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Hardened Structures Reminder of 20 Basic Survival Preparation Tips

Friday, July 16th, 2010 at 12:15 PM

Hardened Structures reminder of 20 Basic Survival Preparation Tips

Hardened Structures Home

Hardened Structures Home

Virgina Beach VA -(Ammoland.com)- Hardened Shelters LLC is a professional construction program management firm specializing in commercial, and residential hardening, fortified homes, bomb shelters, bunkers, storm shelters and self-sustaining hardened facilities.  Hardened Structures reminds us all to be prepared and take responsibility for yourself  should you encounter a survival event.

Evacuating your area (getting out of town quick):

1) Have a bug-out pack or bag for each family member and even pets. Bug-out bags are pre-packaged support bags or backpacks designed for loading into your vehicle and getting away from your present location when minutes really count.

Items to consider in a bug-out bag (one stingy adult for 7-10 days and not in a cold winter environment):

  • Three sets of underwear and sox
  • Wool sweater and warm hat
  • Light wind-proof jacket
  • Durable pants
  • Two long sleeve shirts
  • Pair of durable shoes
  • Poncho/rain gear
  • Basic bathroom kit, roll of toilet paper
  • Back-up medications and prescription glasses
  • Four large trash bags (many uses)
  • Stick matchesand joke type birthday candles
  • 8-12 MRE (Meals Ready to Eat) and hard candy
  • Light towel, baby powder (for dry showering)
  • Feminine hygiene products if applicable
  • Sheath or utility pocket knife
  • Wool blanket or sleeping bag
  • Gallon or more of water per person (if possible)
  • Water purification tablets or filter system
  • 100 feet of military grade 550 nylon cord
  • Flashlight and extra batteries
  • Cash in $10 bills (gold coins for barter)
  • Portable hand-crank radio
  • Firearm(s) and ammunition
  • Important papers,I.D.s, wills, insurance, birth certificates, passports, etc.
  • Note pad, pencils and pens

You must prepare for the fact that roads in and out of your area may be blocked by traffic, wrecks or worse, so the best bug-out container is a pre-packed backpack so you can walk out of the area if you must abandon your car. Have a map.

2) Keep your car’s fuel tank at least half way full. If possible, safely store 5-10 gallons of auto gasoline at your residence (outdoors, not in the garage) in approved gas containers. Change gasoline every few months and remember, in a crisis the gas stations will be jammed, out of service or $50.00 a gallon.

3) Know several evacuation routes. Have a basic destination a way and a plan how to link up with your family members. Depending on where you are and the situation it may be best to avoid strangers from seeing you.

4) Have an emergency travel bag with you always (this is NOT as comprehensive as your home based bug out bag). This is a smaller supply of items you keep in your car. Consider you are on a vacation trip and an event occurs stranding you miles from home or civilization. Odds are you will have basic clothing and personal items in your luggage.

Your emergency travel bag (a back pack is best container) might contain:

  • Flashlight and extra batteries
  • 100 feet of military 550 cord
  • Handgun (where legal) and 100-200 rounds of ammunition (may become barter) for each gun. We recommend the.22 long rifle caliber for overall versatility.
  • Hunting knife
  • 3-6 MREs, hard candy
  • Quart of water per person
  • Small portable radio (extra batteries)
  • Chemicals to purify water
  • One roll toilet paper
  • Four large garbage bags

Make this kit as comprehensive as you wish but this kit is to supply you and yours with self defense, food and water augmented by the personal items you may already have packed with you.

Basic Residence Survival Tips:

1) Know where all of your residence’s gas, electric and water shut-off valves are and have the tools to shut them off.

2) Develop a neighborhood watch/protection program. There is safety in numbers to defend your family and your house and prepare your neighborhood in the event of civil unrest. This may mean strategic blocking of your area’s streets, armed defense planning and fire-fighting plans, etc. This is especially important in urban environments; however civil unrest will extend far outside of the inner city as time passes.

3) Have firearms (and ammunition) and know how to use them. For most home-defense situations a pump-action shotgun with buckshot will prove effective.

4) Have a 60-day supply of food. The best survival food is the food you usually eat. Most canned foods have a posted 3-5 year “use by” date but may keep longer protected from extreme heat or cold.  Basic choices might be:

  • Stews
  • Beans
  • Chili
  • Tuna and sardines
  • Soup
  • Canned pasta
  • Canned chicken
  • Spam

These are meals in a can. Canned foods are insect and rodent proof and can be eaten cold (they are already cooked). Once opened, you can heat them over a candle in their own can juice which will provide much needed liquid. Juices and canned fruits have a much shorter shelf life.

Rotate your food stock throughout the year and as you use it and replenish with new purchases. Any food that might be getting near the expiration date may be donated to food banks for a tax write off. If needed, ration carefully from the beginning of the survival event. You can easily survive on one 303 size can a food per person per day if necessary. Last, don’t forget food for children and pets. Freeze dried and dehydrated foods, dried beans, etc. will keep for years but require water to rehydrate them.

5) Maintain a good supply of paper plates, plastic utensils, and disposable aluminum foil pans as you may not have the water for washing. Also have a back-up supply of toilet paper (and shovel for digging a backyard outhouse if water is gone). Garbage bags are very handy too. Other supplies might be candles, matches, an extra can opener or two, batteries, etc.

6) A gas barbecue grill is a real asset. Have an extra tank or more safely stored outside in garbage bags for weather protection. Your bbq grill can cook, heat canned food and boil water, making it an excellent backup for electrical power or gas loss. Always keep it outdoors.

7) Know how to locate water. You can live without food for a couple of weeks (sometimes much longer), but you will die in a very few days without water. To find water, check toilet tanks (not the toilet bowl), water heater, pools, etc. In an emergency while water is still available you can fill sinks and bath tubs (drains will leak). Any of those plastic storage tubs you may have for clothing, etc. make excellent water storage containers. Fresh water goes bad so learn how to maintain and purify water with common household bleach (a valuable item to have as it also works as a powerful sanitizer). If you buy water, the one-gallon jugs in your supermarket have at least a year storage life if kept cool; check the expiration dates.

8) Medical and First Aid supplies for at least 60 days. Many people do not maintain back up medications, pain killers, stimulants and sleeping aids and other legally obtained drugs. In addition a first aid kit that can handle larger injuries is an important item for any family. Get trained in basic First Aid at the least.

9) Keep some cash at home in case the banks shut down. As mentioned for the bug out bags, gold coins may make for excellent barter (not retail purchases) if things get that bad. Have copies or safely stored originals of valuable papers (wills, insurance, etc.) located where you can get them any time and quickly.

10) Have one or more hand crank, battery operated radios. Keep the batteries out until needed. Keep the radios wrapped well in aluminum foil and store in military surplus ammunition can for protection against electronic interference such as the effects of EMP (electronic magnetic pulse). Most batteries hold a charge for only 2 to 3 years.

Hardening Your Residence:

While serious hardening with bullet-resistant materials may not be feasible, there are things you can do to prepare your house in the event of civil disturbances and many disasters where you should not go outside such as in an atomic fallout situation or volcanic ash.

1) Advanced planning for civil unrest is important. First, all the previous recommendations apply. Have good locks on your house. Make sure any glass windows near your doors will not allow access to internal hand operated dead bolt locks. Have plenty of outdoor lighting.

Have good, solid, exterior doors with good locks. Keep high bushes away from windows and doors or cut them down during the emergency. Have a sturdy storm door to your front entrance. Consider applying tinted film to your front windows. It limits visibility into your house in daylight; it acts as both a heat and cold insulator and can resist or stop items thrown at your windows. Set up retreat rooms in your home that can act as basic panic rooms (bathrooms are excellent). Be prepared to defend your house. Be prepared to fight a significant house fire. If you have a swimming pool have a gas-powered pump you could use to fight a fire should your regular water supply be cut off.

2) Residence contamination: Move your disaster supplies into the house with you. Get your supply of water in place. Have duct tape and plastic sheeting that you can apply to the insides of windows, doors, fireplaces, and even use to isolate off a safe room or area. Close off vents and air conditioning. Cover stove and fireplace dampers and clothes dryer vents. From time to time you will need fresh air in a sealed room or carbon dioxide will build up to a deadly point.

3) Learn to recognize signs of danger. Tsunami, fire, floods, etc. Then plan how you will resist or escape from the particular threat(s) in your area.

4) Don’t be a hero. It is not heroic to die in your house defending it from a forest fire. Apply this thinking to other threats. It is ok to be a hero to save lives though.

5) Legal stuff. Some day order will be restored (hopefully) and anything you may have done during the emergency situation may be held against you in a court of some kind.

6) Read, learn and live. There are many books and sources for survival. Keep your plans simple and practical for your situation. Then put the plans for you and your family into use. Remember, planning for survival after things go south-is too late.

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SurvivalBlog.com – Prepared Individuals Living in Uncertain Times

Saturday, August 1st, 2009 at 12:08 AM

SurvivalBlog.com – Prepared Individuals Living in Uncertain Times

The Internet's Most Popular Daily Blog On Survival And Preparedness Topics

The Internet's Most Popular Daily Blog On Survival And Preparedness Topics

SurvivalBlog.com

SurvivalBlog.com

Somewhere West of the Rockies - -(AmmoLand.com)- AmmoLand.com’s featured Gun Blogger of the Month, for August 2009, is the SurvivalBlog.com.

James Wesley, Rawles (JWR) is a survivalist author and lecturer. JWR is also the editor of www.SurvivalBlog.com.

“I’m also a former U.S. Army intelligence officer, and now work as a full-time blogger and freelance writer. This blog reflects my interests. I’ve been an enthusiastic survivalist since my teenage years. I grew up in the Bomb Shelter era, and that mind set just never wore off” says James Wesley, Rawles.

The first amazing thing about the SurvivalBlog.com is JWR has not missed a daily post to his blog for four years starting in 2005 and his blog is a vast reference of survival tips, how to articles, political discussions and detailed discussion on everything survival and preparedness related.

SurvivalBlog.com Interview:

Q: What is your Blog’s Official Name?
A: www.SurvivalBlog.com

Q: What is your Name?
A: Jim Rawles

Q: What is your Online Name that you may post under?
A: Rawles (Such as at The FALFiles.)

Q: Where are you located?
A: Somewhere West of the Rockies

Q: What is the point of view or purpose of your blog?
A: To encourage preparedness

Q: How long has your Blog been active?
A: Since September 2005. (It is posted daily, and I’ve never missed a
day.)

Q: What do you do for a living or is your blog a full time job?
A: I”m a full time blogger, but also a novelist

Q: Do you have a specific agenda or goal of your blog?
A: To encourage preparedness and self-sufficiency.

Q: Do you have any other digital sites?
A: www.rawles.to and www.SurvivalRealty.com

Q: What is one thing that you want your readers to know about you?
A: If you like my blog, you’ll live my novel: Patriots: A Novel of
Survival in the Coming Collapse.
See:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patriots:_A_Novel_of_Survival_in_the_Coming_Collapse

Patriots: A Novel of Survival in the Coming Collapse

Patriots: A Novel of Survival in the Coming Collapse

Q: What was the best thing you did on your blog that go the most
reaction from your readers?
A: Published my “List of lists“, with family preparedness suggestions.

(The List of List Includes: Water List
Food Storage List
Food Preparation List
Personal List
First Aid /Minor Surgery List
Nuke Defense List
Biological Warfare Defense List
Gardening List
Hygiene List/Sanitation List
Hunting/Fishing/Trapping List
Power/Lighting/Batteries List
Fuels List
Firefighting List
Tactical Living List
Security-General
Security-Firearms
Communications/Monitoring List
Tools List
Sundries List
Survival Bookshelf List
Barter and Charity List)

Q: What was the worst thing you did on your blog that go the most
reaction from your readers?
A: I was 16 hours late posting SurvivalBlog one day, and some folks
thought that I had died or had been kidnapped.

Q: You have a lot of written content on your blog. Do you write it
all yourself or do you have help?
A: It is a collaborative effort.

Q: Obviously since we are featuring you your blog is Pro gun? What do
you think the outlook is for the future of gun rights in America?
A: I think that the growing 10th Amendment movement and upcoming court
decisions (that will expand on the Heller decision) will more firmly
secure our RKBA. I also expect Vermont-style concealed carry (“no
permit required”) will catch on in many western and southern states.

Q: What is your favorite firearm and why?
A: I like the L1A1. It is the ultimate in reliability for the FAL family.

Q: What hunting or shooting sports hobbies do you have?
A: Big game hunting, plinking, and steel challenge.

Q: Of the topics you cover what do you enjoy writing about the most?
A: Worst case scenarios

Q: What things would you like to do or expand in your blog to in the
future?
A: As time permits, I’d like to add educational video segments on
self-sufficiency.

Q: What would you like to say to those that are anti gun or maybe just
unsure of the purpose of guns in our society today?
A: They should just read The Document, at face value. Its language is
plain and clear!

Q: You have a lot of things going on besides SurvivalBlog.com, what
other things can our reader look forward to seeing from you?
My nonfiction book “How to Survive the End of the World as We Know It:
Tactics, Techniques, and Technologies for Uncertain Times” will be
released by Penguin Books in late September. I’m also presently writing
two sequels to my novel “Patriots”, which will be released in 2010 and
2011, by Simon & Schuster. Audio book version of several of my books
are also now in the works.

Q: What parting remarks or comments you would like to make or promote?
A: Get your Beans, Bullets, and Band-Aids together, folks! Time is short.

The SurvivalBlog.com has a great selection of articles. Check out Save Your Nickles, Survival Guns and Peak Oil.

Take some time and visit our friends at James at the SurvivalBlog.com

Peak Oil

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