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Old 11-08-2008, 07:07 AM   #11
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Backwoods View Post
This list can be bought for about $160 (look for sales, buy generic and store brands), and provides 30 days of nourishing meals with 2500 calories per day per person for a family of 4.

Additional items that would enhance this diet include cream of mushroom soup, instant potatoes, syrup, sprouting seeds, tea, more canned meats, vegetables, fruit, & dried beans/peas, tomato/spaghetti sauce (another $30 - 40). From these ingredients you can prepare: donuts, chocolate cake, chili mac casserole, biscuits, macaroni & cheese, tortillas, chili & rice, bread, rice pudding, Spanish rice, pasta and various sauces, hush puppies, gluten steaks/meatless loaf, bean loaf, cookies (among the many possibilities).

Measure portions carefully. If you typically don't include these foods in your diet, and this is what you plan to store, start cooking with them now. Don't wait for an emergency to start a new diet. This helps save on your current food bill too, and thus helps you to put aside more food now for an emergency later.

If you can't buy it all at once, buy a little at a time until you have 2 or 3 months emergency supplies on hand. Store carefully so roaches and rodents don't get in -- look for food grade plastic containers such as 5 or 6 gallon buckets with lids, you can often get them cheap or even free at bakeries, donut shops, restaurants, or other places that serve a lot of food. Empty 2 liter pop bottles are another cheap storage container for dry goods like beans, rice, and flour.

Rotate your supplies, use some of the flour, rice, beans or whatever, and then buy more. "Store what you eat, and eat what you store." Use this list as a guide, customize it to meet the needs and tastes of your family.
Funny you mention cost. My wife and I (by the list I posted above) figured our family of five to be able to eat plenty for less than $5 a day. Sounds like one of those "Save the Children" commercials. LOL!
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Old 11-08-2008, 08:03 PM   #12
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Along with a copy of the Bible, how about a copy of Poor Man's James Bond and a copy of the Federalist Papers? I guess it would depend on what type of disaster one is considering.
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Old 12-01-2008, 02:14 AM   #13
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I generally just keep a two week kit these days:

A balanced diet of soups,vegtables,canned meats.
Asperin
Neopsorin
a basic medical kit
Cigarettes
three pints of Vodka
A camp knife,a smaller hunting knife,and a Buck 110.
A tarpolean and a wool blanket.

three changes of clean clothing including underwear and socks.
a medium weight coat with a removable liner.
An extra pair of broken in boots.
An SKS rifle with 100 rounds of ball ammo and 50 rounds of SP.
A Ruger MkII pistol and 200 rounds of high vel cci HP.

And the whole kit can be dumped in the trunk of my car in less than five minutes.
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Old 12-02-2008, 01:29 AM   #14
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Granted that I am involved in search and rescue and disaster relief missions, my supplies double for my personal use and in support of those missions. A list follows:

10 million candle led light
6 cases (24 bottles) water
2 5 gal water containers
4 5 gal gasoline containers
wading boots
full trauma kit
flashlights
3 cases MRE's
2 cases C-rations
2 cases NATO rations
Complete CERT kit
Additional first aid supplies
Tyvek suits
N95 and N100 masks
10 pair leather gloves
2 fm transceivers
6 GMRS radios
handheld GPS
assorted canned goods
gas stove
gas cannisters
personal care products
4000 w generator
cleaning products
Clorox

This is a partial list of what I keep stock of. Although this was secured by me, I do use it for whatever comes along.
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Old 12-13-2008, 04:33 PM   #15
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Hi,
We share a common concern about meds. I am First Responder certified by Red Cross, and recent CERT vol. I recommend it for everyone! I paid only $150 through our ambulance squad. Check around with community orgs, FD, PD, etc.

I have used prescriptions personally 2-3 yrs passed expiration. No problems.
There are many useful herbs and household items for severe bleeding, antiseptic, anesthetic, etc.

I'm working on publishing a book and a pkt guide on urban survival. Until then, I can share more. Just ask. I also post on myspace.
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