cqaigy2
Super Member
It's partly a matter of education. If you grow up living with winter weather, your more likely to understand the specific cold weather issues and can make good decisions on the allocation of resources like time, money and physical effort. On the matter of preparedness, those are more generalized skills of understanding the systems you depend on and prioritizing and of us that had parents and neighbors that practiced good preparedness knowledge, will typically do better. For instance, we depend on electric power for heat, water, septic, cooking etc., and we typically loose power for a few days every other year with the longest being 2 weeks. Along with loosing power, we also get isolated because of flood and trees down in the roadways so that we can't leave to resupply essentials. Because of those situations, we have backups such as portable electric power and wood stove for heat and also our camping equipment comes into play. Those are substantial investment of knowledge,time physical ability and money that aren't available to some people. And then their are the gerbils.