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Tuesday, June 2, 2026

Summer Is Here — Is Your Family Ready for the Heat?

LMNT Electrolytes Burn Cream

Summer is here-Is your family ready for the heat? Everything you need to know about extreme summer heat, staying safe, recognizing heat illness, and knowing when to head to the ER. Summer is one of the most wonderful times of the year, but extreme heat can turn a fun day outside into a medical emergency faster than you might think.

As temperatures soar across the country, it’s crucial that every family understands the risks of heat-related illness, how to prevent them, and what to do when things go wrong. Whether you’re at the beach, in the backyard, or just running errands, heat safety is for everyone.

Cooling Mission Cloths

Please note that I’m not a doctor, a nurse, or anyone in the medical field. My husband recently had an episode where he didn’t know where he was or what he was doing, and he didn’t know the name of his church’s leader. This is why I’m writing this today. He was severely dehydrated from golfing in the heat and hadn’t eaten or had a drink of any kind in over 6 hours. He wouldn’t go to the doctor; he’s stubborn sometimes. I called my granddaughter, who’s a nurse, and she asked me if his face was drooping (possible stroke). No, it wasn’t.

My other daughters suggested he may be dehydrated, so I started him on some electrolytes. I always stock these two brands. LMNT and Liquid IV. He slowly got better, and he learned he had to take water with him when he golfs or goes outside in the heat of the day. Frogg Towels To Stay Cool

Why Extreme Heat Is So Dangerous

Your body is remarkably good at cooling itself, mainly through sweating and increasing blood flow to the skin. But when temperatures climb above 90°F, especially with high humidity, that cooling system gets overwhelmed. The real danger isn’t just air temperature. The heat index, which combines temperature with humidity, is what you should watch. A 95°F day at 60% humidity can feel like 114°F to your body.

Children, older adults, pets, and anyone with chronic health conditions are especially vulnerable. But healthy adults can get into serious trouble too, particularly during physical activity or when working outdoors.

The Hydration Golden Rule: Drink water before you feel thirsty. By the time thirst kicks in, you may already be mildly dehydrated. Aim for at least 8 to 10 glasses of water per day in summer, more if you’re active or sweating heavily. Avoid alcohol and excess caffeine, which speed up fluid loss. Mission Cooling Supplies

The 3 Heat Illnesses Every Family Should Know

Heat illnesses exist on a spectrum, from mild muscle cramping to life-threatening heat stroke. Knowing the difference can save a life.

Heat Cramps

Mild · Stage 1

What it is: Painful muscle spasms, usually in the legs, arms, or abdomen, caused by heavy sweating and loss of electrolytes during exercise or physical work in the heat.

Symptoms:

  • Painful muscle spasms or tightening
  • Heavy sweating
  • Muscles feel hard or knotted to the touch
  • Usually occurs during or after exercise in the heat

What to do: Stop the activity immediately and move to a cool place. Drink water or an electrolyte-rich sports drink. Gently stretch and massage the cramping muscle. Rest for several hours before resuming any strenuous activity. Don’t resume activity if cramps return.

Heat Exhaustion

Moderate · Stage 2

What it is: A more serious condition where the body is losing the battle against overheating. The body is still sweating and trying to cool down, but struggling to do so. This is a warning sign. If not treated, it can rapidly progress to heat stroke.

Symptoms:

  • Heavy, excessive sweating
  • Pale, cool, or moist skin
  • Weakness, dizziness, or fainting
  • Nausea or vomiting
  • Fast, weak pulse
  • Headache and muscle cramps
  • Body temperature may be elevated up to 104°F

What to do: Move the person to a cool, air-conditioned space immediately. Loosen or remove tight clothing. Apply cool, wet cloths to the skin. Have them sip cool water slowly. If vomiting occurs or symptoms worsen, call 911 without delay. Don’t try to give fluids to anyone who is unconscious.

Heat Stroke

Severe · Stage 3 · Medical Emergency

What it is: Heat stroke is a life-threatening emergency. The body’s temperature regulation system has completely failed, and core body temperature reaches 104°F or higher. Without immediate treatment, heat stroke causes permanent organ damage and death.

Symptoms:

  • Body temperature of 104°F or higher
  • Skin is hot, red, and dry — no longer sweating, a critical warning sign
  • Rapid, strong pulse
  • Confusion, slurred speech, or unconsciousness
  • Throbbing headache
  • Seizures
  • Loss of consciousness or not responding

What to do: Call 911 immediately. While waiting for emergency services, move the person to a cool area. Cool them down as quickly as possible using any means available. Immerse in cool water, apply ice packs to neck, armpits, and groin, and fan them while misting with cool water. Don’t give fluids by mouth if unconscious. Don’t leave them alone.

When to Go to the Emergency Room

Call 911 or go to the nearest ER immediately if you or anyone around you experiences:

  • Body temperature of 104°F (40°C) or higher
  • Confusion, disorientation, slurred speech, or altered mental state
  • Loss of consciousness or difficulty waking up
  • Seizures of any kind
  • Hot, dry skin, stopped sweating despite the heat
  • Rapid, strong pulse that won’t slow down
  • Symptoms of heat exhaustion that don’t improve within 30 minutes of cooling
  • Vomiting that prevents drinking fluids
  • A child or infant who is limp, unresponsive, or unusually quiet in the heat

When in doubt, call. Heat stroke can kill within minutes. Early intervention saves lives.

10 Essential Tips to Beat the Summer Heat

  1. Stay hydrated: Drink water every 20 minutes outdoors
  2. Stay cool indoors: Use AC or a cooling center from 10 am to 4 pm
  3. Cover up: Wear light-colored, loose clothing and a wide hat
  4. Time your activity: Exercise before 9 am or after 7 pm
  5. Never leave kids in cars: Car temps reach 140°F in minutes
  6. Use sunscreen: SPF 30 or higher every 2 hours outdoors
  7. Eat light: Choose water-rich fruits like watermelon
  8. Check the heat index: Not just temperature; humidity matters too
  9. Watch the older people and the young: Check on neighbors and family often
  10. Know the signs: Learn heat cramp, heat exhaustion, and heat stroke symptoms

A note for families with young children: Children’s bodies heat up 3 to 5 times faster than adults’. Always bring extra water, take regular shade breaks, and watch for signs of overheating, such as flushed skin, irritability, or unusual quietness. Babies and toddlers can’t tell you when they’re hot. Check on them frequently and never leave them in a parked vehicle, even for just a minute.

Heat Exhaustion vs. Heat Stroke: What You Need to Know

How To Be Prepared For Extreme Cold Weather

The Bottom Line: Enjoy Summer Safely

Summer is meant to be enjoyed, with backyard cookouts, beach days, evening walks, and making memories with the people you love. You don’t need to hide inside all season. You just need to respect the heat.

Know the signs of heat cramps, heat exhaustion, and heat stroke. Keep everyone hydrated. Take breaks in the shade or indoors. And when in doubt about someone’s symptoms, call 911 or head to the ER. Heat illness escalates fast, and acting quickly is always the right call. Stay cool, stay safe, and have a wonderful summer. May God bless this world, Linda

The post Summer Is Here — Is Your Family Ready for the Heat? appeared first on Food Storage Moms.



from Food Storage Moms

Homestead Hygiene – Low Water Ways to Stay Clean and Avoid Infection

Virtually every culture practices routines of hygiene to prevent illness. Homesteaders and survivalists must implement procedures for washing hands, showering or bathing, laundering clothing and washing dishes with minimal water in order to prevent illness off grid. I grew up backpacking in the deserts of Arizona and Southern Utah and never stopped. Where possible, travel […]

from Survivopedia

Monday, June 1, 2026

Why You Shouldn’t Use Handheld Radios During SHTF

A buddy of mine ran an experiment back in 2023 that still bothers me when I think about it. He set up a basic software-defined radio receiver in his truck, the kind you can build for about $35 with parts ordered off the shelf, and drove a 40-mile loop through three counties in rural Tennessee. 

By the end of that drive, his laptop had logged 847 distinct handheld radio transmissions, mapped roughly 60% of them to within a quarter mile of their origin point, and identified at least twelve operators by voice signature. They were twelve people who probably thought they were being careful.

What I find very interesting is that this wasn’t FBI or another 3-letter agency, but one regular guy with hobby-grade equipment in his car. Now imagine what happens when the grid is sideways and when your Baofeng on channel 4 is screaming your coordinates to anyone within thirty miles who knows what to listen for.

This is the part of comms planning that gets glossed over in every prepper forum I’ve ever read.

The Direction-Finding Problem

The basic physics of radio directions has been settled science since the 1920s, and the equipment to do it has gotten absurdly cheap. A Doppler-based DF unit that would have cost $8,000 in 1995 can now be assembled for under $200 using a Raspberry Pi, four cheap antennas, and free software anyone can download. Two of those units, placed a few miles apart and networked, will triangulate your position within seconds of you keying up.

👉 How to Use a Ham Radio in a Blackout (Easy 5-Step Tutorial)

The longer you transmit, the tighter the fix gets. Most folks practicing comms discipline focus on what they say. The actual problem is that you transmitted at all.

A typical “quick check-in” on a handheld, even one of those clipped fifteen-second transmissions everyone thinks is safe, is more than enough time for a determined listener with modern equipment to plot your location on a map. And here’s the kicker that experienced operators sometimes miss. Frequency-hopping doesn’t help you against a wideband SDR. The receiver sees the whole spectrum at once and the hop pattern itself becomes a signature.

Your Baofeng Is a Beacon Even When You’re Not Talking

A banner with the message 7 signs your home is bugged and you'd never notice and a picture showing a hidden microphoneThis one was surprising even for my experienced prepper friends. A handheld radio in receive mode is still emitting RF. The local oscillator inside every superheterodyne receiver leaks a small amount of signal back out through the antenna.

It’s faint, but it’s detectable at close range, sometimes a few hundred yards, depending on conditions.

During the Cold War, this was how counterintelligence teams in Eastern Europe located clandestine listening posts.

The technique never went away. It just stopped being relevant to most civilians. So, if someone is sweeping a neighborhood looking for active electronics, your “I’m just listening” handheld is announcing itself, enough that a team doing close-in detection work can locate your house.

The Voice Print Problem

Voice biometrics has gotten cheap and accurate. Open-source speaker identification models can match a thirty-second voice sample to a known speaker with around 95% accuracy.

If you’ve ever been on YouTube, podcasts, a work conference call that got recorded, or even just had your voice picked up on a Ring camera that ended up in a data breach, your voice signature exists somewhere in a database that can be accessed by hackers. 

👉AI Is Taking Over America. The #1 Clue Is Your Power Grid

Key up on a repeater during a crisis, and you’re not anonymous just because you used a fake callsign. The voice print is the fingerprint. Three or four transmissions over a week is more than enough to build a profile, link it to a name, and from there to an address, a family, a workplace.

When Handhelds Actually Make Sense

I’m not telling you to throw your radios in a drawer. They have real use cases, just not the ones most prepper articles push. Here’s where they earn their keep:

Inside your perimeter, low power, short duration

If you’re coordinating between a barn and a house on 100 milliwatts of transmit power, the signal physics work in your favor. Ground clutter, vegetation, and structures absorb low-power VHF and UHF quickly. 

👉 Google Will Never Find Your Home If You Do THIS!

Someone two miles away with a good antenna might pick you up. Someone ten miles away almost certainly won’t. Run your handhelds on the lowest power setting that maintains the link and you’ve eliminated about 80% of the detection risk.

Listening only, with a separate dedicated receive setup

A radio that never transmits is dramatically harder to locate. Use it for situational awareness, weather monitoring, monitoring emergency services, and tracking what’s happening in your area. Keep your transmitting radios in a Faraday container until you need them.

Vehicle-to-vehicle within a convoy, brief and coded

If you’re moving and the people listening are also moving, the DF problem gets exponentially harder. A quick coded transmission between two trucks half a mile apart is genuinely useful, and by the time anyone triangulates the signal, you’re a mile down the road.

Initial coordination before going dark

Set up your plan, your check-in windows, your fallback meetups, and your code phrases before things go sideways. Then practice operating without the radio. The radio becomes the contingency, not the primary tool.

Six Better Alternatives 

This is where the conversation actually gets interesting, because the alternatives are out there and they’re underused.

Wired field telephones

Bunker picture and a headline that says THIS IS WHERE YOU'LL FIND ME DURING WW3, WATCH VIDEOThe TA-1 and TA-312 surplus military field phones are still floating around at military surplus stores for fifty to two hundred bucks.

Run WD-1 communications wire (also cheap surplus) between key positions on your property and you have completely silent, undetectable, encrypted-by-physics communications.

No RF signature exists. None. You can talk all day and the only way anyone intercepts you is by physically tapping the wire, which means they’re already on your property.  For perimeter security and homestead coordination, nothing beats it.

Dead drops

A pre-arranged physical location where written messages are left and retrieved. Old school espionage tradecraft. Completely silent in the electromagnetic spectrum. The Soviets and the CIA ran entire networks on dead drops for decades because the technique fundamentally cannot be intercepted remotely.

Light and signal panels

Pre-arranged visual signals using colored panels, mirrors, or shielded flashlights at night carry exactly zero RF signature and can communicate complex information if you’ve done the homework.

6 Unusual Ways to Communicate After an EMP

A red panel in the south window means one thing, a blue panel means another. It sounds primitive because it is primitive, which is precisely why it works when everything electronic has become a liability.

HF NVIS for longer ranges, but with caveats

Near Vertical Incidence Skywave on the 40 and 80 meter bands lets you talk regionally without the line-of-sight limitation.

The signal goes nearly straight up, bounces off the ionosphere, and comes back down over a wide area.

The catch is that NVIS is harder to direction-find than VHF/UHF because the signal arrives from above rather than from a specific compass bearing.

Still detectable, still requires discipline, but the DF problem is meaningfully different.

MURS radios at minimum power

If you absolutely need RF, the Multi-Use Radio Service operates on five VHF frequencies with a 2-watt maximum power limit. Lower power means smaller detection radius. License-free, simple, and the limited frequency range makes monitoring easier without making transmitting more secure, but the low power is a feature here, not a bug.

Mesh networks with encryption

Devices like Meshtastic running on LoRa frequencies use low-power, short-burst transmissions with built-in encryption and message routing. Detection is still possible but the burst duration is so short and the encryption is strong enough that practical exploitation is much harder than with voice radio. Worth investigating if you haven’t already.

The Best Thing For Your Survival

Grid Phantom - AI Defense SystemThe mindset shift that took me too long to make was understanding that comms during a crisis isn’t about being able to talk.

It’s about being able to coordinate without revealing yourself. Those are very different problems with very different solutions.

Most preppers I know have spent more money on radios than on actually building a communications plan. Three Baofengs and a roll of duct tape isn’t a plan.

A field phone running between your house and your observation post, paired with pre-arranged visual signals, paired with a tight schedule of when you actually transmit on radio and when you don’t, that’s a plan.

Get your wire run this summer. Practice operating without the radios so you know what works and what falls apart. Then when you do need to key up, you’ll do it briefly, at low power, with discipline, and you’ll go dark again before anyone has time to plot you on a map.


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The post Why You Shouldn’t Use Handheld Radios During SHTF appeared first on Ask a Prepper.



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Why 90% of People Will Die Without the Power Grid

Estimated reading time: 9 minutes

Why 90% of People Will Die Without the Power Grid

Electricity is the lifeblood of modern society. Our entire infrastructure is dependent on power drawn from the electrical grid, as well as much of what is in our homes.

Should the electrical grid go down, it would wreak havoc on the way we do things, bringing almost everything to a sudden and complete standstill. Society would no longer be able to continue as it has. 

That very same electrical grid is the most fragile part of our infrastructure. Power lines go down, leaving people without electricity in just about any sizeable storm. That goes for winter storms too, where ice can build up on the wires, causing enough extra weight that it causes them to break.

Hurricanes can cause enough damage to leave whole regions without power for weeks or even months. There were still people without electricity up to a year after Hurricane Maria hit Puerto Rico. 

But these storms are mere regional events. Those are easier to survive, because help can come from outside the affected area. Things would be a whole lot different if we lost the entire electric grid at the same time, leaving the entire country without power. 

What Happens When The Grid Goes Down?

Most of us have experienced power outages at various times in our lives. We suddenly lose power in our homes, causing everything that runs on electricity to stop instantly. We rarely notice what that power outage does in the wider world around us. 

In a true grid-down situation, there would be much more that would stop working than in a normal power outage. Radio stations, water purification plants and pump houses, hospitals and even some stores have emergency generators to provide power.

But even those would stop running after a few days, if they couldn’t get more fuel for their generators. We’d see a wide variety of things just stop working within days, such as:

  • Traffic lights would be out.
  • Gas stations wouldn't be able to pump gas, nor would refineries be able to produce more.
  • City water would stop running.
  • City sewage plants would be unable to process sewage, causing sewage lines to back up
  • Pretty much all communications would be out, including radio, television, telephone, and internet.
  • Store cash-registers wouldn't work. Grocery stores would have to throw out meats, frozen foods, dairy and anything else that can spoil, if those food items aren’t stolen by looters first.
  • Stores would quickly run out of critical supplies, as they would not be able to order replacement goods.
  • Traffic would come to a standstill, due to the lack of gasoline and diesel.
  • The air traffic control would stop working; pilots wouldn’t be able to communicate with the ground and any ground-based navigational aids would be lost once generators lost power. Pilots would have to land quickly, or take the risk of landing without those aids. There would probably be midair collisions, especially near airports, as multiple airplanes tried to land.
  • Hospitals would quickly be unable to provide adequate healthcare, as they wouldn’t have electricity and would run out of supplies.
  • Pharmacies would quickly run out of prescription medicines.
  • Most businesses would be closed.
  • The shipping industry, both overland and over the water, will come to a standstill without fuel to burn.

There are other things as well, which we could add to this list; but these are the major ones. 

Empty Store Shelves

How Will This Affect Human Life? 

According to the report of the EMP Commission, about 90 percent of the population would lose their lives during the first year after an EMP takes out the electrical grid. However, this doesn’t just apply to an EMP. Anything that would cause a loss of the electrical grid would have the same effect, for the same reasons. 

First Wave of Deaths

The fist wave of people to die off after the loss of the grid would be those who need to take daily doses of prescription medicines to treat chronic medical conditions. More than 131 million Americans take medicines daily to deal with those conditions; some 66 percent of all the adults in the United States.

While some of them would be able to survive without those medicines, there are many more who wouldn't be able to survive, such as diabetics who require insulin injections. It all depends on what their condition is, how serious it is, and whether there is an alternative, such as a natural remedy that they can take. 

Second Wave of Deaths

City sewage is an important part of curtailing the spread of disease, so with that out, we can expect an epidemic to hit within a few weeks after losing power. It doesn’t matter what the disease pathogen is, as any would spread easily from lack of proper sanitation.

Human waste is filled with dangerous pathogens, which will likely get into whatever surface water supplies exist, because of people bathing in those water sources. Once there, disease would rapidly spread through society, causing the second wave of death. 

Medical professionals would end up trying to treat the resulting epidemic with one hand tied behind their back. Without electricity, their ability to diagnose would be severely hampered, and with drug supplies running out, their ability to properly treat their patients will be curtailed. Many would die. 

Third Wave of Deaths

But the biggest killer would be the third wave of deaths, which would be people dying of starvation. Some 83 percent of the US population lives in urban areas, which clearly defines them as not being farmers.

While some may have vegetable gardens, few will be growing enough food to live on. We are accustomed to buying our food in grocery stores and restaurants, not growing it ourselves. 

The average grocery store stocks three days’ worth of inventory; less for fresh foods, which are often delivered daily. Chances are pretty good that those stores will be looted, with people taking everything that looks useful. But even if that doesn’t happen, they’ll run out of food quickly.

The food in people’s freezers would start thawing after about 24 hours, making it imperative to either eat it or preserve it in some other way. But few people know how to properly preserve food, especially meats.

Everyone will eat as much as they can, before it goes bad…or even after it goes bad. Even so, it won’t take much time to eat up the available supplies of fresh meat. Canned foods would last longer, but even there, most people only have a limited supply on hand. 

Survivor in Abandoned City

We can count on some people trying to organize and “redistribute” whatever food sources they can find. But even if they are able to find every prepper’s stockpile, that will only extend the lifespan of most communities by a few days.

Preppers stockpile enough for their families; not for their communities. When there are 50 people trying to eat off of one prepper’s stockpile, their one-year stockpile supplies food for a week, no more. 

It will be necessary for those who survive to put all their efforts into growing food, so as to have enough to keep going. Having to farm, without the advantage of internal combustion engines to power our farm equipment, means doing everything by hand. That’s a lot more time-consuming and a lot less efficient. But without investing all that manual labor, we would all die. 

Not only will this wave of deaths be the biggest, it will also last the longest, starting a couple of months after the lights go out and lasting at least a full year. It will take about that long for locally grown food to take over, making up for the loss of our food infrastructure. Even then, people will be on a near-starvation diet, rather than having in abundance. 

Fourth Wave of Deaths

The lack of food will likely lead to the next and final wave of people dying off, as criminals and those who live near the edge of lawlessness gang together to steal whatever they can, from whoever has it.

Killing others in order to get food to keep themselves alive will not be much of a moral issue to these people. In fact, this may go as far as cannibalism, as people seek anything they can eat. When there is no other food available, there are those who will resort to literally anything. 

This final wave will need to be killed off, before they kill off those who are trying to rebuild society and grow food for their families. That will require local communities working together and forming militias to fight, protecting their families and the community at large. 

Surviving The Loss of The Electric Grid

As a survival problem, the loss of the electric grid is the most challenging scenario we face today. While mankind didn’t need electricity to survive most of history, we have become highly dependent on it. It is that dependency which will cause us the greatest problem. 

The only answer is to be able to survive without the use of electric power. That’s possible; but it’s a lot of work. It means becoming self-sufficient in the fullest sense of the word. But it means more than that, in that we’ll need to help others become self-sufficient as well.

If we want our children to survive, and aren’t just concerned about surviving ourselves, they will need a community around them. Mankind needs a community, not just to procreate, but to fulfill all the needs of our lives. 

Turning your home into a homestead, where you are growing all the food you eat is a good start. But you need to be ready to help your neighbors do the same, so that your children will have neighbors once you are gone.

That’s much harder, as those neighbors probably won’t be preppers themselves. All they’ll have, that they can contribute, is the ability to work; you’ll have to provide the knowledge, tools, and even the seed. 

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Sunday, May 31, 2026

2026 Summer Prepping Checklist. Are You Ready?

Last July, my garage hit 104°F and nature reminded me that no matter how prepared you think you are, it’ll find a way to punch holes in your plan. The flaw in my setup showed itself when a case of canned tomatoes I’d had on the shelf for about eighteen months started swelling at the seams. Not all of them, just the ones stacked closest to the south-facing wall. 

The acid in tomatoes reacts with the tin lining when temperatures climb past 95°F for extended stretches, and what looked like a perfectly good rotation suddenly turned into a biohazard sitting next to my workbench. 

That’s the kind of thing nobody warns you about when you first start building a stockpile, and it’s exactly why summer is the perfect season to have a prepping checklist.

The Truth About Rice and Other Grains

Grain weevils, rice moths, and Indian meal moths all become active when storage temperatures cross 75°F. Their eggs are already in your grain when you buy it. Every bag of flour, rice, oats, cornmeal, and pasta from any grocery store comes with microscopic eggs already deposited by the producer’s facility. Cold storage keeps them dormant, while warm storage wakes them up.

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The fix is dry ice or oxygen absorbers in sealed mylar, and it has to be done right or you’re just creating a sealed environment for the bugs to thrive in:

  • For mylar with oxygen absorbers, you need at least 5-mil thickness (most cheap mylar is 3.5-mil and pinholes will let oxygen back in within months). 
  • For dry ice treatment, you place about three ounces of dry ice per five-gallon bucket on top of the grain, let it sublimate completely with the lid resting loose for about thirty minutes, then seal. The CO2 displaces oxygen and suffocates any active insects and most eggs.

If you’re already stored and just want to check, pour a cup of your stored rice or wheat onto a white plate and leave it under a bright light for ten minutes. Any movement, any tiny dark specks crawling, you’ve got an infestation. The whole bucket is compromised. You can still salvage the grain by freezing it for a week (kills all life stages), then re-storing in properly sealed mylar, but don’t pretend it’s pristine.

What 95°F Storage Actually Does to Your Cans 

FRT bannerThe shelf life printed on a can assumes storage at around 70°F. For every 18°F above that, the chemical degradation roughly doubles.

A can rated for five years sitting in a 95°F shed is realistically giving you maybe eighteen months of true nutritional integrity before the vitamins start collapsing and the seals begin to fatigue. 

Also, high-acid foods like tomatoes, citrus, pickled goods, and anything with vinegar will go first. The acid eats through the protective lining and you’ll start getting metallic taste, then eventually botulism risk if seals fail.

Walk your stockpile this week and physically touch the tops and bottoms of every can. Any flex, any popping sound, any bulge, that one goes in the trash. Don’t compost it, don’t feed it to the chickens, bag it and bin it. Botulinum toxin doesn’t care about your livestock either.

For jars, the lid is your tell. Press the center. If it pops back, the seal is broken and oxygen has been getting in for who knows how long. Even if the contents look fine, toss it. Some preppers will tell you to reprocess, but reprocessing food of unknown age and contamination history is asking for trouble you don’t need.

What to Do With the Expired Food

An expired can isn’t automatically garbage, but it isn’t automatically safe either. 

For example, low-acid canned goods (beans, corn, peas, meats) that are within two years past their printed date, with no bulging, no rust, no dents along the seam, and that hiss properly when opened, are generally fine. 

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It’s also important to take a smell test on a small amount and then cook thoroughly. I’ve eaten ten-year-old canned chicken from a properly stored basement. It was bland, but safe.

High-acid foods past their date go in the trash. The risk-to-reward ratio isn’t worth it. Anything with even slight rust along the seam, anything that hisses wrong (you’ll know the difference!), anything with off-color or texture, all of it gets tossed without debate.

Water Storage in Summer is a Different Animal

UV exposure breaks down plastic faster than you realize. If your blue 55-gallon drums are sitting where summer sun touches them even briefly each day, you’re getting phthalate leaching into your water supply. 

Cover them, move them, or wrap them in heavy-duty reflective material. Same applies to those stacked 5-gallon water bricks in the garage.

It’s also worth mentioning that bleach loses potency in heat.

The bottle of plain unscented bleach you bought in March for water purification has already lost a percentage of its sodium hypochlorite by July. Bleach degrades roughly 20% per year at room temperature, faster in heat. Calcium hypochlorite (pool shock) is your better summer storage option because it’s stable as a dry powder for years and a small amount treats enormous volumes of water. One pound treats about 10,000 gallons. Store it separately from anything organic because it’s an oxidizer.

Also (and I really can’t stress this enough), the best way to avoid this kind of hassle altogether is to buy or even build your own atmospheric water generator. It’s one of the most useful devices you can own, since it essentially pulls water straight out of thin air and doubles as a water filter.

Ammo and Optics 

Brass-cased ammunition stored in fluctuating humidity will develop verdigris, that green corrosion, around the case mouth. Toss a few silica gel packs into your ammo cans and replace them annually. 

Battery-powered optics, red dots especially, will drain faster in heat. Pull the batteries on anything you’re not using regularly and store them separately.

The Medicine Cabinet Gets Forgotten Every Year

This is What Happens When You Take Expired MedicationsInsulin, EpiPens, and most antibiotics lose potency rapidly above 86°F. If you’ve got a family member dependent on temperature-sensitive medication, summer is when your power-out plan gets tested whether you want it to or not.

A Yeti cooler with rotating frozen water bottles will hold safe temperatures for 72 hours if you’re disciplined about opening it.

Beyond that, you need either a generator-powered fridge or you can bury them underground – for this, you can follow this DIY Buried Fridge

Check expiration dates on your antibiotics, pain relievers, and any prescription stockpile. The often-cited military study showing many medications remain potent decades past expiration applies to dry tablets stored cool and dark. It does not apply to liquids, suspensions, or anything stored in a hot garage. Tetracycline antibiotics specifically can become toxic past expiration.

HERE’S THE LIST of medications you can still safely take after they expire.

The Actual Checklist Before You Close the Tab

Print this. Tape it to the inside of your storage room door. Walk through it with a pen in hand, not from memory.

Canned Goods

  • Touch the top and bottom of every can. Any flex, bulge, or pop means trash.
  • Inspect every seam for rust, dents, or seepage.
  • Pull anything high-acid (tomatoes, citrus, pickled) older than 18 months in hot storage.
  • Wipe down shelves and check for rodent droppings or insect frass behind the cans.
  • Rotate oldest to the front, restock the back.
  • Log what got tossed and what needs replacing before fall.

Jars

  • Press every lid center. Pops back means broken seal, throw it out.
  • Check for cloudy liquid or color shifts compared to a fresh jar – take a test after this method.
  • Confirm rings are clean and not rusting onto the jars.
  • Move anything in direct or reflected sunlight to a darker spot.
  • Wipe jar exteriors. Sticky residue attracts ants and moths fast in summer heat.
  • Date every jar with masking tape if you haven’t already.

Grains & Dry Goods

  • White plate test on rice, wheat, oats, flour, cornmeal, pasta. Ten minutes under a bright light.
  • Check mylar bags for pinholes, especially along seal lines.
  • Verify oxygen absorbers haven’t expired or been compromised (the indicator should still be pink).
  • Pull any brown rice older than six months and use it now or trash it.
  • Confirm storage temperature stays below 75°F. If it doesn’t, fix that before you fix anything else.
  • Inventory how many pounds of each grain you actually have.
  • Inspect buckets for cracks near the rim.

Water

  • Inspect drums for UV damage, algae, or sediment buildup.
  • Cover or relocate anything getting direct sun.
  • Test stored water with a TDS meter if you have one, sniff and visually check if you don’t.
  • Rotate any water stored longer than 12 months unless it’s properly treated.
  • Verify bleach hasn’t expired. Replace anything over six months old.
  • Confirm calcium hypochlorite is dry, sealed, and stored away from organics and metals.
  • Check filtration systems (Berkey, Sawyer, etc.) for cracks, mold, or worn gaskets.

Medical

  • Inventory all prescriptions and note exact expiration dates.
  • Identify everything temperature-sensitive and confirm the cool-storage plan.
  • Test the backup cooler with thermometer and frozen bottles for 72 hours.
  • Toss anything past date that’s liquid, suspension, or tetracycline-based.
  • Restock bandages, gauze, tape, and anything used in the last six months without replacement.
  • Make sure you always have these 7 medicines in your stockpile – they are crucial when SHTF!

Ammo & Firearms

  • Open every ammo can and inspect for verdigris on case mouths.
  • Replace silica gel packs.
  • Function-check every firearm in the rotation.
  • Wipe down anything in long-term storage and reapply a light protective oil.
  • Pull batteries from optics, lights, and lasers not in daily carry.
  • Confirm magazines are loaded to spec and springs aren’t taking a set.
  • Check ammo can gasket seals. Cracked rubber means moisture is already getting in.

Tools & Equipment

  • Run the generator. Actually start it. Don’t just look at it.
  • Top off fuel and add stabilizer if it’s been sitting.
  • Test every flashlight, headlamp, and lantern.
  • Make sure you check and replace old batteries lying around. Also, you can learn how to recondition old batteries instead of throwing them out.
  • Verify if your hand pumps, hand grinders, hand saws actually work.
  • Inspect any solar panels for dust, or connector corrosion under the junction box.

Perimeter & Property

  • Walk every fence line and gate.
  • Check for storm damage, washouts, and overgrowth blocking sight lines.
  • Move flammable storage at least twenty feet from propane and fuel tanks.
  • Confirm gutters and drainage paths are clear before late-summer storms.
  • Test motion lights and security cameras – here’s how!
  • Verify your bug-out vehicle starts, has fuel, and the tires hold pressure.

Documents & Cash

  • Confirm physical copies of IDs, deeds, insurance, and medical records are in your fireproof storage.
  • Refresh emergency cash. Small bills.
  • Update the family communication plan if anything’s changed (numbers, addresses, meetup points).

Get out there before the worst of the heat sets in. Bring a notebook, not just this checklist. Write down what you find, what needs fixing, and what needs replacing before September. Your future self will thank you when you’re not scrambling in October. 


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