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Anonymous ID:psxbY2ym Tue 08 Oct 2024 12:06:53 No.484189629 Report
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>>484189931>>484183774The way it was put to me, was this way:
You have a choice.
Either leave right when a crisis hits, or some time later.
If you leave when the crisis hits - you will be one of millions all fleeing. Nothing is going to be moving. It will be gridlock.
This happened after Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans. Everyone left at the same time, and they were all stuck. No food, no water, no fuel, no nothing.
If you leave too early, then you abandon everything and you will lose out on what you have stored - because you cannot take it all with you.
The best option seems to be a golden window of 6 weeks or so.
If there is a crisis and it has not been resolved in 6 weeks, then you need to start seriously thinking about moving.
You need to have more than 6 weeks of food and water stored, because things never go to plan. Ever.
>Rule of 3: you can go three weeks without food, but only 3 days without water.
Have water, yes, but also the ability to make more water safe to drink.
You can do this via filtration, you can do it chemically, or you can do it via boiling.
Filters will eventually become unusable. Boiling requires a heat source which may or may not work (think "electricity out"). Chemically may not always be an option.
Use redundant systems - filter when you can, boil as a rule and treat chemically with bleach.
Plain liquid bleach has a short shelf life - a few months.
Using a dry granular like Pool Shock (calcium hypochlorite) to create bleach on demand, as needed, is preferable because as a dry granular it will store indefinitely.