- Every time I go to the grocery store, even if it's just to pick up cat food or paper towels, I buy some form of canned good or other long-term-storage-type food. Before you know it, you've got a six month supply of soup and veggies and suchlike.
- Every time I go to a gun show, I buy a magazine for my pistol or carbine. Any time I'm at a gun shop and see a quality AR or 1911 mag in the "miscellaneous stuff" bin, I get one. Before you know it, you've got fifty pistol mags and fifty rifle mags.
- Whenever I need batteries or light bulbs or suchlike, I buy the next size larger pack than I really need and set the extras back. Before you know it, you've got a pretty decent store of both items in the sizes you need most.
Books. Bikes. Boomsticks.
“I only regret that I have but one face to palm for my country.”
Sunday, April 11, 2010
It's good to have a back stock...
I can't afford to hoard. However...
I think I shall adopt this practice for myself. I already do it with mags and ammo. It doesn't make much sense to fail to apply it to other needful things.
ReplyDeleteI do this as well. However I always consume the beef jerky.
ReplyDeleteToilet paper and coffee. I grab some every time my wife makes me go to Wally World for something else.
ReplyDeleteI keep good rotation going on the fruits and soups so that if it nears the printed expiration date, I donate it to the local food pantry.
ReplyDeleteGood idea, and yes it does pay off in the long run!
ReplyDeleteI do the same with Tucks Medicated Pads. I'll be hornswoggled if the U.N. Blue Helmets come marching up my driveway (or was that Cheetoh-eating Wookie-Suiters? I forget...) and I'm left without an adequate supply of same. IIRC, I have three spare jars stashed for now. :-)
ReplyDeleteI'm not as worried about U.N. Blue Helmets as I am about unemployment, magazine bans, goofy light bulb legislation, or short-term natural disasters...
ReplyDelete...although all of the above are panicky wookie-suited fears and have never happened in my lifetime.
:-) back atcha. :p
Oh, I don't disagree with the practice. I'm just placing a smidgen different priority on something I feel necessary when civilization goes to hell in a handbasket - at least until I can grow and extract Witch Hazel myself during a protracted survival situation. I ain't terribly effective being a tough-as-nails bastion of American ingenuity and all that when there's a nagging little problem. Kinda hard to make use of those wonderful USAF Combat Survival School skills when my God-damned pooper's bleeding and on fire. So, between that and Prilosec, you might say I'm hoarding like a mofo...
ReplyDeleteGewehr98 said:
ReplyDelete"Kinda hard to make use of those wonderful USAF Combat Survival School skills when my God-damned pooper's bleeding and on fire."
Tough to argue with that.
Cooper wrote an article on "Ballistic Wampum" extolling the virtues of continually setting back some .22 LR, essentially doubling the order and setting half back "for my friend."
ReplyDeleteI have a good handful of those temporary filling kits. I don't want to live through the zombieapocalypse with a bad tooth or a missing filling. I also have a good stock of the ointments and creams and etc for all the other ailments north and south.
ReplyDeleteI get good samples of other stuff from my MD, who rotates out the sample analgesics to keep them fresh.
"Cheetoh-eating Wookie-Suiters?"
ReplyDeleteThis is something we all fear.
They could invade our homes and set up shop in the basement playing video games.
Shootin' Buddy
Wife and I bought a few cases of REAL lightbulbs. (currently we DO use the curley ones when possible just because they do use less power, and they last a good long while, but we don't have kids who might roughhouse and break teh mercury globe)
ReplyDeleteBut we'll be damned if our supply gets cut!
Also I'm happy to report we stored them up high so the basement flood didn't gank them!
+1 with FatWhiteMan. I've always lived by "Sgt Edward's rules" from Parris Island; "Ammo, water and 'toilet'(sic) paper, hogs; everything else is negotiable" I'm adding coffee to the list. I'm less concerned with mags (though it's a good idea to "opportunity shop") than having plenty of "goods" with which to fill them.
ReplyDeleteCornmeal and gunpowder and hamhocks and guitar strings.
ReplyDeleteAlso 100-watt bulbs and paper towels, and lots and lots of coffee.
Boat Guy +1
ReplyDeleteWhen the coffee runs out, somebody is getting shot.
Gerry
It isn't really that hard to prepare for bad times. I just takes a little thought. Good for you.
ReplyDeleteBoat Guy. Maybe Uncle Sam's Misguided Children are different, but the Army runs on coffee, beer, tobacco, and toilet paper. Or did; tobacco use was frowned on but not dead when I retired, but I understand that it's up in The Sandbox, even if you can't legally get a beer...
ReplyDeleteFor operational needs add ammo, ancillary shooting needs--magazines, repair and replacement parts, and cleaning supplies--and batteries.
A brick of either .22rf High Speed Hollow Point or Large Rifle Primers every month, and an eventual well rotated goal of 6 months Spam, canned bacon, canned butter, soup, any kind of long term protein.
ReplyDeleteStarch is available anytime, if needed, off the back of a National Guard truck. I run hypoglycemic and need my meat.
Chicory grows pretty well in North America, and while it may not really be coffee, it's better than nothing.
ReplyDeleteEd Foster:
ReplyDeleteIf you are Hypoglycemic, I know of a way to control it. At least, it's been working for me for about 16 years. Might work for you.
I recently found a can in the garage with three bricks of Federal .22's in it; old enough the price was $7.90 each. They still shoot just fine. Cool, dry place and they last well.
ReplyDeleteWhat Brian said.
ReplyDeleteRemember to rotate your stock of wear items, by use or donation.
All the batteries and canned food in the world are useless if they're inedibly old and discharged from age...