Real Life Bug Out Bag

   / Real Life Bug Out Bag
  • Thread Starter
#31  
Extra pair of shoes.

Worked with a guy who ran LRRPs (Long Range Reconnaissance Patrol) on his second tour in Vietnam. Another was a Green Beret there. Both said most important thing you can do in any situation is take care of your feet. That one thing could be life or death. So a comfortable pair of walking shoes to wear and a pair of boots for rough going.

Plus extra socks.

RSKY
 
   / Real Life Bug Out Bag #32  
No danger here from a forest fire, not too much danger of an earthquake, tornado is a possibility but I have a storm shelter for that so I won't be going anywhere. IF a SHTF where government collapses, then I am better off right here with all my guns and ammo and food.

IF I were inclined to bug out, ID papers (birth certificate, passport etc) might be most important. If I were a prepper, I think I would have S---Load of freeze dried food & a proper way to sanitize water for drinking as the most important item along with cooking utensils ( not much use in having food if you have no way to prepare)and fire prep tools (a little GI alcohol single burner stove might be a very important device to have.
Personal meds is a must and a first aid kit is advisable, plus a personal protective weapon of choice and a good swiss army knife(one with lots of tools on it), lastly personal hygiene items.
 
   / Real Life Bug Out Bag #33  
for less space than a cell phone charger and recharge cell battery deals, you can get a solar USB charger that will slowly charge up your usb devices.

For your flashlights, get the small multi LED flashlights that use 3 AAA batteries. Long battery life on LED, lots bright white light. If you get rechargeable AAA batteries, and the correct adapter, you can charge those AAA batteries from your solar usb charger.

here's a tip many don't know. that USB plug in your trucks cig-lighter. Pull it out. take a 9v battery and match up the +/- and touch your USB charger to the 9v battery. MOST of the units on the market will work.. and will give you the 5v USB output on the charge port using that 9v battery. Yes, it will likely charge slower ( lower current - most units are 500 ma if cheap, and the better ones are up to 2000ma, though 1000ma is common on the units that cost mor ethan 5$.. the 5$ ones are almost always 500ma.. but you won't see that on the 9v battery... but it will charge. slowly... and yes.. it wil deplete the 9v battery after charging a while. ( which is why having a nimh or LI rechargeable 9v battery and a 12v small solar charger is nice. )

Items for a BOB can be endless.
 
   / Real Life Bug Out Bag #34  
Biggest issue with creating a BOB is keeping it fresh, most people make one up, then never touch it for years, when they do they find they have loaded it with lots of 'perishables' like dry cell batteries, medicines, food, etc that has gone either badly out of date, or just plain bad. My biggest example is a flashlight loaded with Duracell batteries, in a couple years the batteries will have leaked so badly that you might not even be able to remove them, ask me how I know!!!

IMHO, Creating a BOB is different than a survival kit, generally if you are bugging out you need to capture and take items that will enable you to survive, CASH, passwords, credentials, account info, etc. will enable you to be resourceful. where survival WILL require more food, water, clothes, light and power, but not necessarily to depart the locale.

Think hard about what you're trying to protect against (survival in place vs. need to relocate), maybe even a combination of kits. Also, think about your locale, in lowland or coastal some type of flotation equipment may be beneficial or necessary, but is it necessary in the high country?
 
   / Real Life Bug Out Bag #35  
The things the FEMA list highlighted for me were items like prescription drugs, documents, and “female hygiene” products. Remembering items like that would substantially reduce the misery quotient.

“Bug out” implies an unplanned departure. If the tides get crazy, we’d have an hour notice and probably couldn’t come back for two-three days.
 
   / Real Life Bug Out Bag #36  
We think more in terms of Get Home Bag instead of bug out. We each have a bag we keep in our vehicles with items designed for a day or two to keep us going and for protection. Home is the safe place. Home is where the food is, the water is and safety is. Bugging out where we live is a recipe for disaster.
 
   / Real Life Bug Out Bag #37  
Extra pair of shoes.

Worked with a guy who ran LRRPs (Long Range Reconnaissance Patrol) on his second tour in Vietnam. Another was a Green Beret there. Both said most important thing you can do in any situation is take care of your feet. That one thing could be life or death. So a comfortable pair of walking shoes to wear and a pair of boots for rough going.

Plus extra socks.

RSKY

Easy to forget the basics.

In our modern automobile centric world, what many people have on their feet would make 5 miles tough.

Rdgs, D.
 
   / Real Life Bug Out Bag #38  
We think more in terms of Get Home Bag instead of bug out. We each have a bag we keep in our vehicles with items designed for a day or two to keep us going and for protection. Home is the safe place. Home is where the food is, the water is and safety is. Bugging out where we live is a recipe for disaster.

What's in that bag? Is it planned for a breakdown or something more catastrophic?
 
   / Real Life Bug Out Bag
  • Thread Starter
#39  
Lots of good thoughts here.

This bag will have only non perishable or non expiring items in it. Other items, such as medicines, cash, certain clothing items, will be stored or positioned for easy pickup. I believe this is the key.

After starting this thread I now believe that just making a mental list of things needed and obtaining those items is a great big step forward in preparedness for an event as discussed above.

A funny aside to the discussion. About a month ago the youngest daughter called on a Saturday night. She was sick and throwing up everything. Couldn't even keep water down. She had remembered that we had some suppositories for one time somebody in the family had the same illness. So 10PM Saturday night I made the 25-mile drive to deliver the two boxes my wife had dug out of the refrigerator where they had to be stored. I unlocked her door (digital door lock) and placed the items on the kitchen counter and hurriedly left the building. The next day she called laughing, one box had been prescribed in 1987, the other in 1997. She used the newest ones and they seemed to help. So the next time one of us had to visit our family doctor we got a new prescription.

RSKY
 

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