Survival Fishing
Step by Step Prepper Plan
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.
Sunday, November 4, 2018
Home Defense Plan
How to Create a Home Defense Plan That Really Works
By Seth Thompson published in General, How To, Safety and Training
Every year, somewhere between 1.2 million and 3+ million American citizens use a firearm in self-defense, according to recently compiled home invasion statistics and crime reports. These numbers offer proof for the need to take home defense planning seriously.
This doesn’t mean that homeowners should live in fear. It means that responsible homeowners need to use comprehensive home defense strategies to protect their property. The most effective strategies require proper planning and the best information to go off of to prevent these incidents from happening in their homes.
Here’s how to create a home defense plan that really works:
Start By Burglar-Proofing Your Home
Over 2 million home burglaries are reported each year in the U.S., according to Safeguard the World, a Florida security company. It’s important for homeowners to take the first critical step to protect themselves against the most common crime in most neighborhoods, by burglar-proofing their homes. Burglars are typically opportunists who will break into a house if it looks unkempt or unsecured.
Start by securing potential weak points in your home, such as open windows, unlocked doors, open backyards with bushes, garages without lighting, and unsecured entry points to balconies and upper floors. Such weak points are what burglars or home invaders will look for when trying to get into your home.
Make sure your home is well maintained. Strategically place outdoor lighting to cover blind spots, trim your outdoor shrubs and lawn, never leave ladders outside, clear away debris, and fix any damaged windows and locks. Embrace the habit of shutting your windows and locking all doors when you’re not at home.
You can also get yourself and your family a dog as part of your home security plan. Large breeds, such as German Shepherds, Pit bulls, Labradors, Doberman, Bull mastiff, Akita, and Rottweilers are great options for homeowners who are serious about their home defense and deterrent strategies. These intelligent breeds have loud barks and are able to warn families of an intruder.
Install Video Surveillance Cameras
Only 20% of American homes use security cameras. Despite this, it’s important to note that homes without security systems are 300% more likely to be broken into than homes with them. Criminals don’t want to be recorded or seen, which is one of the main reasons why cameras are an effective deterrent. If you keep many valuables in your home or spend a lot of time away, installing security cameras is a must.
Modern security camera systems are more cost-effective than ever to install and maintain. Many also carry advanced features standard, such as remote viewing and playback from phones, tablets, and computers. Additional features for consideration include long-range infrared night vision, pan-tilt-zoom capabilities, motion-sensitive activation.
Install cameras in strategic areas like your main entry doors, garage, or backyard. Put up a surveillance sign saying “Video surveillance in use 24/7.” This is usually a great deterrent.
Consider Getting a Self-Defense Firearm
As part of your home defense plan, it’s advisable also to get yourself a rifle, shotgun or handgun for self-defense. Consider the type of gun and ammunition you need for self-defense, the training required to become proficient at using it, and additional equipment you may need. This could be a flashlight, ear protection, and/or a well-fitting holster.
You must also ensure that your gun or guns are stored safely in an easily accessible gun safe, so that your weapons and ammunition are ready when they’re needed.
Regularly Review and Practice Your Home Defense Plan
A home defense plan is never complete without regular reviews and practice to ensure its viability. By combining home defense strategies such as, burglar proofing, installing surveillance cameras both indoors and outdoors, and keeping a firearm ready, you can more easily take control of any situation that puts you and your family at risk. Cameras are an especially effective enhancement to the way you use guns for self-defense, as tools for enhanced situational awareness.
Make sure to strengthen all possible points of entry in your home and keep your home defense deterrents up to date. You and your family need a concrete home defense plan and must be able to execute it without hesitation or confusion. Consider the size and layout of your home, how many people live in your home, the abilities, and age of each member, and other details like where to go or regroup in case of a breach.
Taking the Right Approach
You can create a home defense plan that really works by being realistic and preparing for the most likely scenarios first. With the right approach, your home will be protected from incidents like break-ins when you’re at home or away, property intrusion and others.
Do you have a home security plan or tip? Share it in the comment section.
Seth Thompson is a writer and content strategist specializing in topics concerning homeowners and business owners for companies including CCTV Security Pros. he also writes about developments in science and technology. In his free time, Seth enjoys basketball and nature walks.
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Top 10 List of Prepper info
Top Rated Prepper Handbook Posts of all time
Top Rated Prepper Website
Country Home Security Plan
Home Invasion Response Plan
Guns in plain sight
Intruder Detection
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Modern Home Security
Sustainable City Survival
Random Security
Modern Defensive Shotguns
Click on the label below for similar topics
For additional information see the following links:
Blog Table of Contents Top 10 List of Prepper info
Top Rated Prepper Handbook Posts of all time
Top Rated Prepper Website
Country Home Security Plan
Home Invasion Response Plan
Guns in plain sight
Intruder Detection
Riot Preparations
Double Barreled Defense
Modern Home Security
Sustainable City Survival
Random Security
Modern Defensive Shotguns
Click on the label below for similar topics
Saturday, October 20, 2018
EDC Survival
EDC or Every Day Carry is one of the most likely survival scenarios you are likely to encounter. This is a situation where things go bad, and all you have with you are the things that you normally carry with you EVERY DAY. IF you are lucky, you have your car with a good assortment of things available.
Lets look at two scenarios: 1) No Car and 2) Having your car with you.
NO CAR - What you should carry on your person every day
CAR - What to carry in your car
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Lets look at two scenarios: 1) No Car and 2) Having your car with you.
NO CAR - What you should carry on your person every day
- Charged cell phone; don't let it get too low!
- Money - Cash, in small bills & a few coins
- A knife &/or a Leatherman Multi-Tool
- A ferrous rod &/or bic lighter for starting fire
- Band aids in your wallet or purse for first aid
- Concealed Carry pistol with extra rounds of ammo
- Comfortable shoes for walking great distances
- Long sleeve shirt &/or waterproof coat
- Condom (un-lubricated) for carrying water
- Know your edible wild plants; this is free and adds no weight
CAR - What to carry in your car
- Gasoline - enough to get home. Never run it down near empty.
- Case of bottled water (rotated every year)
- Water filter
- Stainless steel water bottle
- 2 Qt Pot to cook and boil water in
- Rifle with military ammo can full
- Back Pack
- Machete
- Water proof poncho or tarp for shelter
- First Aid Kit
- Long shelf life snack foods like beef jerky, granola, raisins or canned goods
- Cell Phone, solar charger & water proof case; power off when not needed
- MURS Radio and solar charger for communications
- Motion Detecting, Solar Powered Lights &/or Alarms for Intruder Detection
- Fishing - net, line & lots of hooks; extra line for security trip wires
- A Thermal Scope will give you superior night vision for night travel
- A regional MAP or Atlas, plastic coated or in a freezer bag for navigation
For more information visit our related links below:
Survival Pack (Security Patrol or Bug Out pack)
Wilderness Survival Pack (Video)
Dual Purpose Items
EDC For Women
EDC For Men
EDC Survival
Best Survival Knife
Primitive Shelter
Best Campsite Selection Criteria
Acorn Flour Pancakes
Emergency Water
Prepper Gift List
Bear: Fire Arm or Spray?
Noodling for fish
Primitive Fire Building
Bear Attacks
Nomadic Prepper Strategy
Catch your own live bait (for fishing)
How to make clay pots
Quickly craft stone tools
3 Odd techniques for catching fish
Survival Fishing
Step by Step Prepper Plan
EDC For Women
EDC For Men
EDC Survival
Best Survival Knife
Primitive Shelter
Best Campsite Selection Criteria
Acorn Flour Pancakes
Emergency Water
Prepper Gift List
Bear: Fire Arm or Spray?
Noodling for fish
Primitive Fire Building
Bear Attacks
Nomadic Prepper Strategy
Catch your own live bait (for fishing)
How to make clay pots
Quickly craft stone tools
3 Odd techniques for catching fish
Survival Fishing
Step by Step Prepper Plan
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.
Monday, October 1, 2018
What is a Prepper?
Preparing is a basic human function. We prep for a visit to the
grocery store by making a list. Eggs, check. Bread, check. Milk, check.
You can even prepare mentally without physically doing
anything."Prepping" is an extension of these normal preparations
everyone already does. It is usually considered extreme due to the
exposure it has garnered lately, being tied into ludicrous scenarios
that grow more and more far fetched by the day. Those that use prepping
to get ready for inevitable disasters or emergencies are "Preppers."
At TruePrepper, we are here to clear the air. Prepping is not about daydreaming on doomsday scenarios, it is about being ready for threats likely and unlikely that will be thrown your way. Prepping is about keeping yourself and your loved ones safe from harm and staying in control in unavoidable situations. Five steps can help you stay in control not only when SHTF, but in everyday scenarios as well:
The first step is to take a look at all the threats we have identified on this website. Come back when you are done browsing, but it is quite a few! These are just threats we are making you aware of. Try to branch out and look at what your neighbors have experienced, conventional and unconventional. Here are a few questions you can ask yourself:
Determine and Prioritize your Risks
Determining your risk to the threats you have identified is often overlooked in the prepping community, but it is one of the cornerstones of preparedness. Conducting a risk analysis is very important for prioritizing how you spend your time and physical resources. A risk analysis is completed by comparing the impact of a threat with the frequency that you anticipate that threat to occur. If you determine your risk levels wrong, and then prioritize your preparations accordingly, you may end up looking foolish or even worse, not being around to look foolish. Recently I read a blog post on how a well known prepper lost their home in a house fire. While my condolences go out to them and their family (nobody was injured, thankfully), I couldn't help but wonder if they had prioritized properly. Years of stockpiled food stores, energy solutions, and survival gear lost to one of the most common personal disasters that can affect a family. Take a look at our TrueRisk index, where at TruePrepper we have conducted a general risk analysis for you that you can tailor to your need. You will notice that almost everyone needs to prepare for house fires and home invasions first and foremost. Risk analysis and prioritization is important.
Make a Prepper Plan
Your plan can be written or verbal, small or large, a single plan or multiple plans, but it has to be shared and practiced. You have identified the threats, decided which you need to address and in what priority. Start with the high priority threats and plan accordingly. Your plan should include in the very least communication information, safe locations depending on threat, and ways to avoid threats and be more safe. Talk with your family about your plans for various disasters, emergencies, and survival scenarios. Share with trusted friends and ask for critiques to identify weak points in your planning.
Develop a Prepper Kit
Your kit can be generic, such as a simple disaster/survival kit, or it can be custom tuned to all threats you anticipate using specialized kits. The kit guides on TruePrepper are meant to get you started on developing different kits based on your needs. Our gear reviews are here to flesh out your prepper arsenal based on our collective knowledge and experience with the gear we share. Be wary of some items targeted to preppers online and in stores, as it is not always "you get what you pay for."
Train and Prepare
Set a schedule to practice, evaluate, and revise your emergency plans- at least annually. How do you prepare for the threats besides practicing your plan? You can mitigate them before they happen. If you live in a flood plain, look into flood insurance. Stay fit. You will be surprised at how much that helps all aspects of your life- not just during emergencies. Be resourceful. Keep learning new things- never stop learning. Survival skills are not only a huge help in making yourself self-sufficient, they are pretty fun to learn too. Last of all, although it is serious business to prepare for what life brings your way, try to have fun with it. If you find you enjoy prepping, you are more likely to stick with it and transfer the importance of being prepared to people you interact with.
For more good prepping information like this visit the True Prepper.
At TruePrepper, we are here to clear the air. Prepping is not about daydreaming on doomsday scenarios, it is about being ready for threats likely and unlikely that will be thrown your way. Prepping is about keeping yourself and your loved ones safe from harm and staying in control in unavoidable situations. Five steps can help you stay in control not only when SHTF, but in everyday scenarios as well:
- Identify your Threats
- Determine/Prioritize your Risks
- Make a Plan
- Develop a Kit
- Train and Prepare
The first step is to take a look at all the threats we have identified on this website. Come back when you are done browsing, but it is quite a few! These are just threats we are making you aware of. Try to branch out and look at what your neighbors have experienced, conventional and unconventional. Here are a few questions you can ask yourself:
- Is your neighborhood prone to burglaries? How often?
- Do you live in a flood plain or where wildfires occur frequently?
- Do you live near a nuclear plant or a fault line?
- Do you live near a train that transports hazardous chemicals?
- Does your neighbor feed bears for fun?
Determine and Prioritize your Risks
Determining your risk to the threats you have identified is often overlooked in the prepping community, but it is one of the cornerstones of preparedness. Conducting a risk analysis is very important for prioritizing how you spend your time and physical resources. A risk analysis is completed by comparing the impact of a threat with the frequency that you anticipate that threat to occur. If you determine your risk levels wrong, and then prioritize your preparations accordingly, you may end up looking foolish or even worse, not being around to look foolish. Recently I read a blog post on how a well known prepper lost their home in a house fire. While my condolences go out to them and their family (nobody was injured, thankfully), I couldn't help but wonder if they had prioritized properly. Years of stockpiled food stores, energy solutions, and survival gear lost to one of the most common personal disasters that can affect a family. Take a look at our TrueRisk index, where at TruePrepper we have conducted a general risk analysis for you that you can tailor to your need. You will notice that almost everyone needs to prepare for house fires and home invasions first and foremost. Risk analysis and prioritization is important.
Make a Prepper Plan
Your plan can be written or verbal, small or large, a single plan or multiple plans, but it has to be shared and practiced. You have identified the threats, decided which you need to address and in what priority. Start with the high priority threats and plan accordingly. Your plan should include in the very least communication information, safe locations depending on threat, and ways to avoid threats and be more safe. Talk with your family about your plans for various disasters, emergencies, and survival scenarios. Share with trusted friends and ask for critiques to identify weak points in your planning.
Develop a Prepper Kit
Your kit can be generic, such as a simple disaster/survival kit, or it can be custom tuned to all threats you anticipate using specialized kits. The kit guides on TruePrepper are meant to get you started on developing different kits based on your needs. Our gear reviews are here to flesh out your prepper arsenal based on our collective knowledge and experience with the gear we share. Be wary of some items targeted to preppers online and in stores, as it is not always "you get what you pay for."
Train and Prepare
Set a schedule to practice, evaluate, and revise your emergency plans- at least annually. How do you prepare for the threats besides practicing your plan? You can mitigate them before they happen. If you live in a flood plain, look into flood insurance. Stay fit. You will be surprised at how much that helps all aspects of your life- not just during emergencies. Be resourceful. Keep learning new things- never stop learning. Survival skills are not only a huge help in making yourself self-sufficient, they are pretty fun to learn too. Last of all, although it is serious business to prepare for what life brings your way, try to have fun with it. If you find you enjoy prepping, you are more likely to stick with it and transfer the importance of being prepared to people you interact with.
For more good prepping information like this visit the True Prepper.
For additional
information see the following links:
Blog Table of Contents
Sunday, September 23, 2018
Prepper Training Drills
During an emergency, it is easy to become indecisive. Unsure about what to do, people often freeze and do nothing. Such delays can be life threatening in some cases. But having rehearsed your plans makes executing them second nature.
It is good to have plans, but we must be able to execute them, and that requires practice. So what are some good training drills to practice? Anything that you have formal written plans for should be practiced. In addition to that, here are some suggested Training Drills:
For additional information see the following links:
Blog Table of Contents
Top 10 Lists
http://www.primitiveskills.com/ |
- Bug Out Time - there are Red Flag Warnings that it is bug out time, but will we recognize them and respond in a timely & sensible way?
- SHTF Day One exercise - what do you do the first day you realize things are falling apart?
- Home Invasion - Often there is no warning, requiring that you respond quickly and respond. Group Security Drills Country Home Security Plan
- Pandemic Quarantine procedures - don't just let people come and join your group.
- Shooting Skills - Target Practice, especially for beginners. A .22 Long Rifle or BB gun are the best for beginners and still fun for old timers.
- Group Movement Exercises for your Security Team. How do you safely move from point A to point B when the SHTF?
- Power Outage - practice being out of power for 1 day, 2 days, .... days. Its ok to leave your refrigerator and freezer running, but turn the breaker off for everything else and practice surviving without electricity.
- Fishing Skills are essential to Wilderness Survival and should be practices frequently.
Survival Fishing
3 Odd Techniques for Primitive Fishing
How to catch your own live bait
Noodling
- Camping - outdoor skills are essential. Camp out with the family and practice living off the land with only what you can carry in your Survival Back Pack.
- First Aid practice is good. Take Red Cross CPR classes or other such training.
For additional information see the following links:
Blog Table of Contents
Top 10 Lists
Sunday, September 16, 2018
Sewer disposal when the SHTF
Here is a TEST for you. After this test, the importance of this topic will be obvious.
Go 7 days without toilet paper or flushing your toilet. How long before it is intolerable?
Or try to bring in water from a creek or swimming pool in a 5 gal pail for every toilet flush you do.
Now suppose that every time you go out for a pail of water, that your life is in danger from Looters.
Consider the rule: when it is brown, flush it down; if it is yellow, let it mellow.
For many, it may be difficult to imagine how dark and violent the world can become. City Survival could become dangerous, especially without a Neighborhood Watch Program.
But our focus here is on waste disposal, which is an often overlooked consideration. Imagine what the neighborhood will be like when everyone starts dumping their poop in different places. Is there a vacant lot, or empty space away from everyone and water sources for dumping waste? Perhaps a business dumpster, or even an abandoned business.
Burning some waste and burying the rest (got shovels?) in 8" deep catholes could be a solution, although the smoke from burning could draw undesirable attention to you, putting your life in danger especially if you don't have Security &/or Intruder Detection. Even if you detect intruders, do your people have Shooting Training, or even Gun Safety Training?
The US Department of Conservation offers the following:
How to do it:
Your Neighborhood Watch Program could help organize a safe, sanitary latrine location a minimum of 200 feet away from water, trails, and campsites, in organic soil. Your latrine should be about 12" deep and one foot long for each person that will be using it each day. Then as the first one foot is used, the waste is covered and then the next foot is used.
By the middle of the 1800's cities, life in big cities was hazardous to your health. The air was polluted, the streams were open sewers and the streets were covered in horse manure. This led to disease and the death of many people. We must manage waste to prevent this from reoccurring and a small amount of planning can help achieve this.
For additional information, see the following links:
Blog Table of Contents
Top 10 List of Prepper info
Top Rated Prepper Handbook Posts of all time
Top Rated Prepper Website
Go 7 days without toilet paper or flushing your toilet. How long before it is intolerable?
Or try to bring in water from a creek or swimming pool in a 5 gal pail for every toilet flush you do.
Now suppose that every time you go out for a pail of water, that your life is in danger from Looters.
Consider the rule: when it is brown, flush it down; if it is yellow, let it mellow.
For many, it may be difficult to imagine how dark and violent the world can become. City Survival could become dangerous, especially without a Neighborhood Watch Program.
But our focus here is on waste disposal, which is an often overlooked consideration. Imagine what the neighborhood will be like when everyone starts dumping their poop in different places. Is there a vacant lot, or empty space away from everyone and water sources for dumping waste? Perhaps a business dumpster, or even an abandoned business.
Burning some waste and burying the rest (got shovels?) in 8" deep catholes could be a solution, although the smoke from burning could draw undesirable attention to you, putting your life in danger especially if you don't have Security &/or Intruder Detection. Even if you detect intruders, do your people have Shooting Training, or even Gun Safety Training?
The US Department of Conservation offers the following:
Shallow holes for human waste
Dig a shallow hole for human waste; but not just any hole, anywhere. Choose an appropriate place to dig the hole.How to do it:
- Keep human waste well away from waterways. Dig shallow holes at least 50 m from water, tracks and campsites.
- Select a site where other people are not likely to walk or camp, such as next to thick undergrowth or near fallen timber. If possible also dig your hole where it will receive plenty of sunlight. Heat from the sun helps decomposition.
- Use a trowel to dig a hole 150 - 200 mm deep (about the length of the trowel blade) and 100 -150 mm wide. Deposit your solid human waste. Then back fill the hole with dirt and disguise it with leaf litter or other natural materials.
- If camping in an area for more than one night, or if camping with a large group, agree on a single toilet place and dig a hole deep enough for the group for the length of your stay.
Toilet paper
- If you have to use paper, use only plain, unbleached, non-perfumed types.
- Use toilet paper sparingly.
- Do not burn toilet paper, as this can result in wildfires. Bury paper in your shallow hole or carry it out with you in a plastic bag.
- Try using natural materials such as bark or leaf vegetation (non-prickly!) or snow instead. Natural ‘toilet paper’ is as sanitary as processed toilet paper and blends back easily into the environment.
Your Neighborhood Watch Program could help organize a safe, sanitary latrine location a minimum of 200 feet away from water, trails, and campsites, in organic soil. Your latrine should be about 12" deep and one foot long for each person that will be using it each day. Then as the first one foot is used, the waste is covered and then the next foot is used.
By the middle of the 1800's cities, life in big cities was hazardous to your health. The air was polluted, the streams were open sewers and the streets were covered in horse manure. This led to disease and the death of many people. We must manage waste to prevent this from reoccurring and a small amount of planning can help achieve this.
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