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SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
Road Side Pub
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<blockquote data-quote="MarcSpaz" data-source="post: 16003275" data-attributes="member: 183445"><p>I used to be an Assistant Emergency Coordinator in my county. I have trained with local and federal law enforcement and I am certified by FEMA and DHS as a NIMS ICS Manager, specializing in Technology and BIO-hazards. I spent a decade with my team preparing to not only survive, but to help others in affected areas as well. I'll give you all some tips on how to survive multiple situations, based on what I have learned and opinions I have developed.</p><p></p><p>I am going to skip the obvious stuff like meds, first-aid, firearms, etc., and cover stuff commonly ignored or under-prepped.</p><p></p><p>First and foremost, if you are going to "bug-out", you MUST do it prior to it being a necessity. If you wait until the SHTF, you're screwed, you waited too long. Bug-out requires a tremendous amount of insight and reading conditions/events in such as way that common travel is still an option. In a brown fan moment, passable roads, fuel, food and respect are either non-existent or very hard to find.</p><p></p><p>Also, be sure you have a vehicle that is capable of carrying the people you want to bring, food and supplies, as well as truly being off-road capable. You don't want to get stuck or not be able to get somewhere because a road is washed out or there is 6 inches of snow on the ground.</p><p></p><p>You need multiple destinations planned outside any expected area that will be impacted, with multiple routes per destination. If you are going somewhere that you don't own the property, make sure the property owner knows you are coming. Stay out of national parks, local parks, land management areas, and wildlife management areas. Especially if factions of military or law enforcement are something you are trying to avoid.</p><p></p><p>Regardless of where you are or what your plan is, if it involves staying in the affected area, you should plan for between 10 to 30 days worth of supplies so you don't need to venture outside. Cities are over crowded and a lot of people will be competing for limited resources. Lots of fighting will happen the first week. As people kill each other off or run away (evacuate), it will become safer to leave your location (Katrina is a great example of this).</p><p></p><p>Out in farm country, you are less likely to have chaos, but stragglers trying to leave the city or burbs will find their way to your land. Be ready to defend yourself if/when they arrive.</p><p></p><p>Specific supplies for the first days... plan on 3,000 calories / 300+ carbohydrates per day, per person. You also need 3 gallons of water per day, per person. At least 1 gallon should be potable. I know the water sounds like a lot, but non-potable water for washing, flushing toilets, etc. gets used very quickly. Plus you need potable water for hydration as well as cooking/food prep.</p><p></p><p>If you are in a close community, such as a city or the burbs, work with your neighbors to make a plan. There is strength in numbers. Using numerical odds to your favor to keep people away from your home is your best option. Remember, bullets go trough drywall very easily. Also, your home is probably very flammable. Due to a lack of fortification in your home, you must keep potential trouble far enough away from the property that it is protected from people who mean you harm.</p><p></p><p>If you are in a city or burbs and there is no immediately visible end to the loss of public infrastructure, you need to find what government agencies are stood up to support victims and get there before your supplies run out. After your short-term resources are exhausted, you are screwed. Especially if you have nowhere to go. Many agencies have predetermined locations chosen, such as schools, churches, warehouses, big-box stores, etc. Do research BEFORE it becomes a requirement to know.</p><p></p><p>If you are smart, you will play the long game. For me, that is zero dependency on any commercial resources and being able to live indefinitely off of natural resource. I have a home that borders a federally protected water right-of-way. Fresh flowing water is on my land. I have been baiting deer on my land for the last 20 years. If society goes to shit, be it for 3 months or 30 years, unless my property is over-run, I have zero reason to ever leave.</p><p></p><p>Get used to living without electricity. Generators are great if you are in a defensible community and your community members are going to make up a reliable team, but resources for generators are limited. Also, if an entire area is blacked out except your house, the bad guys know who has shit they can rob. Lights in the darkness and the sound of an engine (generator) running make you a target.</p><p></p><p>Learn how to butcher animals, smoke meats, etc. Without refrigeration, smoking and spice will be the only reasonable way to preserve food so you don't have to hunt/fish all the time.</p><p></p><p>Learn what naturally occurring vegetation and insects in your area are edible. Farming is great, but finding heritage seeds will be almost impossible and its not likely you know how to grow hybrid crops. Also, even if you know how to grow crops, you need to eat while you're waiting for that stuff to grow.</p><p></p><p>Firearms are great for all-out defense, but get a compound bow or compounded cross bow. Arrows and bolts are quiet and efficient killers without spooking other animals and giving your position away. While firearm cartridges are limited, even if you reload, arrows and bolts are easily reusable with little to no maintenance and almost no limit to the number of times they can be reused.</p><p></p><p>Learn to take care of and ride a horse. Be sure you have something to barter with to get a horse for transportation (if you don't own your own). Fuel will become limited very quickly. Horses are very quiet compared to driving a truck.</p><p></p><p>Learn how to make a fire. Like an actual long and hot burning fire. And learn how to do it without lighters or matches. Again... those items run out/dry.</p><p></p><p>I could write a book... but this should give you something to think about. Lots of stuff to take action on.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="MarcSpaz, post: 16003275, member: 183445"] I used to be an Assistant Emergency Coordinator in my county. I have trained with local and federal law enforcement and I am certified by FEMA and DHS as a NIMS ICS Manager, specializing in Technology and BIO-hazards. I spent a decade with my team preparing to not only survive, but to help others in affected areas as well. I'll give you all some tips on how to survive multiple situations, based on what I have learned and opinions I have developed. I am going to skip the obvious stuff like meds, first-aid, firearms, etc., and cover stuff commonly ignored or under-prepped. First and foremost, if you are going to "bug-out", you MUST do it prior to it being a necessity. If you wait until the SHTF, you're screwed, you waited too long. Bug-out requires a tremendous amount of insight and reading conditions/events in such as way that common travel is still an option. In a brown fan moment, passable roads, fuel, food and respect are either non-existent or very hard to find. Also, be sure you have a vehicle that is capable of carrying the people you want to bring, food and supplies, as well as truly being off-road capable. You don't want to get stuck or not be able to get somewhere because a road is washed out or there is 6 inches of snow on the ground. You need multiple destinations planned outside any expected area that will be impacted, with multiple routes per destination. If you are going somewhere that you don't own the property, make sure the property owner knows you are coming. Stay out of national parks, local parks, land management areas, and wildlife management areas. Especially if factions of military or law enforcement are something you are trying to avoid. Regardless of where you are or what your plan is, if it involves staying in the affected area, you should plan for between 10 to 30 days worth of supplies so you don't need to venture outside. Cities are over crowded and a lot of people will be competing for limited resources. Lots of fighting will happen the first week. As people kill each other off or run away (evacuate), it will become safer to leave your location (Katrina is a great example of this). Out in farm country, you are less likely to have chaos, but stragglers trying to leave the city or burbs will find their way to your land. Be ready to defend yourself if/when they arrive. Specific supplies for the first days... plan on 3,000 calories / 300+ carbohydrates per day, per person. You also need 3 gallons of water per day, per person. At least 1 gallon should be potable. I know the water sounds like a lot, but non-potable water for washing, flushing toilets, etc. gets used very quickly. Plus you need potable water for hydration as well as cooking/food prep. If you are in a close community, such as a city or the burbs, work with your neighbors to make a plan. There is strength in numbers. Using numerical odds to your favor to keep people away from your home is your best option. Remember, bullets go trough drywall very easily. Also, your home is probably very flammable. Due to a lack of fortification in your home, you must keep potential trouble far enough away from the property that it is protected from people who mean you harm. If you are in a city or burbs and there is no immediately visible end to the loss of public infrastructure, you need to find what government agencies are stood up to support victims and get there before your supplies run out. After your short-term resources are exhausted, you are screwed. Especially if you have nowhere to go. Many agencies have predetermined locations chosen, such as schools, churches, warehouses, big-box stores, etc. Do research BEFORE it becomes a requirement to know. If you are smart, you will play the long game. For me, that is zero dependency on any commercial resources and being able to live indefinitely off of natural resource. I have a home that borders a federally protected water right-of-way. Fresh flowing water is on my land. I have been baiting deer on my land for the last 20 years. If society goes to shit, be it for 3 months or 30 years, unless my property is over-run, I have zero reason to ever leave. Get used to living without electricity. Generators are great if you are in a defensible community and your community members are going to make up a reliable team, but resources for generators are limited. Also, if an entire area is blacked out except your house, the bad guys know who has shit they can rob. Lights in the darkness and the sound of an engine (generator) running make you a target. Learn how to butcher animals, smoke meats, etc. Without refrigeration, smoking and spice will be the only reasonable way to preserve food so you don't have to hunt/fish all the time. Learn what naturally occurring vegetation and insects in your area are edible. Farming is great, but finding heritage seeds will be almost impossible and its not likely you know how to grow hybrid crops. Also, even if you know how to grow crops, you need to eat while you're waiting for that stuff to grow. Firearms are great for all-out defense, but get a compound bow or compounded cross bow. Arrows and bolts are quiet and efficient killers without spooking other animals and giving your position away. While firearm cartridges are limited, even if you reload, arrows and bolts are easily reusable with little to no maintenance and almost no limit to the number of times they can be reused. Learn to take care of and ride a horse. Be sure you have something to barter with to get a horse for transportation (if you don't own your own). Fuel will become limited very quickly. Horses are very quiet compared to driving a truck. Learn how to make a fire. Like an actual long and hot burning fire. And learn how to do it without lighters or matches. Again... those items run out/dry. I could write a book... but this should give you something to think about. Lots of stuff to take action on. [/QUOTE]
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