10 PREPS You Must Get Now or Someone Else Will!

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  • čas přidán 29. 05. 2024
  • Don't miss out on this essential survival guide! In today’s video, we dive deep into the 10 crucial items you must secure now to ensure you're prepared for any crisis. These items are not just your everyday essentials; they are the difference between being ready and being left behind. Each of these items plays a critical role in survival and self-sufficiency, from maintaining warmth and safety to ensuring you have access to clean water and reliable power. Curious about what these items are? Make sure to watch the entire video to discover these key preps that you need to act on immediately before they're gone!

Komentáře • 19

  • @stevehartman1730
    @stevehartman1730 Před měsícem +10

    Wood stove, first aid kit, a good full tang knife, water filter, solar charger, emergency radio, versatile shelter options..a wool blanket 1 or 2 contractors bags, solar powered lights, reliable fire making tools, paracord

    • @danam.8709
      @danam.8709 Před měsícem +1

      Consider keeping alcohol (in ¿tuna? cans) as a fuel for the stove ... safe to burn without the giveaway of wood smoke. Make terry cloth, draw string bags of a size to contain a fire brick. Warm the bricks on or in the stove. Once warm put them in your beds they will keep warm for a long time and with wool blankets will give you a necessary good night's sleep.

    • @suegeorge998
      @suegeorge998 Před měsícem

      Thank you.

    • @NANASplash
      @NANASplash Před měsícem

      Thank you, Steve.

  • @user-qm3jo9os7s
    @user-qm3jo9os7s Před měsícem +2

    Get a car CB that plugs in your phone charger.you can get a magnet antenna.so you dont have to wire it in.i just paid 20.00 for a used one.get a Gun or non folding knife.keep water and granola bars in your car.

  • @LalaDee6251
    @LalaDee6251 Před měsícem +3

    What about Grandma’s molasses, does this stay good for a long time?

  • @susanwilliams1881
    @susanwilliams1881 Před měsícem +3

    Thanks for sharing

  • @able880
    @able880 Před měsícem +1

    The average person knows nothing about wood stoves or burning wood -
    Those with glass doors often wind up with a broken glass -
    If your getting a. Wood stove that you can just run a stove pipe out of a window -
    I would recomend you get a none EPA compliant cast iron wood box heater and the pipe that will be needed to pass the stove pipe through a window -
    Its far better to use stainless steel vent or chiminy pipe - also you need a collar were the stove pipe fits through a window or window opening along with a rain cap - ( galvanize and black stove pipe is often only good for one season it will rust away ) were as stainless steel stove pipe will out last the wood heater in many cases -
    Wood cures or dries about an inch per yr - its difficult to burn green wood -
    With none compliant cast iron wood stoves you can burn any thing in them that will burn along with green unseasoned wood -
    It takes an enormous amount of fuel to heat a home -
    In many areas there is no code restrictions on storing wood -
    A barbeque propane tank might only be enough fuel too heat a home for a day -
    Also in many parts there codes that restric hos many tanks you can have on hand -
    There also portable floding stainless wood burning heaters -

    • @NANASplash
      @NANASplash Před měsícem +1

      Excellent information. Thanks so much for sharing it!!!

    • @able880
      @able880 Před měsícem

      ​@@NANASplashglad you could appreciate that information -
      There all the shows on prepping but few know what there up against - I live in the deep south US the winters are not long -
      I live in a rural area after ice storms they will not deliver propane - the power can be knocked out for months - there is 7 miles of wire per customer - in the 1980s there were ice storms that knocked out power for long periods and it was getting down to 5° F -
      Back then every one used a wood box stove for primary heat or back up heat out here in the woods -
      I had a old wood box heater that was sort of a decoration - but when they will no longer deliver propane, after a ice storm - I had a piece of metal plate with a hole for the stove pipe cut in the plate that would fit in a window -
      all I had to do was put the heater in place and the plate in a window and slip the pipe on the stove and through the window plate then put the stove pipe on out side -
      I always kept a few cords of wood on hand even when I burned propane and heating oil - so after ice storms I could continue to heat my place -
      What most don't know is animals as long as they have feed there body's will generate the heat there body's need -
      With humans our body's only generate extra heat if we're moving - if we lay still heavy clothing will slow down our heat loss but we will become very cold after a while -
      We require external heat from some sort of heating device - in my case if it's real cold every day I'll burn 200 gallons of propane a month - so in 2 months I'm out of fuel - even if a truck comes by they might limit me to 100 gallons after hard ice storms - even after hurricanes propane delivery's are slow for a while after -

    • @able880
      @able880 Před měsícem +1

      I like watching these different shows, there interesting to watch -
      But if the support systems for city's fail most will not survive any length of time -
      I had worked the offshore and remote mountain oilfields as a contractor from the early 70s for yrs -
      In remote mountain regions we took all Wheat, rye, barley, buckwheat, and oatmeal off the menus - also all cooking oil except for butter off the menus - there were some meats we restricted like pork & rabbit ect -
      Those grains have proteins that viruses thrive on in extreamly cold regions - the crews would dehydrate from repeatedly catching the flue eating those grains in places it was getting real cold -
      The cooking oil including virgin olive oil and meat fats raise our blood pressure - the only oil used was butter it will pass through the kidneys just fine -
      The army learned all this during WW2 -
      We were primarily fed what's termed Dutch Rations they had fed sailors that diet for decades -
      it's was only about 300 calories a day - verses the average American diet of 2 to 3000 calories a day -
      Before the pipe lines reached us with fuel gas we were very limited when it came to fuel -
      Also the roads were not passable for lengths of time - it's often hard to find air drops in deep snow -
      Those grains I mentioned were all hybrid from the Romans - before that the grain were generally of the emery family -
      Humans need less food than most animals - if we're eating the right type of foods - if you look up The Survival Tabs - they were developed for NASA astronauts on long missions -
      A one quart bottle had 180 Tabs that was 2 weeks of food - the pipe line surveyors in the mountain oilfields packed quart bottles of tabs and lived on 240 calories a day for long periods that very difficult work -
      Like military MREs they can make you constipated -
      These prepper programs don't teach any of what I've said - also for hydration salt needs to be added and stored or shaken -
      Then the body will absorb the water and the person will be hydrated -

  • @debbiechadwick861
    @debbiechadwick861 Před měsícem

    What are contractor bags used for?

    • @user-mc4vz9mx6l
      @user-mc4vz9mx6l Před měsícem +1

      Water collection,temp shelter,cut it to make cordage,etc many things you can do with them

    • @NANASplash
      @NANASplash Před měsícem +2

      Body bags, sanitary uses, split and cover windows…