We first became familiar with the term TEOTWAWKI when we read James Wesley Rawles book How to Survive the End of the World As We Know It. Mr. Rawles is over at SurvivalBlog. If you haven't been over there, check out his site. It is full of information and resources.
What have you done to prepare? Okay, let’s look at the list. We all have lists and some even have lists of lists. Most of them include the following basic categories: Food, Water, Shelter, Protection and Tools. This is not an inclusive list. There are other facets of survival that are not addressed here, such as medications and pre-existing health conditions.
It’s TEOTWAWKI (the end of the world as we know
it). The SHTF (stuff hit the fan) and now you are on your own. Are you
prepared? Do you have the spiritual, mental, emotional, psychological and
physical tenacity to survive?
What have you done to prepare? Okay, let’s look at the list. We all have lists and some even have lists of lists. Most of them include the following basic categories: Food, Water, Shelter, Protection and Tools. This is not an inclusive list. There are other facets of survival that are not addressed here, such as medications and pre-existing health conditions.
Food
What do you have that will
maintain your health and vigor for an extended period of time? Staple goods
stored correctly will last for an extended length of time. These goods could
include: wheat, flour, rice, beans, sugar, honey, cereals, oatmeal, pasta,
powdered milk, cornmeal, powdered eggs, freeze dried meals, freeze dried meat
and/or vegetables, shortening, and salt. Canned goods, either from the store or
pressure canned at home will include a variety of items such as: green beans,
corn, soups, stews, tomatoes, fruit, juices, broth, olives, salmon, pickles, and
relish. Condiments and flavorings that will make meals more appealing: spices,
mustard, mayonnaise, salsa and dressings. Dried or canned meat with a healthy
fat content is a very desirable commodity. Seeds, nuts and dried fruits add
many different vitamins and minerals that would otherwise be lacking in a
survival diet. Vitamin and mineral supplements can also provide some nutritional needs that may be in short supply. A quality multi-vitamin is a good thing to have on hand.
Now that you have acquired an
adequate food supply what is your next step? What are you going to do when your
supply runs out and there is nothing left? Are you going to be able to provide
new food to your store of goods in a great enough quantity to maintain health
and vigor for your family? Are there too many people to feed? Are there enough
people to do the work necessary?
New food. Where will it come
from? I have heard many people say they will just go out in the woods and hunt.
Okay. That will work for…maybe, one week, because you and 5000 other people
have the same idea and in a very short period of time all game will be hunted
out….everywhere. Now what? I have also read about people who claim they will
just go out in the country and find a farmer and become their friends so the
farmer can feed them. I’m sorry, but what a laugh. About the only thing I know
that a farmer will let ‘someone from a town or city’ shake hands with in
TEOTWAWKI situation will be their shotgun. So that rules that out. Next? Will
you turn to a life of crime to feed your family? If you are watching your loved one starve, to what lengths will
you go? Have you thought about this? Are you prepared for it? So, back to new food and where or how to
obtain it, much of which will depend upon where you live when the SHTF. There
are a couple of different scenarios that will happen.
First, if you live in a town or
city and have only been able to make preparations there, this will greatly
limit your options of obtaining new food supplies. Many, many people have
prepared a way to G.O.O.D. (get out of dodge) when the time comes. Some have a
destination planned, but many don’t. Some have stocked a retreat that they hope
to get to when the time comes, some have made arrangements to go to another
family member’s or friend’s place. I can only say my prayers are with everyone
in this situation. It must be very difficult to know that at some point you
will have to flee and try to beat the odds in successfully leaving a highly
populated area before it is too late and end up in a safe, survival place and
not a starving refugee.
If you are already at your
retreat, then I would imagine you are doing everything you can to obtain the
things you need should we experience TEOTWAWKI. In that case, what are you
doing to insure that you will be able to produce a new food supply? Another
thing I have heard some people say is that they will eat their cows, or even
their neighbor’s cows. Do you know how much meat is on a cow? How will you
preserve it so the vast majority of it will not just rot? Do you have enough
salt to preserve it? Do you have the means to dry it and make jerky? Do you
have a way to store it and keep insects and varmints out of it? I would
recommend a smaller animal – goat, sheep, chicken, etc. – smaller carcass, less
waste, less fuel/time/energy to preserve/can/dry. Smaller livestock have lower
feed requirements and will provide more offspring in less amount of time.
Chickens will also provide eggs and can be fairly hardy at scavenging food for
themselves. Sheep and goats do well on just about any type of forage. The goats
may not produce as much milk if that is one of your plans, but they will
produce some. If you do have any kind of livestock how are you going to
maintain them so that someone else doesn’t steal or eat them? Are you able to protect your retreat, the people and animals that are there?
Livestock guardian dogs are a great asset, but they need to eat too. What are
you going to feed them?
Ok, that takes care of meat. What
about vegetables or fruit? Wherever you are, you can practice growing something
to eat. Grow tomatoes on the porch or balcony in a pot, spinach in the window
sill, just practice with whatever you can. If you are at your retreat,
preparing a garden, enriching the soil and learning what grows and produces
successfully in your area is critical. Those cans on the shelf are only going
to last so long and unless you are expecting Uncle Sam, mom and dad, your
children, neighbor or friends to feed you and take care of you when the chips
are down, then you had better learn everything you possibly can while there is
still time. Buy gardening books – how to, what to do when the bugs eat it up,
companion planting, seed starting and saving, if you don’t know it, buy a book
about it. Even if you don’t have time to learn it all and read all of them now,
you will have them for references. Seeds – how many do you have? You know the
saying to never plant your last seed, right? What if there is a late frost?
What if there is a hail storm? What if the bugs decimate everything? You can
never have too many seeds. Some will keep their viability for years and some
barely last a season. Again, know what grows and produces well in your area and
stock up on enough seeds to last your life time and then some. In my opinion,
they will be worth much more than gold.
I hope this has given you
something to think about pertaining to your food supply. Re-evaluate what you
have, what you need, how to obtain it and store it. Food for thought, right?
Water – the most precious commodity
We all know we can’t live without
water. Wherever you live try to have a variety of sources for water that are
easily accessible. There has been much written about how to purify and store
water. If you are planning to bug out, try to take as much pure water with you
as you can. Make sure you have more than one easily portable means of filtering
and purifying water. If you are trying to make time, don’t plan on boiling any.
Think through your water supply very carefully.
At a retreat there are many different
options for water supply. If your location allows for it, drill one or two
water wells. Install a hand pump on one and a 12 volt pump on the other powered
with a solar panel and battery. Have well buckets, pulleys and rope on hand in
case you need it. Devise a rain catchment system using guttering and water
storage tanks. Make sure the tanks you use are opaque and will help prevent the
growth of algae in the system. Dig a pond and plan for a feasible way to
transport the water to your home. Gravity flow systems work well. You will need
a way to filter the water. The Katadyn Gravidyn or Big Berky filters work well
and last a long time. Buy extra filters.
Along with water, think about
sanitation. All of that water is going to go somewhere. When you are no longer
relying on a toilet, what will you do then? Do you know how to dig a latrine or
outhouse? This item is very important. Sanitation will keep you healthy or lack
of will kill you. So make plans to safely dispose of all waste whether you are
in an apartment in town or at your retreat.
Shelter
Where will you live when
TEOTWAWKI happens? Most of us reading this post already have some distinct
ideas or plans where we will live. If you don’t, you need to make plans now
before something happens and forces you in a direction not of your choosing.
The climate and surrounding
population will impact your living conditions when the SHTF. Again, if you plan
to bug out have a destination in mind. Don’t go blindly driving out of town
hoping to run across some place you can stay. I don’t think that place will
ever materialize. Have a plan. Don’t head to a place that everyone else you
know is going. It will not be survivable.
If you have or are preparing a
retreat, plan everything around a total grid down situation forever. If the
power ever does come back on it will just be an added bonus, but don’t count on
it. With that said your shelter needs to be livable in the summer and winter.
If you live in an area that gets hot in the summer, what are you going to do to
maintain shelter and stay cool enough to manage? If you live in an area that is
very cold in the winter, how will you stay warm enough? Wood burning stoves or
fireplaces are wonderful and have the bonus of a place to cook meals. Do you
have enough firewood? Is there more available close by? Are you in the physical
condition to obtain the needed supply for as long as you live? A large stock of
fuel – propane, heating oil, kerosene, gasoline, etc. – will eventually run out
and probably won’t be replaced. Then what? Make a plan. It may not work out,
but it will give you the chance to carefully consider what is needed in your
location.
Do you have enough beds, bedding,
towels, clothing, shoes, shoestrings, socks, underwear, coats, gloves……etc. for
everyone that will be living with you? Your clothing will often be your number
one line of shelter. What will you do when your last pair of jeans wears out?
When your last pair of shoes is nothing but holes? Have you looked that far
down the road? If you have children, do you have clothes for them to grow into?
It’s hard to contemplate or imagine the types and quantity of clothing you and
your family will need for the foreseeable future. Can you sew? Do you have
material, needles, thread, buttons, zippers, and a treadle sewing machine? Can
you mend what you have so it will last as long as possible? How are you going
to keep your home and clothing clean? Do you have an extra broom or two? Do you
have soap? How much and how long will it last? What are you going to do when it
runs out? I really don’t see ever going to the store to buy soap if we really
have TEOTWAWKI. How will we keep clean and healthy and able to work hard enough
to survive? That goes back to an adequate water supply. Where will you bathe?
How often? How will you heat the water to bathe, wash your clothes and wash
dishes? Think. Think hard. How much do you need and what will you do when
everything you have been able to store and produce yourself is gone. What will
you do next?
Protection
We all see difficult times in the
initial phase of TEOTWAWKI. Do you have an adequate way to protect you and
yours? Innumerable articles have been written about the best forms of
protection, be it gun, knife or self. What you need is what works best for you,
your family and your situation.
The most important means of
protection, bar none, is your mind. This is one area that you have to be able
to wrap your mind around or it doesn’t matter what gun or training you have
had. If there are people coming to take everything you own or harm your family
you have to be ready to do the unthinkable. Period. Otherwise, you will lose
everything. Then all the preparations you have made will come to naught. Spend
time thinking, role playing in your mind a plethora of scenarios that may come
to pass when the SHTF. See yourself protecting your family and home. See
yourself successfully dealing with whatever threat may come your way. Practice
it over and over and over. Then practice it some more. Mental preparation will
provide you the opportunity to react in a more effective manner. Throwing your
hands up in the air in total surprise with “Oh! No! What do we do now?” coming
out of your mouth will only get everyone captured, hurt or killed. This is a
very important part of your plans and preparations.
So, now some time has passed and
most of the ‘bad guys’ have come and gone. You will still need to be ready to
protect your family and home. What about those that have given up on the place
they were staying because they have run out of everything they had stored and
are starving? What do you do when they come straggling up to your gate begging?
What do you do when you turn them away and they become angry? What do you do if
you give them food and a few days later some not-so-friendly people show up
demanding food since you fed the folks a few days ago? Then what? You need to
decide ahead of time how you are going to handle these situations. What if you
turn away the angry people and they come back later with 20 more angry people?
Can you handle that?
Let’s say you have several
firearms that you can use for protection and hunting. Do you have enough
ammunition? What will you do when you run out? Then what? We all know the
current state of ammunition supplies. If you don’t have what you want or need
now, you may never get it. If you are in this condition, what are you going to
do for protection? Think long and hard about how you will handle the safety and
security of your family.
Tools
There are so many tools that will
be useful in the case of TEOTWAWKI. I will break them down by categories and
hope this list stimulates many ideas and the creation of more lists for your
situation.
Kitchen/Food
These will be tools you need
every day to prepare your food and many of them will depend on if you have any
food to prepare. That thought goes back to the first section on food. Daily
food preparation will include items like silverware, plates, bowls, cups,
cooking utensils (spatula, large spoons, etc.), pots, skillets, bake ware, can
opener (for all of those canned goods you have stocked up on), pressure canner,
water bath canner, jars (which are great drinking glasses), lids, rings, tongs,
percolator (if you have stored any coffee), dishpan/bucket for wash water and
drain water (take the goose neck off of the drain under your kitchen sink and
catch the water in a five gallon bucket – use it to water the garden), wash
cloths, towels, soap (what are you going to use when you run out?), table and chairs
for both inside and outside. That list will get you started.
Gardening
I consider gardening to be a
must. If you are going to survive past what food you have stored then you are
going to have to be able to generate more food. So – gardening tools – always
have more than one. Is one person going to grow everything? I hope not. So store
as many of each item as you can – they will also be great for bartering. I
don’t think we are going to be forging new shovel blades. Tools – shovels,
rakes, hoes, buckets for water and produce, dishpans/bus tubs (are handy for
storing and washing produce or dishes or clothes or…) , galvanized washtubs and
watering cans, gloves (hard work will be easier if your hands are protected),
wide brimmed hats (you will be out in the hot sun growing your food), bandanas
(you will be sweating), wagon (for toting all kinds of things – mulch, dirt,
tools – get one that doesn’t have tires that need to be aired up), sturdy shoes
(and extra pairs – these will wear out), scissors, knives, outdoor chairs and
tables to process the garden produce, something to save seeds in, something to
dry seeds and produce (window screens will work, have extra screening material
– it comes in large rolls at the hardware store) and gumption (you can’t buy
this but you will need to be able to produce it in large quantities).
Repair and Production
You know all of those great tools
we have? Drills, chainsaws, skill saws, etc. that run on AC or batteries that
charge off of AC? Unless you have a solar system that has the capability of
running and/or charging these tools, they will be great paper weights. Hand
tools and the knowledge to use them will be critical. Don’t make do with one
set of screw drivers, pliers, wrenches, hammers, files, brace and bits, drill
bits, chisels, heavy snips, bolt cutters, chains, ropes, pulleys, carabineers,
eye hooks, screws, nails, duct tape (which, unfortunately, will run out one
day), wire, cable, fencing staples, barbed wire, t-posts, extra fencing, stock
panels, lumber, plywood, concrete blocks, PVC pipe with connectors and valves,
and books about things you don’t know how to do – have redundant sets of
everything if possible. This is one of those lists that could fill a book.
There are few of us that know how to build a grist mill or a blacksmith shop.
But there is information on the internet and out there in books that explain
how. Even if we did have the knowledge would we have the tools and materials
needed to construct/produce the needed item or machine to accomplish the task?
Think beyond what you have now to what may need to be produced in the future
and then plan accordingly.
All of this is written to help us
think beyond the preparations we are now making. When TEOTWAWKI arrives, there
will be a time of incomprehensible shock and denial. Then a time of desperation
and despair will come. Be ready for it and be ready to mourn and lament your
lack of preparedness in some facet of life. There is no human way that we can
all be prepared for every eventuality – it is humanly impossible. Deal with it
when it comes. Be ready to be able to survive and thrive beyond your ‘preps’.
Be ready to make it on your own when the time of TEOTWAWKI has passed and a
brave new world has come. God will still be ‘Our Father who art in Heaven’ who
leads and guides us along the way.
Blessings to you all,
Fern
A very informative article. There is so much that can be discussed here its not even funny. I know you touched on all of the major points and I hope it spurs people to dig in and research everything in more detail. The more you do and have on hand the higher your chances are in surviving an event.
ReplyDeleteQuinten,
DeleteThank you for your thoughts. It feels as if the wolf is getting closer and closer to the door. There are a lot of planned distractions that keep common folks from focusing on what is genuinely important. Most days are good but there are some days that, what is happening around me gets me down. But today ain't one of them.
Frank
Thank you for your frank and practical advice. I am trying to get back to Oregon from Florida before SHTF to join my family.
ReplyDeleteBest of luck to you and yours, you are fighting the good fight.
Thank you for your comment. Remember, the trip can be fun. Avoid big cities at all costs. Good luck on your move.
DeleteFrank
Although everything you said makes perfect sense, the vast amount of Americans believe "it can't happen here". We as a society are violent , thoughtless and reactive. From where I sit on my front porch, my only option is a .44 magnum with two cartridges; one for my wife and one for me. Due to age, physical condition, and living on the "right coast" my options are limited. Most folks do not consider this an option but from a secular view it is the only one according to my analysis. We do not choose to live in a barbaric world after the bread and circuses have ended.
ReplyDeleteThank you for the response. Your comments open up many debates, moral and ethical. If you still have the ability to shoot then you are valuable to somebody. If it ever comes to that point, remember, that everybody needs to sleep sooner or later, and you will be an asset to someone. Don't ever, ever give up. Find a way. Get a smaller caliber, a 44 is too big for an older person. (-:
DeleteFrank
Remember, Frank, he can shoot softer-recoiling .44 Special rounds in that .44 Mag gun! Otherwise, your reply is spot-on...never give up!
DeleteThat was one of the most thorough articles I've ever read. You could probably turn this post into an ebook and share it with people considering prepping. It hits on nearly everything and has definitely got me thinking. Thanks for sharing this on the Preparedness Blog Hop.
ReplyDeleteThank you for your kind words. Keep thinking. It may save your life some day.
DeleteFern
Thank you for the breakdown of scenarios. Many people I know can not fathom a world where we get to this point. I wish I was still one of them. Ignorance is bliss. It is overwhelming when you first realize that this is a very possible scenario. I am a married father of three in their teens. I live in a small one family concrete block house. My In-Laws live in a more rural area, just 30 miles away in a single wide trailer. It is tough to decide where to go. They have the country and paid off 2 acres. We have a strong house.
ReplyDeleteMy philosophy has been to build on all fronts piece by piece. 90watt solar and two deep cycle batteries and a moderate charge controller. A small amount of non GMO seeds, several hundred rounds of ammo for each ofthe guns I have, Canned goods, but only a few dozen. I am a capable metal caster with a home made furnace. Home made water filter, similar to a Berkey, I try to buy some junk silver every month. I read a lot. Let us all pray for things to turn around. If not, remember, there are sheep, wolves, and sheep dogs. Let's all try to be sheep dogs.
There are always positives and negatives, no matter where you are. It's good that you're thinking and preparing. Try to stay focused.
DeleteFrank
My husband and I are an older couple. I am recovering from breast cancer. Hubby is working on losing weight. We have a 22 acre piece of property that we have built a small house (with wood stove), garage and big barn with cowboy bunkhouse and bathroom (for overflow). We have a well and are digging another with hand pump. We're fortunate to have a swimming hole, fishing hole, trout stream and river down the road a piece. We're readying the garden with chicken manure and fencing (for the critters). We're looking into solar to run the kitchen stove, fridge and freezer. And the outhouse and chicken coop and water saving system will be spring projects. We've got reference books and are both pretty good with firearms. We're learning how to do 'stuff' every day. I could go on and on about preps, but the end result is what we do, we do for our family/community. We will fight to the end to help ourselves and them. I believe it is what I am called to do. Each to his own, but I agree, never give up. Each of us has value to the community.
ReplyDeleteSounds like you have things well under way and have thought many things through. Keep it up and best of luck.
DeleteFrank
Don't forget to purchase a LOT of Toliet Paper.....
ReplyDelete