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Tuesday, May 19, 2026

This Solar Generator Made Me Rethink My Blackout Plan

A few weeks ago, Alec Deacon asked me to test the ArcShield 3000, and I went into it with the same question most preppers would have: Would this actually help my family during a real blackout? Not a quick power flicker. Not a comfortable camping weekend. I mean a real outage where the fridge is […]

from Survivopedia

Emergency Preparedness Items: Are You Ready?

72 Hour Kits with Tags

Emergency Preparedness Items: Are you ready? Life has a way of surprising us. Whether it’s a winter storm that knocks out the power for days, a wildfire that demands a sudden evacuation, or a flood that cuts off your neighborhood from the rest of the world, emergencies don’t wait for a convenient time. The question isn’t whether something will happen. The question is whether your family will be ready when it does.

Taking stock of your emergency supplies once or twice a year is one of the most loving things you can do for the people who depend on you. Let this be your reminder to check in, restock what’s missing, and make sure everyone in the household knows how to use what you have stored.

Emergency Preparedness Items: Are You Ready?

Start with the Basics: Water and Food

Water is the single most important item in any emergency kit. The general recommendation is one gallon of water per person per day, stored for at least three days’ use, though a two-week supply is far better. Don’t forget your pets when calculating how much water to store. A large dog may need nearly as much water as a small child, especially if the weather is warm or the animal is stressed. By now, you know I don’t agree with the one-gallon-per-day-per-person theory. I prefer four gallons per person daily. It’s your choice, I can’t live on one gallon per day. It’s how I roll. Besides trying to stay hydrated, we need water to cook, maintain some level of personal hygiene, and do light laundry chores like washing underwear.

Rotate your stored water every six months and check containers for cracks or leaks. If you use commercially sealed water bottles, check the expiration date printed on the packaging. If you fill your own containers, use food-grade plastic containers with tight-fitting lids and store them away from direct sunlight, which can degrade the plastic and encourage bacterial growth over time.

WaterBricks™: Step-by-Step Instructions

WaterBricks and a Spigot. I use this in my water, so I only need to rotate it every 5 years. Water Preserver. You can also use unscented bleach if you want to rotate the water every six months. (1/8 teaspoon unscented bleach per gallon of water).

When It Comes to Food, Only Buy What Your Family Will Eat

For food, focus on items your family actually eats and enjoys. There’s little point in stocking foods no one will willingly eat during an already stressful situation. Canned goods, dried beans, rice, oatmeal, nut butter, crackers, granola bars, dried fruit, and shelf-stable milk are all reliable choices. If you have young children, stock familiar snacks that comfort them. If you have family members with food allergies or dietary restrictions, plan for those specifically rather than hoping something in a generic kit will work. I feel crackers aren’t great for storage because they go rancid more quickly. I know people will say that if you’re starving, you’ll eat them. Well, you may want to learn to make your own crackers.

How To Make Homemade Crackers

Can Openers

Keep a manual can opener stored directly with your food supplies. Write the purchase date on canned goods with a permanent marker so you can rotate them easily. Check expiration dates at least once a year and fold expiring items into your regular meal rotation. A well-maintained food supply costs very little extra when managed this way once you’ve built up what you want overall.

Consider also storing a small backpacking stove with fuel canisters. During extended outages, the ability to heat food and water makes a significant difference in morale, especially for children and older family members. Can Openers, Large Can Opener, and Electric Can Opener.

First Aid: Do You Know How to Use What’s in the Kit?

A first aid kit does very little good if no one in the family knows how to use it. Your kit should include adhesive bandages in multiple sizes, sterile gauze pads, rolled gauze, medical tape, antiseptic wipes, antibiotic ointment, hydrocortisone cream, tweezers, scissors, a digital thermometer, a CPR face shield, disposable gloves, instant cold packs, pain relievers, antihistamines, an antidiarrheal medication, and any prescription medications your family members need.

Keep at least a week’s worth of prescription medications on hand if your doctor and insurance allow it. Talk to your pharmacist about getting refills slightly ahead of storm season. Store medications in their original labeled containers and keep them in a cool, dry place, separate from any medications you use daily to avoid accidentally depleting your emergency supply.

Basic First Aid Class with CPR

Here is the part most people skip: take a basic first aid and CPR class. The American Red Cross and many local fire departments offer affordable or free training. Knowing how to clean a wound, treat a burn, apply pressure to stop bleeding, recognize signs of a heart attack or stroke, or perform CPR can genuinely save a life before professional help arrives. Refreshing this training every two years keeps the skills sharp.

Add a first aid reference booklet to your kit as well. In a high-stress moment, even trained adults benefit from a step-by-step written guide. The American Red Cross publishes an excellent one that is small enough to tuck inside any kit.

Light, Power, and Communication

When the power goes out, flashlights become essential immediately. Keep one in every room of the house and test them every few months. Stock up on extra batteries and store them in a sealed bag inside your emergency kit to prevent them from rolling loose and draining against other metal objects. Check stored batteries periodically for corrosion, which can spread to and damage your flashlights.

Mark and I like having solar light devices charged and ready to go. We have solar flashlights on our window sills all the time, so they stay charged. We also have solar lanterns so we can light up a whole room, if necessary.

A battery-powered or hand-cranked lantern is excellent for lighting a room during extended outages. LED lanterns are energy-efficient and can run for many hours on a single set of batteries. Solar-powered lanterns are another option if you live in a region with reliable sunshine during the seasons most likely to bring emergencies.

Candles and lighters, or waterproof matches, belong in your kit as backup light sources, but always use them with caution and never leave them unattended, especially around children. Keep a fire extinguisher in your kitchen and check the pressure gauge at least once a year.

Battery-Powered NOAA Weather Radio

A battery-powered or hand-crank NOAA weather radio is one of the most underrated items in any emergency kit. Cell service is often unreliable during large-scale emergencies when towers are damaged or overloaded. A weather radio keeps you informed about the situation, evacuation orders, road closures, and recovery information even when your phone can’t connect. Familiarize yourself with how to operate it before you ever need it.

Charge all your devices fully before a storm arrives. Consider keeping a portable battery bank charged and ready at all times. A high-capacity bank can recharge a smartphone several times, which may be enough to keep you connected during a multi-day outage. Store a charging cable for every device your family uses in the kit alongside the battery bank.

If you have a generator, know how to operate it safely. Generators must always be used outdoors, well away from windows and doors, to prevent deadly carbon monoxide buildup inside the home. Keep enough fuel on hand to run it for several days and store fuel safely in approved containers away from living spaces.

Documents and Financial Basics

In the chaos of an emergency, locating important paperwork can be surprisingly difficult. Prepare now by gathering copies of the documents your family would need most and storing them in a waterproof zip-lock bag or a small waterproof document pouch inside your emergency kit.

These documents should include copies of government-issued identification for every family member, passports, Social Security cards, birth certificates, marriage certificates, insurance policies for home, health, life, and auto, recent bank account statements, mortgage or lease agreements, medical records and vaccination histories for every family member and pet, a list of current medications with dosages and prescribing doctors, and a written list of emergency contacts including out-of-area relatives, your family doctor, veterinarian, lawyer, and neighbors.

Store originals of irreplaceable documents in a fireproof and waterproof safe at home or in a bank safe deposit box. Consider scanning everything and storing digital copies in a secure cloud service you can access from any device.

Keep a small amount of cash in your emergency kit in small-denomination bills. During widespread power outages, ATMs quickly run out of cash, and card readers may not function at all. Having $100 to $500 in small bills can cover fuel, food, or supplies when digital payment systems are unavailable.

Warmth, Shelter, and Clothing

Depending on where you live and what season brings the most likely emergencies, temperature management can be a matter of survival. Emergency mylar blankets are inexpensive, take up almost no space, and reflect up to ninety percent of body heat back to the person wrapped in them. Keep one for each family member, including pets.

Mylar Blankets

In addition to mylar blankets, store several heavier wool or fleece blankets. Wool retains warmth even when wet, making it particularly valuable in flood or rain situations. A sleeping bag rated for colder temperatures than you typically experience is a wise investment for families in northern climates.

Pack a change of clothes for each family member, sized for the current season and updated as children grow. Include sturdy, closed-toe shoes stored near your kit. In an evacuation, many people flee in whatever they’re wearing, which may be inadequate for the conditions they encounter. Work gloves, rain ponchos, and warm hats take up very little space and can make a genuine difference in comfort and safety.

If your household includes infants, keep a supply of diapers, formula, and any other infant-specific items in your emergency stock and rotate them as the baby grows. If you have older family members, plan for their specific needs, including mobility aids, hearing aid batteries, and any comfort items that help them manage stress.

Sanitation and Hygiene

This category is often left off emergency preparedness lists, but sanitation quickly becomes a serious concern during extended emergencies, whether water service is disrupted or families must shelter in place for days at a time.

Store enough toilet paper, paper towels, and hand sanitizer for at least two weeks. Moist towelettes or baby wipes are invaluable when running water is unavailable. Keep a supply of heavy-duty garbage bags, which can serve many functions from waste disposal to waterproofing gear.

If your home loses water service entirely, you’ll need a way to manage human waste. A portable camping toilet with disposal bags is an affordable and compact solution that most families find far more dignified and sanitary than improvised alternatives. Familiarize yourself with how to use it before you need it.

Include feminine hygiene products, diapers, and other personal care items specific to your household. Soap, toothbrushes, toothpaste, and basic hygiene items like deodorant support not just physical health but also the sense of normalcy that helps people cope psychologically during prolonged emergencies.

Household bleach is a useful sanitation item. A small amount added to water can disinfect surfaces, and in an extreme situation where no other option exists, diluted bleach can be used to treat drinking water according to published guidelines from FEMA and the CDC.

Tools and Safety Equipment

A well-stocked tool kit is a valuable part of emergency preparedness that many families don’t think about until they need it. A multi-tool or Swiss Army knife covers a remarkable range of small tasks. Add a full-size wrench and know where your home’s gas shutoff valve is located, and how to turn it off. Knowing this before an emergency, and practicing it once, could prevent a gas leak from becoming a catastrophe.

A crowbar or pry bar can help open jammed doors after structural shifts. Duct tape and heavy plastic sheeting are endlessly useful for quick repairs, covering broken windows, or creating a sealed shelter-in-place if outdoor air quality becomes dangerous. Rope or paracord, zip ties, and bungee cords round out a basic toolkit that handles a surprising variety of emergency repairs.

Keep a fire extinguisher on every floor of your home and inspect it annually. Know how to use one. The acronym PASS, which stands for Pull the pin, Aim at the base of the fire, Squeeze the handle, and Sweep side to side, is easy to teach to older children and teenagers.

Keep a whistle in your kit. In a situation where someone is trapped or needs to signal for help, a whistle carries much farther than a voice and requires far less energy.

Special Considerations for Children and Pets

Children do better in emergencies when they feel involved and informed rather than frightened by the unknown. Talk to your kids about your family emergency plan in a calm, matter-of-fact way. Use age-appropriate language and frame preparation as something smart families do, like wearing a seatbelt or looking both ways before crossing the street.

Let children help pack their own small go-bag. Include a comfort item such as a stuffed animal or favorite book, a familiar snack, a flashlight they can operate themselves, and a card with important phone numbers written in their own handwriting. Children who feel they have a role and a responsibility in the plan are calmer and more cooperative during actual emergencies.

Practice At Least Once A Year

Practice your family plan as a drill at least once a year. Walk your children through the evacuation route, show them where the meeting spots are, and make sure they can recite the out-of-state contact’s phone number from memory. For very young children, consider sewing a small tag inside their emergency clothing with a parent’s contact information.

Don’t Forget Your Pets

For pets, keep a dedicated go-bag ready that includes at least three days of food and water, any medications, a leash or secure carrier, vaccination records and veterinary contact information, a recent clear photograph of your pet with you in it in case you become separated, and a comfort item such as a familiar toy or blanket. Research in advance which emergency shelters, hotels, or friends and family in your likely evacuation area accept pets, because many public shelters don’t.

Planning for People with Access and Functional Needs

Every household is different. A preparedness plan that works perfectly for a family of healthy adults in their thirties may be completely inadequate for a household that includes older grandparents, individuals with disabilities, people who depend on powered medical equipment, or family members with serious chronic illnesses.

If someone in your household uses powered medical equipment, such as a home oxygen concentrator, CPAP machine, or powered wheelchair, contact your utility company about their medical baseline or life-support programs, which may prioritize your address for power restoration. Keep your medical equipment provider’s emergency contact number in your kit and discuss a contingency plan with your doctor well in advance.

Register With Your Local Emergency Management Office

Register with your local emergency management office if a household member has a disability or access need that would make independent evacuation difficult. Many counties maintain voluntary registries that allow first responders to prioritize those households during large-scale emergencies.

Plan specifically for the medications, mobility aids, communication devices, and comfort routines that some family members will rely on. Disruption to routine is particularly hard on individuals with dementia, autism, or certain mental health conditions. Pack familiar items and think through how you’ll maintain as much structure as possible during displacement.

Store Your Supplies Wisely

This is a step many families overlook entirely. Where you store your emergency supplies matters as much as what you store. Rodents can chew through cardboard boxes, paper bags, plastic bags, and even soft plastic containers with alarming speed. They contaminate food with waste and pathogens, destroy first aid supplies, and can render an entire kit completely useless without you realizing it until the moment you need it most.

Store all food items in hard-sided, airtight containers made of thick plastic or metal with secure lids. Gamma-seal lids on food-grade buckets are a popular choice among serious preppers because they seal tightly, open and close easily, and effectively resist pests. Keep your entire kit off the floor on a shelf or elevated platform if possible, since rodents most commonly travel along walls and floors.

Watch For Rodent Droppings

Inspect your storage area every few months for signs of pests. Look for droppings, chewed edges on containers, or nesting material near your supplies. Avoid storing supplies in garages, sheds, or outbuildings that aren’t well-sealed against wildlife. Outdoor structures often have gaps around pipes, vents, and foundations that allow mice and rats to enter easily.

A cool, dry, interior closet is typically the best storage location for most households. Avoid areas subject to temperature extremes or high humidity, both of which degrade medications, reduce battery life, shorten food shelf life, and break down the adhesives in bandages and tape. Label your storage containers clearly on the outside with their contents and the date last inspected. This small habit saves considerable time during the stress of an actual emergency and makes it easy to identify what needs refreshing during your regular checkups.

The Go-Bag: Your Portable Emergency Kit

In addition to your home supply, every household benefits from having a go-bag ready to grab on a moment’s notice. An evacuation order can come with very little warning, and having a bag already packed, either by the door or in a vehicle, means you aren’t scrambling to gather things under pressure.

A go-bag should be a sturdy, water-resistant backpack or duffel that each adult in the household can carry comfortably. Pack it with a three-day supply of food and water, a first aid kit, copies of your important documents, a change of clothes and sturdy shoes, a flashlight and extra batteries, a weather radio, your phone charger and battery bank, cash, any prescription medications, and any items specific to the needs of your family members or pets.

Review and repack your go-bag at least twice a year. Seasons change, children grow, medications change, and a bag packed two years ago may be outdated in important ways. Keep it in an accessible location that every adult in the household knows about. Some families keep a smaller version in the trunk of each vehicle as well, since emergencies don’t always happen when you’re at home.

The Family Emergency Plan

Supplies and go-bags are only part of preparedness. Your family also needs a shared, practiced plan. Emergencies are disorienting by nature, and having decisions made in advance removes a significant mental burden from the moments when thinking clearly is hardest.

Choose two meeting spots outside your home. The first should be near your house, such as a specific neighbor’s driveway or a corner at the end of your street, for situations where you can’t re-enter your home but your neighborhood is accessible. The second should be farther away, such as a school, community center, or relative’s home, for situations where your entire neighborhood must be evacuated.

Out-of-State Family Members

Designate an out-of-state contact that all family members can call or text to check in. During regional disasters, local cell networks are often overwhelmed, but calls to numbers outside the affected area frequently go through more reliably. Make sure every family member has this number memorized and written on a card in their wallet or school bag.

Know your community’s evacuation routes and have a printed map in your go-bag, since GPS and cell service can’t always be relied upon. Know the location of your nearest emergency shelter and whether it accepts pets. Identify two or three routes out of your neighborhood in case primary roads are blocked.

Practice your plan with your whole family at least once a year. Walk through it, not just talk through it. Children and adults alike retain information better when they have physically practiced a behavior. A calm, routine drill creates the kind of memory that functions even when the mind is panicking.

Staying Informed Year-Round

Emergency preparedness isn’t a one-time project. It’s an ongoing habit of attention. Sign up for your county or city’s emergency alert system if you haven’t already. These text and email notification systems are how local authorities quickly communicate evacuation orders, road closures, shelter locations, and recovery information to residents.

Follow your local emergency management office on social media. During active emergencies, these accounts often post real-time updates that are more current and locally specific than national news coverage. FEMA’s website and the Ready.gov resource provide free downloadable planning guides, checklists, and preparedness information for families in every region.

Learn the specific hazards most likely in your area. A family in a coastal community faces different risks than one in a wildfire zone, a tornado corridor, or an area prone to ice storms. Tailor your preparations to the actual threats your household faces rather than building a generic kit that may be missing the most critical items for your situation.

Emergency Tips Every Family Needs

Final Word

Emergency preparedness isn’t about fear. It’s about confidence. It’s the quiet knowledge that if something happens tonight, your family has what they need and knows what to do. The time you invest now, going through your kit, restocking what is expired, practicing your plan, securing your supplies against rodents, and talking honestly with your children about what to do, is time that may one day mean everything.

Take an hour this week. Check the water. Rotate the food. Test the flashlights. Look for signs of rodent damage in your storage area. Make sure the go-bags are current. Walk your kids through the plan one more time.

Then put it all away and go back to living your life, with a little more peace of mind than you had before. Your future self and everyone who depends on you will be grateful you did. May God bless this world, Linda

The post Emergency Preparedness Items: Are You Ready? appeared first on Food Storage Moms.



from Food Storage Moms

Monday, May 18, 2026

How to Stockpile 6 Months of Food for Under $200 (Step-by-Step)

This is not a joke! You can put together six months of survival food for one adult for under $200, and you can do it in a single shopping trip at Walmart or any similar store. Everything on this list is shelf-stable, calorie-dense, and available right now at regular retail prices.

So I’m going to show you exactly what to buy, how much of it, what it costs, and how to store it so it actually lasts. 

The Foundation: Rice and Beans

If you’ve spent any time in prepper circles, you already know that rice and beans together form a complete protein. That’s the whole reason this budget works. You’re not just stockpiling calories but also nutrients your body can actually use long-term.

White rice is your primary calorie source. It’s cheap, it stores for decades when sealed properly, and one pound of dry rice gives you roughly 1,600 calories. At Walmart, a 20-pound bag of Great Value long grain white rice runs about $11.70. You’re going to want 60 pounds total for six months, which means three of those bags. That’s $35.10.

Why white rice and not brown? Brown rice has oils in the bran that go rancid within six to twelve months. White rice, stored correctly, lasts 25 to 30 years. This is a stockpile, not a weekly grocery run. Shelf life matters.

Stop Stockpiling Rice and Beans! Do This Instead

Dried pinto beans are your protein and fiber backbone. A 20-pound bag of Great Value pinto beans costs about $14.94 at Walmart. You want 30 pounds total, so that’s one 20-pound bag and one 8-pound bag ($6.88). Total for beans: $21.82.

Dried lentils cook faster than any other legume and don’t require soaking. That matters in a crisis when fuel might be limited. A 4-pound bag of Great Value lentils runs about $5.50. Grab four bags – 16 pounds total. That’s $22.00.

Running total so far: $78.92 for rice, beans, and lentils. That alone is roughly three to four months of base calories for one person.

The Next Tier: Oats, Flour, and Pasta

walmart cans chicken BIGRice and beans will keep you alive, but you’ll lose your mind eating the same thing every day. These three additions give you breakfast options, the ability to bake bread, and a fast-cooking carbohydrate that breaks up the monotony.

Rolled oats are one of the most underrated stockpile items out there. They’re filling, they store well in sealed containers, and you can eat them hot or cold, cook them into flatbread, or grind them into flour. A 42-ounce canister of Great Value old-fashioned oats costs around $3.50. Buy six of them – that gives you about 16 pounds of oats for $21.00.

All-purpose flour lets you make bread, tortillas, dumplings, pancakes, biscuits, and thickeners for soups. A 10-pound bag of Great Value flour is roughly $5.50. Buy two. That’s 20 pounds for $11.00.

Dried pasta cooks fast and stores for years. Spaghetti, penne, whatever is cheapest. Great Value pasta runs about $1.00 per pound. Buy 10 pounds. That’s $10.00.

Running total: $120.92.

The Survival Supplements

These are the items that turn bland survival food into something you’ll actually eat, and they serve critical functions beyond flavor.

Salt is non-negotiable. Your body needs it to function, and it’s also essential for food preservation. A 4-pound container of iodized salt costs about $1.50 at Walmart. Buy two. That’s $3.00.

Granulated sugar stores indefinitely when kept dry and gives you quick energy plus the ability to make basic preserves and sweeten oats or coffee. A 10-pound bag runs about $6.00. Buy one. That’s $6.00.

The Plant that Doctors Are Begging People to Forage

Vegetable oil is your fat source. Fat is the most calorie-dense macronutrient you can store – about 120 calories per tablespoon. A 48-ounce bottle of Great Value vegetable oil costs around $4.00. Buy three bottles. That’s $12.00 and gives you roughly 144 ounces of cooking oil, which works out to about six months of modest daily use.

Powdered milk rounds out your nutrition with calcium and additional protein. An instant nonfat dry milk from Great Value, the 64-ounce box, costs about $9.00. Buy two. That’s $18.00.

Running total: $159.92.

Spices, Bouillon, and Peanut Butter

Boiling garlic picture and the text is "What happens if you boil garlic you will want to try this tonight)You have about $40 left in the budget, and this is where you spend it wisely on things that make the difference between eating to survive and eating to maintain your mental health.

That distinction matters more than most people realize until they’re actually living off a stockpile.

Bouillon cubes or powder turn plain rice and beans into something that tastes like an actual meal. A large jar of chicken bouillon (about 40 servings) costs around $3.00. Buy two jars in different flavors. That’s $6.00.

Peanut butter is a calorie bomb in the best possible way – roughly 190 calories per serving with protein and fat. A 40-ounce jar of Great Value creamy peanut butter is about $5.50. Buy two jars. That’s $11.00. Sealed peanut butter lasts a year or more without refrigeration.

Basic spices go a long way. You don’t need a full spice rack. Get these four and you can make almost anything taste different from the last meal:

  • Garlic powder (~$2.50)
  • Chili powder (~$2.50)
  • Cumin (~$2.50)
  • Black pepper (~$3.00)

That’s $10.50 on spices.

Honey is the last item. It never expires (literally – archaeologists have found edible honey in Egyptian tombs), it’s a natural antibacterial, and it gives you a sweetener and a mild topical treatment for wounds. A 32-ounce bottle of Great Value honey costs about $8.00.

Final total: approximately $195.42.

The Full Shopping List

Here’s everything in one place so you can print it out and take it to the store:

  • 60 lbs white rice (3x 20-lb bags) – $35.10
  • 28 lbs pinto beans (1x 20-lb bag + 1x 8-lb bag) – $21.82
  • 16 lbs lentils (4x 4-lb bags) – $22.00
  • 16 lbs rolled oats (6x 42-oz canisters) – $21.00
  • 20 lbs all-purpose flour (2x 10-lb bags) – $11.00
  • 10 lbs dried pasta – $10.00
  • 8 lbs salt (2x 4-lb containers) – $3.00
  • 10 lbs sugar (1x 10-lb bag) – $6.00
  • 144 oz vegetable oil (3x 48-oz bottles) -$12.00
  • 128 oz powdered milk (2x 64-oz boxes) – $18.00
  • Bouillon (2 jars) – $6.00
  • 80 oz peanut butter (2x 40-oz jars) – $11.00
  • Garlic powder, chili powder, cumin, black pepper – $10.50
  • 32 oz honey – $8.00

Total: ~$195.42

That gives you roughly 1,800 to 2,000 calories per day for six months, with a reasonable balance of carbohydrates, protein, and fat.

How to Store It So It Actually Lasts

root cellar EC bannerBuying all of this food means nothing if it goes bad in three months because you left it sitting in the original bags on a shelf in your garage.

For rice, beans, lentils, oats, flour, sugar, and pasta, the best low-cost storage method is food-grade 5-gallon buckets with gamma seal lids.

You can get these at Walmart, Home Depot, or Lowe’s for about $5 to $8 per bucket. You’ll need five or six buckets total. Before you seal them, drop in a few 300cc oxygen absorbers (a pack of 50 costs about $10 on Amazon or at any preparedness supply store). 

The oxygen absorbers remove the air inside the sealed bucket, which kills any insect eggs and prevents oxidation. This is what takes rice from a one-year shelf life to a 25-year shelf life. If you want to go even further, line the inside of each bucket with a Mylar bag before adding the food and oxygen absorbers.

A pack of five-gallon Mylar bags (usually 15 to a pack) runs about $25. This creates a nearly airtight, lightproof barrier that’s about as close to professional-grade long-term storage as you can get at home.

For oil, peanut butter, and honey, just keep them in their original containers in a cool, dark place. A closet, a basement shelf, or a pantry that doesn’t get direct sunlight. Oil is the most perishable item on this list – vegetable oil stays good for one to two years unopened. Rotate it and replace as you use it.

When it comes to powdered milk, once you open a box, transfer it to a sealed container with a tight-fitting lid. Unopened and stored in a cool, dry spot, it lasts 18 to 24 months.

A Realistic Look at What You’ll Be Eating

This stockpile works mathematically, but it is important to understand what “six months of food” really means. The entire list adds up to roughly 320,000 calories total. Spread across 180 days, that comes out to about 1,780 calories per day (320,000 ÷ 180 = 1,780). That is survival-level intake for many adults, especially during stressful conditions.

A sedentary person may manage on it, but anyone doing physical labor, hauling water, cutting firewood, or living through cold weather will likely burn far more calories. At 2,500 calories per day, this same stockpile would last closer to four months instead of six.

The daily portions are also smaller than most people expect once you break down the numbers. For example, 60 pounds of rice equals about 27,240 grams total (60 × 454 = 27,240). Divide that across 180 days and you get only about 151 grams of dry rice per day (27,240 ÷ 180 = 151). That provides roughly 540 calories daily from rice alone, with the remaining calories coming from beans, lentils, oats, oil, flour, peanut butter, and sugar.

This stockpile isn’t gourmet and nobody is pretending it is. But it’s also not as miserable as it sounds on paper. Here’s what a typical day looks like:

  • Breakfast: Oatmeal with a spoonful of honey and a glass of reconstituted powdered milk. That’s a solid 400 calories and it’ll hold you until lunch.
  • Lunch: Rice and lentil soup seasoned with bouillon, garlic powder, and black pepper. Maybe a spoonful of peanut butter on the side for extra fat and calories. Around 500 to 600 calories.
  • Dinner: Rice and pinto beans with cumin and chili powder, cooked with a tablespoon of vegetable oil. A piece of flatbread made from flour and water, cooked on a skillet. That’s another 600 to 700 calories.
  • Snack: Peanut butter on a piece of pasta bread or a handful of dry oats mixed with honey. Another 200 to 300 calories.

What This Stockpile Won’t Cover

pork 10 yearsI want to be straight with you about the gaps here, because a $200 stockpile is a baseline, not a complete solution.

You’ll want to add multivitamins over time. A six-month supply of a basic daily multivitamin costs about $8 to $12 and fills in the micronutrient gaps that a grain-and-legume diet leaves open.

Vitamin C is the biggest concern – without fruits or vegetables, scurvy becomes a real risk after a couple of months. A bottle of vitamin C tablets costs about $4 and should be considered a priority add-on.

This list also assumes you have a atmospheric water generator (AWG) or a water source and way to cook. If those aren’t covered yet, that’s where your next dollars go. A basic camp stove, a solar oven and a few propane canisters, or a rocket stove you can feed with sticks, will do the job.

And finally, this is a one-person stockpile. If you’re feeding a family of four, multiply accordingly. The good news is the budget scales linearly – $800 covers four people for six months, which is still far cheaper than a single month of normal grocery shopping for most families.

Start This Weekend!

The hardest part of any stockpile is starting it. Some folks get paralyzed trying to build the perfect system before buying a single bag of rice. Skip the analysis and go to Walmart on Saturday morning with this list and a budget of $200. Load up a cart, drive it home, put it in buckets, and seal them.

After doing the math, I realized I’d been stockpiling without any real direction. Then I came across this six-month prepping plan written by a Navy SEAL, and it completely changed how I think about it. 

The most affordable brand near me is Great Value, which also checked out well when I researched it online – but if you know of other brands with a better quality-to-price ratio, drop them in the comments.


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10 Uses for Purple Deadnettle

Estimated reading time: 6 minutes

If you've ever noticed a low-growing plant with small purple flowers and heart-shaped leaves taking over the edges of your garden or yard, there's a good chance you've been walking right past one of nature's most useful wild herbs. Purple deadnettle (Lamium purpureum) is a common wild plant that most people either don't recognize or dismiss as a weed, but it's far more valuable than it looks.

Despite sharing part of its name with stinging nettle, purple deadnettle won't hurt you. It belongs to the mint family, and you can tell by its distinctive square stem. The leaves are heart-shaped and arranged in alternating pairs along the stem, and toward the top of the plant, the leaves themselves take on a purple hue alongside the pink, white, or purple flowers.

It grows just about everywhere, but especially along the edges of gardens, fields, and forests, preferring sunny spots with loose soil. Like mint, it spreads aggressively through both its root system and seeds, but since it grows wild in abundance, there's no need to cultivate it. Just go find it.

Purple deadnettle is edible, medicinal, and easy to identify with no toxic lookalikes to worry about, making it one of the more beginner-friendly wild plants to learn. From supporting iron levels to stopping bleeding in a pinch, it has a surprising number of uses.

In this video from Luli's Homestead, she explains how to harvest, prepare, and preserve this remarkable plant, along with ten ways to use it. You can watch the video and read the list of uses below.

1. Eat It Fresh

Purple deadnettle is entirely edible and has a mild, pleasant flavor that makes it easy to incorporate into everyday meals. The leaves and flower tops can be eaten straight off the plant, tossed into a salad, blended into a smoothie, or mixed with other greens in dishes like quiche.

Historically, wild plants like deadnettle and stinging nettle were harvested in early spring by people whose winter food stores were running low, making them a genuine survival food with a long track record.

2. Boost Iron and Vitamin C Intake

Purple deadnettle is notably high in both iron and vitamin C, which is a powerful combination since vitamin C enhances the body's ability to absorb iron. For anyone dealing with iron-deficiency anemia, drinking deadnettle tea can help restore those levels over time. It also contains magnesium, zinc, and essential oils, making it a nutritionally well-rounded wild green.

3. Stop Bleeding

One of deadnettle's most well-known practical uses is as a styptic, a substance that helps stop bleeding. In a pinch, you can crush or chew fresh leaves into a poultice and apply it directly to a cut or wound to help slow and stop bleeding.

It works similarly to other well-known styptic herbs like yarrow and plantain. This is exactly the kind of skill that could come in handy when you're far from a first aid kit.

4. Soothe Stings and Inflammation

Applied topically, purple deadnettle has anti-inflammatory properties that make it useful for calming insect stings and bites. All you have to do is crush the plant and apply it directly to the sting site, and by the following day the pain and swelling will have gone down significantly.

5. Fight Fungal Infections

Purple deadnettle has antifungal properties that make it useful both topically and internally. Applied as a poultice or infusion to the skin, it can help address minor fungal issues. This is one of the lesser-known properties of the plant but adds to its overall value as a multi-purpose medicinal herb worth keeping on hand in dried or tincture form.

6. Ease Menstrual Cramps and Heavy Bleeding

For women dealing with difficult PMS symptoms, purple deadnettle offers a combination of properties that can help. Its anti-inflammatory action can calm cramping and reduce associated discomfort, while its styptic properties may help moderate heavy bleeding.

It's a traditional remedy that has been used for menstrual support for generations, though as with any herb, it's worth consulting a healthcare provider before using it medicinally, particularly for anyone already taking blood-thinning medications like aspirin or warfarin, as deadnettle can counteract their effects.

7. Relieve Congestion and Support Respiratory Health

Purple deadnettle has a purgative, expectorant quality that helps thin out mucus secretions and make them easier to cough up. This makes it particularly helpful for people dealing with bronchitis, chest congestion, or asthma. It's often included in herbal tea blends specifically formulated to support respiratory health during cold and flu season.

8. Reduce Fever and Warm the Body

Deadnettle is classified as a diaphoretic herb, meaning it promotes sweating. This makes it a traditional remedy for fevers and winter chills. Drinking it as a tea helps warm the body from the inside and encourages the sweating that helps break a fever. For this reason, it's commonly added to herbal formulas designed to address colds, flu, and fevers rather than used alone.

9. Support Kidney and Urinary Health

Purple deadnettle also acts as a diuretic, stimulating urine production and helping flush the urinary tract. This makes it potentially useful for people dealing with UTIs, kidney stones, or other renal issues where increased urination is beneficial. As with any diuretic herb, you'll want to talk to a healthcare provider when addressing a specific medical condition.

10. Preserve It as a Tincture or Dried Herb

One of the best things about purple deadnettle is how easy it is to preserve for year-round use. The simplest method is dehydrating the tops and leaves on the lowest setting in a food dehydrator until fully dry and crisp, then storing them in a labeled airtight container for use in teas and herbal infusions throughout the winter.

The second method is making a tincture: pack 1 oz of fresh chopped plant material into a glass jar, cover with 2 oz of 100-proof vodka, seal and label it, shake daily for the first week or two, and let it sit in a dark cupboard for 6 to 8 weeks before straining into a dark amber dropper bottle.

Because tinctures made with 100-proof vodka are highly concentrated and alcohol-preserved, they can remain effective for years.

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10 Survival Fails That Will Get You Killed

Estimated reading time: 6 minutes

10 Survival Fails That Will Get You Killed

When you're out in the wilderness, the margin for error is small. A wrong turn or bad decision can quickly become life-threatening. And oftentimes, bad decisions come from harmful survival myths have been passed down for generations. You see them printed in books, repeated in classrooms, and even shown on television.

The good news is that experienced survivalists are pushing back on these dangerous myths. Greg Ovens, for example. He's a self-taught survivalist from Canal Flats, British Columbia. Greg has been studying bushcraft since he was a kid. He's read every survival book he could get his hands on, and has spent over 40 years learning the craft firsthand.

In this video from the Youtube channel, Ovens Rocky Mountain Bushcraft, he goes over 10 survival days that could ruin your day or even cost you your life.

1. Rubbing Snow on Frostbite

This one was actually taught in old first aid classes, which probably led to many people losing fingers and toes. Rubbing snow on a frostbitten area does nothing to help the frozen tissue. In fact, it keeps the area cold and can make the damage worse. The correct approach is to warm the affected area up, not keep it cold.

2. If Birds Can Eat the Berries, So Can You

This myth has likely killed many people. The idea is that if you observe birds eating berries in the wild, those berries must be safe for human consumption. Not true. Baneberries are a perfect example. Birds eat them without issue, but as few as five or six berries can be fatal to a human. Don't use wildlife as your taste-testers.

3. Moss Only Grows on the North Side of Trees

Many old survival books say that if you're lost, just find the north side of a tree by looking for where the moss grows. Greg walks through the woods and points the camera at tree after tree, and every single one is covered in moss on all sides. In dense, shaded forests with enough moisture, moss doesn't play favorites. Relying on this method for navigation could send you in the wrong direction.

4. Drink Your Own Urine When You Have No Water

You've probably seen this one on survival shows (Bear Grylls comes to mind). The idea is that in a desperate situation with no water, drinking your urine is better than nothing. It isn't.

Urine contains concentrated salts that your body has already filtered out as waste. Drinking it will dehydrate you faster than if you drank nothing at all. Save yourself the misery and keep searching for a real water source.

5. You Can Make a Bow Drill String from Plant Fibers or Shoelaces

Bow drill fire starting is one of the most essential primitive survival skills, and the string is the most critical component. Many survival books suggest improvising a string from plant fibers like dogbane, stinging nettle, or milkweed, or simply using a shoelace.

Shoelaces tend to snap before you generate an ember, or they stretch so much that they lose tension. Plant fiber strings can work, but getting one thick and strong enough to actually function can take up to two days of prepare, which is time you simply don't have in a real survival situation. His recommendation: bring paracord. It's durable and reliable.

6. A Plastic Bag Can Reliably Start a Fire

Filling a clear plastic bag or sandwich bag with water to create a makeshift magnifying lens is a real technique, and Greg has actually pulled it off multiple times. But here's the problem: it only works during certain times of year when the sun is intense enough, and it's completely useless on a cloudy day.

In other words, it's a trick that works under a narrow set of ideal conditions. In a genuine survival situation, you're unlikely to have the luxury of waiting for a sunny afternoon. It's a fun skill to practice, but don't count on it when your life depends on making fire.

7. You Can Start a Fire Using Ice as a Magnifying Glass

Made famous by the movie The Edge with Anthony Hopkins, this technique involves shaping a piece of clear ice into a lens and using it to focus sunlight into a fire-starting beam. Sounds cool. Doesn't really work.

The fundamental problem is a catch-22: when the sun is intense enough to start a fire, the ice is too warm and cloudy to form a usable lens. And when the ice is cold and clear enough to theoretically shape into a lens, the sun isn't strong enough to ignite tinder through it. Greg has tried it, and it doesn't work in practice.

8. The Fire Roll Is a Reliable Fire-Starting Method

The fire roll, a technique where you roll smoldering material in cotton or similar tinder, sounds promising but has a critical flaw: it requires ash to work properly. That means you need to have already made a fire to produce the ash before you can use this method.

Greg acknowledges he's come close to making it work and is still experimenting, but points out that it's not a practical solution in a true survival scenario where you're starting from zero.

9. Misidentifying Wild Plants Is Easy to Spot

Greg shows a YouTube video where the host confidently picks what they call “salmon berries”, except they're actually thimbleberries, a completely different plant with a distinctly different leaf, flower color, and berry shape. The mix-up wasn't subtle; the plants look nothing alike to a trained eye.

He also shows a foraging book that misidentifies soapberry, confusing it with tartarian honeysuckle, a plant whose berries are mildly toxic. The takeaway: don't trust a single source when identifying wild edibles, whether it's a YouTube video or a published book. Always cross-reference with other sources.

10. Sweet Berries Are Safe, Bitter Berries Are Poisonous

Another myth pulled straight from old survival literature: you can tell edible berries from poisonous ones by taste. Sweet and pleasant? Go ahead. Bitter? Spit it out. This is flat-out wrong and potentially fatal. Soapberries, for example, are so bitter they're nearly unpalatable, but they're perfectly edible.

On the flip side, some poisonous berries taste just fine. Greg has cautiously tasted several toxic berries (without swallowing) specifically to test this theory, and confirms it holds no water. Taste alone is never a reliable indicator of safety.

Final Thoughts

The common thread running through all of these is the danger of accepting survival advice at face value, especially when it's been repeated so many times it feels like common knowledge. As Greg puts it, do your own research. Test things before you need them. And when in doubt, go with what's proven reliable rather than what makes for a good story in a survival book or movie.

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