I've never understood this. You think people in the city are going to leave all their resources and community behind to walk 20 miles into the suburbs to catch a squirrel?Awesome thread ... thanks for starting it!!! My wife and i are old school, we know alot about alot and have been for years storing things ... we often laugh about it ... when we are gone the kids are gonna find things and say "WTF was mom and dad expecting the world to end?"
Alot of good things have been brought up ... I personally have alot of weapons and ammo ... I will only trust close family. If the shlt hits the fan the big city folks will take out 50% of themselves before they realize a problem ... then 50% of them will flea to the hills only to have 50% of them not survive the remaining 50% will be cut in half trying to steal ... the numbers will come down ... maybe a good thing? I know I'm weird.
Repeating something doesn't make it true. Less than 2% of the population are farmers. How many people do you know who have the resources to grow all the food they need? I've stopped in grocery stores in NNE and their shelves are just as empty as the ones in Boston when a storm is forecast.??? Inner cities get food deliveries every 1-3 days, in a disaster, that's the max amount of time till shelves will be bare, add 36 hours past the no food mark and there will be panic and chaos.
Repeating something doesn't make it true. Less than 2% of the population are farmers. How many people do you know who have the resources to grow all the food they need? I've stopped in grocery stores in NNE and their shelves are just as empty as the ones in Boston when a storm is forecast.
The difference is that a city like Boston has food distribution warehouses for the entire region, a deep water port, an airport, and a highway network. If trucks aren't moving it won't be Boston that's screwed, it will be the rest of the region.
People seem to think that every person in a city must live in a high-rise apartment building, and have no common sense. The fistfights in grocery stores and generator thefts that I've heard of didn't happen in the city, they happened in the 'burbs.
Books I love books!! I have the whole foxfire series, gardening when it counts, a lot of homesteading books, cook books from the 20's/camping books. Butchering books, leather tanning, basket weaving, bow making, etc. I just dropped an ash tree hand pounded it and make a pack basket from it. Working on tooling the straps now. I love learning new things and books are a big part of that.
Repeating something doesn't make it true. Less than 2% of the population are farmers. How many people do you know who have the resources to grow all the food they need? I've stopped in grocery stores in NNE and their shelves are just as empty as the ones in Boston when a storm is forecast.
The difference is that a city like Boston has food distribution warehouses for the entire region, a deep water port, an airport, and a highway network. If trucks aren't moving it won't be Boston that's screwed, it will be the rest of the region.
People seem to think that every person in a city must live in a high-rise apartment building, and have no common sense. The fistfights in grocery stores and generator thefts that I've heard of didn't happen in the city, they happened in the 'burbs.
Great series...I happen to reside in the same county where it (Foxfire) all started...they have a great museum/exhibition...I also have the entire Foxfire series...