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Thursday, July 16, 2026

The Best Peach Cobbler

The Best Peach Cobbler

Peach season is one of the best times of the year, am I right?! If you have a peach tree, this Peach Cobbler recipe is a great way to use up some of those peaches. And, it’s one of the best Peach Cobbler recipes I’ve found! Sweet peaches topped with a delicious, sweet crunch and ice cream make this cobbler the ultimate Southern comfort dessert.

The Story Behind Peach Cobbler

Long before peach cobbler became a beloved dessert across America, peaches themselves had to make quite a journey. Peaches originated in China thousands of years ago, where they were treasured not only for their sweet flavor but also as a symbol of longevity and good fortune. Traders carried peach trees along the Silk Road into Persia, and from there the fruit spread throughout the Mediterranean and into Europe.

When European settlers came to America, they brought peach trees, and the fruit found a welcoming home in the warm climates of the southern colonies. Spanish explorers had already planted peach orchards in Florida in the 1500s, and by the 1600s peaches were growing wild across much of the South. Early American settlers quickly discovered that peaches thrived in this new soil, and peach orchards became a common sight on farms and homesteads.

Cobbler itself was born out of necessity. Early settlers in America did not always have the ingredients or the ovens needed to make a traditional English pie with its delicate lattice crust. Instead, resourceful pioneer cooks made do with what they had. They would place fruit in a pot or a deep dish, cover it with a simple biscuit-like topping, and bake it over an open fire or in a basic oven. The topping often came out looking bumpy and uneven, resembling the cobblestones found on old streets, and many believe this is where the name cobbler came from.

As peach trees flourished across the southern states, peach cobbler became a natural way to use up an abundant harvest. Families would gather baskets of ripe peaches each summer, and cobbler became a simple, comforting way to turn that harvest into a warm and satisfying dessert. It required little more than fruit, a bit of sugar, some flour, and butter, ingredients that most farm families already had on hand.

Peach cobbler grew into a true symbol of Southern hospitality. It was served at church gatherings, family reunions, and Sunday dinners. Grandmothers passed their recipes down to daughters and granddaughters, each family adding its own special touch, whether that meant a hint of cinnamon, a splash of vanilla, or a topping made with biscuits instead of batter. Because it was so easy to make and so universally loved, peach cobbler spread far beyond the South and became a favorite dessert across the entire country.

Today, peach cobbler remains one of the most cherished desserts in American kitchens. It carries with it a sense of history, family tradition, and the simple joy of turning fresh, ripe peaches into something warm and delicious. Every time a family gathers around a table to enjoy a slice of peach cobbler, they are taking part in a tradition that stretches back generations, all the way to those early orchards planted by determined settlers who knew a good peach was worth the effort.

Easy Old Fashioned Peach Cobbler

Peach cobbler is a traditional American dessert that’s a Southern favorite. Although its roots come from the South, everyone loves a good peach cobbler, especially during those spring and summer months.

For this recipe, I used frozen peaches, but you can use fresh peaches as well. This dessert consists of sugared peaches topped with a sweetened biscuit topping, baked until the fruit is tender and the topping is sweet and crispy.

Peach Cobbler with Ice Cream

Peach Cobbler Ingredients

For this recipe, you will need ingredients for the peach filling, as well as ingredients for the cobbler topping. As a prepper, you probably have most of these ingredients already, but if you don’t, get out your shopping list and jot these down:

  • Peaches: I used frozen peaches, but fresh peaches would ultimately make this recipe even better! If using fresh peaches, make sure you read the instructions below on how to peel and cut them.
  • Sugar: When measuring your sugar, use the measuring cup to scoop and pack it, so you get the right amount to sweeten your peaches.
  • Flour: I used bread flour for this recipe. You will measure your flour in the opposite way you measure sugar. Use a spoon to scoop the flour into the measuring cup, and then level it off with a butter knife. Flour packs tightly, so if you scoop it with the measuring cup, you end up with more flour than you need.
  • Lemon juice: It helps keep your peaches from browning while they cook. It helps preserve the flavor and texture of the cobbler.
  • Butter: You will need butter to grease your baking dish, as well as butter for the cobbler topping.
  • Baking powder: This helps the cobbler topping to rise and thicken as it cooks, so you have a fluffy, yet crispy topping.
  • Shortening: Has a higher melting point than butter, which means using it in your cobbler topping results in a higher rise, a soft interior texture, and a crispy outer texture.
  • Milk: I use any milk I have on hand, but I prefer whole milk.
  • Eggs: Eggs work best when they are at room temperature. Set them on the counter about 30 minutes before using them.
  • Course Raw Sugar: This is optional, but adds a layer of sweetness and crunch to your topping.
  • Salt: You’ll need a few dashes of salt for seasoning.

Items You May Need In The Kitchen

Peach Cobbler

Step One

Peach Filling Ingredients

First, gather all of your ingredients so you’re ready to make the recipe. These are for the peach filling.

Peach Filling

Cobbler Topping Ingredients

These ingredients make the cobbler cake-biscuit type topping. Start by preheating your oven to 400°F (204°C). Then grease a 9-inch by 13-inch baking pan with butter and set it aside.

Cobbler Topping Ingredients

Step Two

These are the frozen peaches thawing and draining. I felt they were too large for my cobbler, so I cut them in half or thirds, depending on how large the peach slices were.

Sliced Peaches

Cut Peaches Smaller

I wanted bite-sized pieces of the peaches, so here they are. It was easy to cut them smaller while they were slightly frozen. We let them drain for about two hours.

Peaches Cut Smaller

Drain your frozen peaches, or peel and cut your fresh peaches. Grab a bowl and combine the drained peaches, sugar, flour, lemon juice, and salt. Stir until covered and set aside.

Peach Filling

Step Three

Now, the cobbler topping. Combine the flour, sugar, and baking powder, and stir until mixed. Beat the eggs and milk together.

Mix Dry Ingredients

Step Four

Now, cut in the butter and the shortening with a pastry cutter.

The Best Peach Cobbler

Step Five

Pour the egg mixture into the flour mixture and stir with a fork until combined.

The Best Peach Cobbler

Step Six

Mix using your hands or the pastry cutter.

Cut In The Butter

Step Seven

Place the peach mixture into the buttered baking pan.

The Best Peach Cobbler

Step Eight

Then, place dollops of the cobbler topping onto the peaches. Make it as even as possible to give that “cobbled” look. Sprinkle with coarse raw sugar, if you choose.

Cobbler Topping

Step Nine

Bake the peach cobbler for 30-35 minutes, or until golden brown. Let the cobbler rest for 10-15 minutes before serving.

Finished Product

Serve with a scoop of vanilla ice cream or a dollop of freshly whipped cream. Enjoy!

The Best Peach Cobbler

Peach Cobbler Recipe

The Best Peach Cobbler
Print

Peach Cobbler

Course Dessert
Cuisine American
Prep Time 30 minutes
Cook Time 35 minutes
Resting Time 15 minutes
Total Time 1 hour 20 minutes
Servings 8 people
Author Linda Loosli

Ingredients

Fruit Filling

  • butter to grease baking dish
  • 3 pounds frozen peaches, drained
  • 2 cups white granulated sugar
  • 1/2 cup white flour, I use bread flour
  • 3 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
  • Dash of salt

Cobbler Topping

  • 3 cups white flour, I use bread flour
  • 4 tablespoons white granulated sugar
  • 1-1/2 tablespoons baking powder
  • Dash of salt
  • 3 tablespoons butter
  • 3 tablespoons vegetable shortening
  • 3/4 cup milk
  • 2-3 eggs, 3 medium or 2 large
  • 3-4 tablespoons coarse raw sugar (optional for a crunchy top)
  • Serve with whipping cream or vanilla ice cream

Instructions

Fruit Filling

  • Start by preheating your oven to 400°F (204°C). Grease a 9-inch by 13-inch baking pan with butter.
  • Then, drain the frozen peaches.
  • Grab a bowl and combine the drained peaches, sugar, flour, lemon juice, and the salt. Stir until covered and set aside.

Cobbler Topping

  • Combine the flour, sugar, and baking powder, stir until mixed.
  • Now, cut in the butter and the shortening with a pastry cutter.
  • Beat the eggs and milk together. Pour the egg mixture into the flour mixture and stir with a fork until combined.
  • Place the peach mixture into the buttered baking pan.
  • Then, place dollops of the cobbler topping onto the peaches. Make it as evenly as possible to make that "cobbled" look. Sprinkle additional sugar on top of the cobbler.
  • Bake for 30-35 minutes or until golden brown.
  • Let the cobbler rest for 10-15 minutes before you serve it.
  • Serve with a scoop of vanilla ice cream or a dollop of freshly whipped cream.

Recipe Tips

  1. Don’t use canned fillings. Although you may be tempted to use canned peaches or peach pie filling, you should stick to fresh or frozen fruit. Otherwise, the cobbler will be sickly sweet and gummy.
  2. Thaw the frozen peaches. This allows you to drain them and coat them with sugar, flour, and lemon juice.
  3. Cut peaches into bite-sized pieces. Whether you are using fresh or frozen peaches, make sure they are cut into bite-sized pieces for easier scooping and eating.
  4. Don’t overcrowd the topping. If you completely cover the fruit filling with the topping, it will steam the fruit and the bottom of the topping, making a wet finished cobbler. Instead, leave space between each portion of the topping so that the steam can escape. This creates a caramelized fruit with a crispy topping.
  5. Bake it to perfection. You want the filling to be bubbly around the sides, and the topping to be a deep amber color. You can use a thermometer in the center of the cobbler at the thickest part of the topping to check for doneness. It should be (200°F ) = (93°C)

How Do I Use Fresh Peaches For This Recipe

If you are using fresh peaches for this recipe instead of frozen ones, you will need to peel and cut your peaches first. Then, you can mix them with the sugar, flour, and lemon juice and follow the steps above.

How to Easily Peel Fresh Peaches

  1. Boil a pot of water on the stove.
  2. Gently lower 2-3 peaches into the water at a time.
  3. Boil for 30 seconds.
  4. Then, remove the peaches and immediately place them in an ice-water bath. The ice water shocks the peaches to keep the flesh from cooking and makes them easy to peel.
  5. Easily peel the skin off your peaches.

Why is Peach Cobbler Called Cobbler?

A cobbler is like a deep-dish pizza. It has a gooey inside with a crispy, crunchy dough on top. It’s similar to a pie, but it’s called a cobbler because the crust is thicker, arranged in a “cobbled” look, and is only placed on top, not around the filling.

Do You Serve Cobbler Hot or Cold?

This is a personal preference. I serve cobbler hot or warm because I think it is made even better when served warm, with a cool, creamy contrast, such as whipped cream or vanilla ice cream. You can serve it cold as well, but it’s all up to how you like it.

How Do I Store Leftover Peach Cobbler?

According to the USDA, peach cobbler can be stored at room temperature for 2-days. After 2 days, you will want to refrigerate your leftover peach cobbler to keep the topping from getting mushy. Cover it tightly with plastic wrap and store it in your fridge for an additional 2-3 days.

More Dessert Recipes You’ll Love

Looking for more recipes where you can use your fruit from your garden?! Here are some of my favorite homemade dessert recipes to try!

Final Word

I hope you enjoyed learning about the history behind this wonderful dessert as much as I enjoyed sharing it with you. There is something so special about a recipe that has traveled through centuries and continents to land on our tables today. I hope you will gather some ripe peaches this season and make a peach cobbler of your own to share with the people you love. It’s all about teaching our kids and grandkids to cook from scratch. Please stock up where you can. May God bless this world, Linda

The post The Best Peach Cobbler appeared first on Food Storage Moms.



from Food Storage Moms

10 Things You Should Buy Right Now If You Haven’t Started Prepping

Estimated reading time: 8 minutes

10 Things You Should Buy Right Now If You Haven’t Started Prepping

If you’re one of our readers who likes to learn about homesteading and preparedness, but hasn’t taken any concrete steps, this article is for you.

Everywhere you look, there are signs that civilization has peaked and it’s all downhill from here. Thanks to wars, crop failures, political battles, and economic turmoil, food insecurity is on the rise, and the entire world is going crazy.

We don’t know when things are going to pop off, but you have to accept reality: hard times are coming. For many, they’re already here. The best thing you can do is get ready. Be prepared to rely on what’s in your pantry, basement, or wherever. It’s the only thing you can rely on.

Having a stockpile of food and other basic necessities will give you peace of mind. You’re going to sleep a little better. You’re going to feel your anxiety drop. When you hear the news about recession, war, or another pandemic, you can take a breath.

You don’t have to be one of the people panicking to get a bag of rice to feed your family. You can stay home, stay safe and stay calm.

The following list is a great way to get started securing your future, and you can always build on this list. Preppers will tell you that true preppers never stop. You keep stocking and adding little things that will make your life a little easier if there’s a disaster, manmade or natural.

If the shit were to hit the fan, would you be prepared to stay in your home for days? Weeks? If you’re not, you need to get started on this list. Most of these things are really cheap and plentiful right now. You can buy in bulk and pay pennies for some of the items.

Food

Food is pretty obvious and it’s a big umbrella. Essentially, you want to have nonperishable foods. Don’t waste your money stocking anything that requires refrigeration. There are countless lists you can find about what you should be putting away for a rainy day. We’ll give you some of the brief highlights.

There is one really important rule to remember—only store what your family will eat. Some other things you’ll want to remember are things like nutritional content. Calories count, but not in the way you are used to now. You’re going to need the calories when you’re busting your butt trying to take care of business.

You need energy. Calories are energy. You’re also going to need to think about nutrition. You need to stay as healthy as possible. Eating a balanced diet is important. You’re going to need plenty of protein, carbohydrates and the basic vitamins and minerals.

On a side note, it doesn’t hurt to store some of the little things that bring you comfort. Chocolate and candy can go a long way to making a horrible day a lot better. Think of the kids that are going to be desperate for their usual treats.

Water

It’s hard to store enough water to keep your family going, but there are some options. If you are going to store water straight from your tap, store it in plastic containers like washed and rinsed two-liter soda bottles. Don’t use milk jugs. They aren’t going to last long.

Bottled water is good for immediate short-term use. The larger five-gallon containers are great, and 55-gallon barrels are better if you have the space for them.

You’ll need to store plenty of methods to purify any water you store or collect. A nice filtering system is great. Basic household bleach will also work (use 5-8 drops of regular unscented bleach per gallon of water), but it’s only good for about six months on the shelf. Make sure you are rotating your supply.

Here are some other water purification methods to consider:

First aid

If you’re not able to get to a doctor, you need to be prepared to handle your immediate medical needs. You may not have the luxury of running to urgent care to handle a minor injury. Everything from the basic scraped knees to a laceration that requires stitches or a sprain.

A few supplies you want to have in your stockpile are listed below. Don’t be afraid to add to it and overstock. You can never have too much.

Natural medicines

This is one of those things that will take some knowledge. You want to learn about some natural medicine cures and homeopathic meds. Buy a book—you won’t be disappointed. There are plenty of options available. Plenty of things you can use to fight infections that don’t require a prescription.

It goes beyond daily vitamins. Things like raw honey, garlic pills and essential oils all have their place in the world of natural medicine. When you can’t get access to prescription meds, know how to treat yourself without a prescription pad.

Consider stocking up on herbal teas such as chamomile, peppermint, and echinacea. Chamomile can help with sleep and anxiety, peppermint aids digestion, and echinacea boosts the immune system. Also, keep a supply of activated charcoal for poisoning and a book on identifying and using wild medicinal plants.

And finally, make sure you have a mortar and pestle so you can grind up ingredients.

Tools

This is about as big of an umbrella as the food topic. When we talk about tools, we talk about the things that allow you to survive. To live without the most basic conveniences like calling a handyman to fix a broken door or maybe without electricity.

Think about what’s in your garage or pantry right now. Could you start a fire to keep your family warm and to make a meal? Can you secure your front door to keep people from coming to get the stuff you do have? Fix your car, bike or whatever transportation you might be relying on?

Cleaning supplies

You need to keep your space clean and as bacteria free as possible. If things get to the point you don’t have running water, keeping your home clean becomes even more important. You want to avoid cross-contamination with your food prep.

You also need to think about the stuff you’re going to be doing outside and tracking in. Keeping your home clean can make you feel better physically as well as mentally.

Personal hygiene

Cleanliness is important to staying healthy. It also makes you feel a lot better when you don’t stink. You can’t afford to deal with issues that arise from being dirty. It can lead to sickness and even infection. Stock up on these things because they can also be very useful for bartering with your neighbors.

Survival in general

Think of what’s in your junk drawer, garage or in the closet that catches all the weird little things that you need but don’t really have a space. The list below is not comprehensive, but it will help get you in the right mindset.

Think about all the little things that make life easier. Things that will help you survive in general.

The list is a starting point. Having these supplies on hand will mean the difference between not just surviving but being comfortable and better capable of thriving. Don’t put it off. Make a plan, clear some space in your home and do it.

Originally published on Homestead Survival Site.

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The post 10 Things You Should Buy Right Now If You Haven’t Started Prepping appeared first on Urban Survival Site.



from Urban Survival Site

Daylight Saving Time: Yay or Nay?

Daylight Savings Time Banner

Daylight Saving Time: Yay or Nay? We’d like to help you understand the clock change debate. Every spring and fall, most of us go through the same ritual. We walk around the house changing clocks, resetting the microwave, and trying to remember whether we’re supposed to lose an hour of sleep or gain one. Daylight Saving Time, often shortened to DST, has been part of American life for over a century, yet it remains one of the most debated topics. So is it a blessing or a burden? Let’s look at where it came from, why it started, and whether it’s actually doing what it was designed to do.

Blue and White Alarm Clock

My Thoughts

Twice a year, I have to think about: “Spring Ahead or Fall Back.” I remember as a young mother, it was hard on my little girls. It was either “I’m not tired yet,” or “It’s still light outside.” Then the following morning, we had what I call grumpy girls. They were either too tired to get up “early” to go to school, or they were “wide awake” at night. This may seem silly, but it always seemed to happen around Halloween time. It was dark at night to take the trick-or-treaters out. Trivial, I know, but it wasn’t at the time with our young girls.

I can see instances where farmers would prefer cooler mornings or evenings to harvest. We don’t have a farm, so I can’t say for sure. I would love to hear from all of you about your thoughts on DST. It’s hard when you have family members in, say, Arizona, and they’re sometimes one hour ahead or the same. I can’t remember which one applies when it comes to contacting our loved ones in AZ. LOL!

When Did Daylight Saving Time Start

Daylight saving time was first adopted in the United States in 1918 as an effort to conserve fuel during World War I. It was brought back during World War II for the same reason and to support national security and defense efforts. The regular twice-a-year time change most of us know today has been consistent since the 1960s.

There’s a common myth that farmers pushed for Daylight Saving Time so they could have more daylight hours to work their land. In truth, farmers were among its strongest opponents from the very beginning. Rural and working-class Americans argued that the change mostly benefited office workers and city dwellers who enjoyed extra evening daylight, while farmers were left doing their early morning chores in the dark. It’s a good reminder that history isn’t always what popular assumptions tell us.

Why It Started

The original idea behind Daylight Saving Time was simple. By shifting the clock forward an hour in the warmer months, people would need less artificial light in the evening, which, in theory, would save fuel and electricity. During wartime, every bit of conserved energy mattered, so the practice made sense to lawmakers at the time.

The Pros of Daylight Saving Time

Supporters of Daylight Saving Time point to a few consistent benefits. Some studies suggest that more natural evening light can improve road safety and has been linked to reductions in pedestrian accidents and certain types of crime during DST months. Longer evening daylight also tends to encourage families to get outside after dinner for a walk, a bike ride, or a trip to the park. Proponents argue that extra evening light supports outdoor recreation and can help offset the sedentary habits of modern life, while local businesses such as restaurants and shops often see increased evening activity.

The Cons of Daylight Saving Time

On the other side, the drawbacks are just as real. Health experts have pointed to a connection between the time change and disrupted sleep and circadian rhythm, and some research has linked the spring shift to a higher risk of stroke and motor vehicle accidents in the days that follow. Government studies over the decades, including a Department of Transportation review in 1974 and a Department of Energy study in 2008, found little to no meaningful difference in energy savings from the time change. In other words, the original reason for Daylight Saving Time may no longer hold up the way it once did.

Is Daylight Saving Time Beneficial

Honestly, the answer depends on who you ask. Dr David Prerau, who has served as an expert consultant on Daylight Saving Time for both the United States Congress and the British Parliament, points out that focusing only on the one lost hour of sleep in spring overlooks the many months of lighter evenings that follow. On the other hand, sleep researchers tend to favor sticking with one consistent time year-round, arguing that our bodies function best when our daily rhythm lines up naturally with sunrise and sunset. The American Academy of Sleep Medicine has stated that permanent Standard Time is preferable because it aligns more closely with our natural circadian rhythms.

What’s Happening With Daylight Saving Time Right Now

This is a topic that’s actually moving in Washington as I write this post. Nineteen states, most recently Texas in 2025, have already passed laws or resolutions in favor of permanent Daylight Saving Time, though none of those can take effect without a change in federal law. Just yesterday, on July 14, 2026, the House Committee on Energy and Commerce advanced a companion bill, and the full House passed it by a vote of 308 to 117 to keep Daylight Saving Time throughout the year. The bill now heads to the Senate. Public opinion on the whole issue remains mixed, with only about a third of Americans in recent polling saying they see much purpose in the twice-yearly clock change at all.

What This Means For Your Family

Regardless of where lawmakers land, here are a few gentle ways to help your family adjust each time the clocks change.

Start shifting bedtime by fifteen minutes a few days before the change rather than all at once.

Get outside in natural morning light as soon as you can after the change to help reset your body clock.

Keep mealtimes consistent even if the clock feels off, since routine helps children and adults alike adjust faster.

Be patient with little ones and pets, since it often takes about a week for sleep schedules to fully settle.

Whether you consider yourself a yay or a nay on Daylight Saving Time, it’s one of those quirky traditions that touches nearly every household in America twice a year. Understanding where it came from and what the research actually shows can help take some of the frustration out of it, even if we can’t control what Congress decides to do next.

States That Stayed Standard Time Year Round

Hawaii and most of Arizona have chosen to stay on Standard Time year-round rather than observe Daylight Saving Time. Hawaii’s proximity to the equator means its daylight hours stay fairly consistent throughout the year, so shifting the clocks forward in summer would offer little practical benefit and would only push sunset even later into the evening. Arizona opted out for a different reason, largely tied to its desert climate. With such intense summer heat, an extra hour of evening daylight would mean an extra hour of scorching temperatures before the cooler evening hours set in, so the state decided against the change.

Interestingly, the Navajo Nation, which sits within Arizona’s borders, does observe Daylight Saving Time, since its reservation extends into neighboring Utah and New Mexico, both of which follow the time change. Keeping the same time across the entire reservation helps avoid confusion for residents, schools, and businesses that operate across state lines.

Behind Every Front Door, There’s a Story

How Can We Ease Our Anxiety In Today’s Chaos?

Final Word

Daylight Saving Time may seem like a small twice-a-year inconvenience, but it touches nearly every part of family life, from school mornings to bedtime routines. Understanding its history and the honest tradeoffs behind it can help us all feel a little less frustrated when the clocks change, no matter which side of the debate you land on. For those of us preppers who grow a garden, I don’t think it will make much difference in the larger scheme of things. May God bless this world, Linda

Copyright Images: Daylight Savings Time Banner Depositphotos_312494146_S, Blue and White Alarm Clock Depositphotos_163795616_S

The post Daylight Saving Time: Yay or Nay? appeared first on Food Storage Moms.



from Food Storage Moms

Herbs And Foods That Support The Immune System During Long Stressful Times

When people think about the immune system, they often think about a pill bottle. That is the wrong place to start. During a long emergency, your immune system is not helped by one magic herb or one expensive supplement. It is helped by the daily basics: enough protein, enough calories, clean water, decent sleep, lower […]

from Survivopedia

Wednesday, July 15, 2026

12 Things You’re Storing in Your Garage That Could Kill You in a Crisis

Walk into your garage right now and look around. Somewhere in that clutter sits something capable of killing you, and it’s probably been sitting there for years without a second thought.

It’s the gas can by the door. The propane tank behind the mower. The extinguisher you’ve never once checked. Ordinary items, hiding in plain sight, waiting for the one moment you’ll actually need them to work.

That moment usually arrives during a crisis, when the power’s out, your hands are shaking, and you’re moving fast in a dark garage grabbing whatever you think will save you. It’s exactly the wrong time to discover that what you were counting on has been quietly failing you for months.

Old Gasoline That’s Turned to Varnish

Gasoline left sitting for six months to a year breaks down into a gummy, acidic residue that clogs fuel lines and seizes small engines. That means the generator you’re counting on to keep your fridge running during a blackout might refuse to start at the exact moment you need it. Rotate your fuel supply every few months and store it in approved containers, and that failure point disappears completely.

Why does this happen? Gasoline is a blend of volatile hydrocarbons, and as it ages, the lighter compounds evaporate first, leaving behind a heavier residue that thickens over time. Ethanol-blended fuel, which is most of what you’ll find at the pump today, breaks down even faster than pure gasoline because ethanol absorbs moisture from the air. That absorbed water settles at the bottom of the tank and corrodes metal components from the inside. 

The secret to extending usable storage life to about a year? Go to buginguide.com and find out how to store gasoline long-term, plus other useful tips that you need before it’s too late. 

A Car Battery Left to Freeze or Overheat

Extreme cold can crack a battery casing, while extreme heat can cause it to vent hydrogen gas in a poorly ventilated space, meaning your vehicle might fail you the moment you need to evacuate fastest.

A dead or dying battery makes this worse than you’d expect. When a battery is fully charged, the acid inside can handle temperatures far below zero. But a discharged battery is mostly water inside, and it freezes almost as easily as a puddle. One cold night can split the casing and leak sulfuric acid across your garage floor, and trying to recharge a frozen battery can make it rupture entirely.

And if you’ve already got a dead battery sitting in your garage, don’t let it corrode into a hazard. Put it to work instead. I used to toss dead batteries until I tried the method in EZ Battery Reconditioning on a car battery I’d written off, and it came back holding a charge like new. Now every battery in my house gets a second life before it ever sees the trash.

Propane Tanks with Corroded Valves

A rusted or corroded valve can leak propane slowly enough that you won’t smell it until it’s already filled an enclosed space, and one spark from a nearby appliance is all it takes after that. This gets more dangerous the closer your garage sits to your living space. 

That’s why you need to inspect every tank before storing it long-term, and a genuine hazard turns into a dependable backup fuel source.

Expired Fire Extinguishers

An extinguisher past its inspection date hands you the worst kind of false confidence. You grab it during a fire, assuming it’ll work, pull the pin, and nothing happens. Check the pressure gauge every few months, so the one tool built for this exact emergency actually performs when you need it to.

Most home extinguishers are rated for a specific class of fire, and using the wrong type can make things worse instead of better. A standard ABC dry chemical extinguisher handles ordinary combustibles, flammable liquids, and electrical fires, which covers most garage scenarios. 

But if yours has been sitting near a workbench for a decade, the dry chemical inside can settle and compact, meaning even a fully pressurized unit might not discharge properly. Give it a firm shake every couple of months to keep the powder loose, and replace any unit older than twelve years regardless of how the gauge reads, since the internal seals degrade even when the extinguisher looks untouched.

Paint Cans and Solvents Stacked Near Anything That Sparks

Old paint and solvents release flammable vapors even through a sealed lid, and a hot summer afternoon can push those vapors past their flash point without a single spark involved. 

Move these away from your workbench, outlets, and any pilot light, and you close off one of the most common causes of garage fires before it ever starts.

Rodent-Chewed Wiring You Haven’t Noticed

Mice chew through wire insulation constantly, and a frayed cord running to your freezer can spark a fire without warning, especially under the extra load a crisis puts on your electrical system. Walk your garage’s wiring once a season with a flashlight, and you’ll catch the damage long before it catches fire.

Rodents target wiring specifically because the insulation is often made from soy-based compounds in newer vehicles and appliances, which mice find genuinely appealing to chew. 

If you store a chest freezer or a second refrigerator in the garage, that cord deserves extra attention, since a compromised line feeding a freezer full of meat can fail silently for days before anyone notices the food has spoiled.

Stacked Lumber or Cardboard Against the Water Heater

Scrap wood and moving boxes end up leaning against the one appliance in the garage with an open flame more often than anyone wants to admit, and that’s how an ordinary afternoon turns into a house fire. Keep three feet of clearance around any gas appliance, and you eliminate one of the easiest fires to prevent entirely.

Ladders and Tools with Structural Damage

A cracked ladder rung or a loose tool head might get handled carefully on a normal day, but a crisis pushes people to move fast and skip caution, which is exactly when that hidden damage causes a fall you can’t easily treat if help isn’t coming quickly. Inspect your ladders and tools now, and you’ll trust them fully when speed actually matters most.

Standing Water in Buckets or Old Containers

A forgotten bucket or a low spot in a tarp turns into a real hazard fast. Near outlets or a generator setup, it’s an electrocution risk waiting for you to stumble through a dark garage in a hurry. Left sitting more than a few days, it becomes a mosquito breeding ground, and in a crisis where medical care is already stretched thin, a mosquito-borne illness is the last complication your family needs.

Storing water on purpose is a different story, but only if you do it right. Use white oak barrels if you can, since the tight grain keeps water clean far longer than most containers. If you prefer plastic, make sure it’s food-grade HDPE (look for the #2 stamp), never a repurposed milk jug or chemical container, and keep it sealed and away from sunlight so algae and bacteria can’t take hold.

Better yet, skip the standing water problem entirely with a military-style water generator, which pulls drinking water from the air and runs it through a built-in filter, so there’s nothing sitting stagnant anywhere in your garage. The bad part is the price. A whole-home unit runs $13,999 to $34,999, plus another $10,000 to $25,000 for installation, which puts it out of reach for regular families.

If you’re a fan of DIY projects or just want a fun weekend build, there’s the Backpack Water Generator, inspired by those same military devices at a small fraction of the cost, around $40. Build one, see how it performs, and you can always add more later.

I actually wrote an article on how to set up and run your atmospheric water generator, after many of you sent messages asking about the science behind it.

My final take? It’s definitely worth a try, and you’ve got nothing to lose.

A Generator Stored Without Ever Being Test-Run

A generator that’s never been started can hide a gummed-up carburetor, a dried-out gasket, or a seized starter cord, and none of it shows up until the grid goes down and your family is standing there watching you pull the cord. Run yours under load for fifteen minutes every couple of months, and you’ll know exactly what it can do before your life depends on it.

I did that routine for years, and honestly, I got tired of it. Tired of the stale gas, the maintenance schedule, the wondering. Then a reader mentioned a design our own military studied during the Cold War, built to keep equipment running through the kind of blackout that was supposed to end the world. I figured it was another internet legend until I dug into the Cold War Generator plans myself.

The thing runs without gasoline, so nothing gums up and nothing goes stale in your garage. I put mine together over a weekend with parts that cost less than a season’s worth of generator fuel, and it’s been sitting ready ever since. Unlike my old gas unit, I don’t wonder anymore. I know.

The Underrated Danger You Need to Solve ASAP

Ask any burglar which door he’d try first and he’ll point at the garage. Yours probably has a lock on the side entry and a camera over the driveway. On a normal Tuesday night that’s plenty, because the guy casing your street knows the police are a phone call away.

Take the police out of the equation and everything changes. A blackout that stretches past the third day puts desperate people on foot. A garage door gives to a crowbar faster than anything else on your house, and your camera’s been dead since the first hour. Whoever gets that door open is standing ten feet from the kitchen. The 911 lines, if they work at all, have a three-hour queue of people just like you.

I started looking into what still protects a home after the usual systems quit. That’s how I ended up reading Guerrilla Home Defense. The whole thing assumes nobody’s coming to help, and the methods run on stuff sitting around the average household right now. I opened it expecting recycled alarm-company advice. I closed it wondering why I’d spent years securing every door except the one that actually matters.

And this week only, we want to give something back to you. Click the banner below and grab Guerrilla Home Defense at a special price. Seven days, then it’s over.

What Twenty Minutes Tonight Could Save You From

None of these twelve things are dangerous because they’re old or forgotten. They’re dangerous because a crisis changes what your garage is for. It stops being storage and becomes the place you’re pulling fuel, tools, and equipment from under pressure, often in the dark, often with your hands shaking and no time to think twice.

The families who get through a crisis without a second disaster on top of the first one aren’t lucky. They’re the ones who walked through their garage on an ordinary Tuesday, flashlight in hand, and fixed what needed fixing before it mattered.

You have that Tuesday right now. Take the twenty minutes. The next time you need something out of that garage, you won’t get the luxury of finding out it failed you first.


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