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Saturday, March 28, 2026

If We Have A War: What You Need To Grow Food

Garden Tools Garden Seeds

If we have a war, what you need to grow food. When the shelves run empty and supply chains collapse, the people who survive are the ones who know how to grow their own food. A war or large-scale crisis can disrupt grocery distribution within days. Whether you have a backyard garden, a community plot, or even a few raised beds, building your food-growing knowledge and gathering the right tools now could mean the difference between eating and going hungry. This post covers almost everything you need to get started, from the ground beneath your feet to the tools in your hands.

Garden Tools Garden Seeds

Starting with the Soil: Your Most Important Resource

No garden survives without good soil. In a crisis scenario, your soil is your lifeline, and understanding it is the first skill worth developing. Healthy garden soil is loose, dark, and full of organic matter. It drains well but holds enough moisture to keep roots fed between waterings. Before you plant a single seed, get your hands in the ground and assess what you are working with.

Sandy soil drains too fast and holds few nutrients. Clay soil holds too much water and becomes compacted. Loamy soil is the ideal balance. If you’re not starting with loamy soil, you’ll need to amend it, which is a task you can absolutely accomplish with the right materials.

Testing your soil pH is also worth doing if you can. Most vegetables prefer a pH between 6.0 and 7.0. If your soil is too acidic, you can raise the pH with lime. If it’s too alkaline, sulfur can bring it back into range.

Soil Amendments That Will Transform Your Garden

Soil amendments are materials worked into the earth to improve its structure, fertility, or drainage. Stocking up on these now, or learning how to make them yourself, is one of the smartest forms of crisis preparation.

Compost is the king of all soil amendments. It adds nutrients, improves drainage in clay soils, helps sandy soils retain moisture, and introduces beneficial microorganisms. You can make compost for free from kitchen scraps, grass clippings, and dried leaves. During a long-term crisis, your compost pile becomes a nutrient-recycling system that costs nothing.

Aged manure from chickens, cows, horses, or rabbits is another powerful amendment. It adds nitrogen and organic matter. Never apply fresh manure directly to beds where you’re growing food, as it can introduce pathogens. Let it age for at least three to six months first.

Wood ash is a useful amendment if you’re burning wood for heat. It raises soil pH and adds potassium and calcium. Use it sparingly and work it in well.

Peat moss or coconut coir can help loosen dense clay soils and improve their structure. Coconut coir is a more sustainable option and holds moisture well without becoming waterlogged. Coconut Coir

Garden Tools Fertilizer Coconut Coir

Bone meal adds phosphorus, which supports strong root development and flowering. Blood meal adds nitrogen and is particularly useful for leafy greens like lettuce, spinach, and kale. Bone Meal

If supply chains are cut off, your long-term amendment strategy should revolve around compost, animal manure, and wood ash. These are the amendments you can produce or source locally without any commercial infrastructure.

Garden Gloves: Protecting Your Most Essential Tools

Your hands are your most important tools, and in a crisis, an infected cut or a broken nail bed is no minor inconvenience. It can take you out of work when you can least afford it. A good pair of garden gloves is not optional equipment. It’s protective gear.

Look for gloves that are durable but allow enough dexterity to handle seeds, transplants, and delicate weeding tasks. Leather palm gloves are excellent for heavy digging and moving sharp debris. Nitrile-coated gloves offer good grip and puncture resistance while still allowing fine motor control. For general use, a mid-weight pair with a reinforced palm and breathable back fabric is the most versatile option.

Stock more than one pair. Gloves wear out faster than you expect, especially if you’re gardening every day. Having backup pairs stored in a dry location is a practical form of preparedness. Digz Garden Gloves

Garden Tools Garden Gloves for Gardening

Tomato Cages: Vertical Growing for Maximum Yield

Tomatoes are one of the most calorie-dense and versatile vegetables you can grow in a survival garden. They’re productive over a long growing season, can be preserved by canning or drying, and provide vitamins that are critical when other food sources are scarce. However, tomato plants need support as they grow; without it, they sprawl across the ground, become more susceptible to disease, and produce far less fruit.

Tomato cages solve this problem by training the plant to grow upward. This improves air circulation around the foliage, keeps the fruit off the damp soil, and makes harvesting significantly easier. Standard wire tomato cages from a garden center work well for smaller varieties. For larger indeterminate tomatoes, which keep growing and producing until frost, you may want heavier-gauge cages or stakes with twine.

In a crisis scenario, tomato cages can be improvised from fencing wire, rebar, or even sturdy sticks lashed together. The concept matters more than the specific product. Your goal is to get the plant vertical.

Using a Hod to Gather Your Harvest Efficiently

A garden hod is a slatted wooden or wire basket traditionally used to gather freshly harvested vegetables. It may be one of the most underrated tools in a productive garden. Unlike a bucket or solid container, a hod lets you rinse your vegetables right in the basket, and the water drains through the slats as you carry your harvest to the kitchen.

In a busy survival garden where you’re harvesting beans, tomatoes, squash, leafy greens, and root vegetables on a rotating schedule, a hod dramatically speeds up the post-harvest process. You pick directly into the hod, carry it to a water source, rinse, and your vegetables are clean and ready to store or cook. It saves trips, saves time, and keeps your produce off the dirt.

A well-made wooden hod will last for many years with minimal care. You can also find lighter, easier-to-clean wire versions. Keep one hung near your garden entrance so it’s always at hand when you head out to harvest. HOD Basket

Hod With Vegetables

Small Garden Hand Tools: The Everyday Workhorses

When you think about garden tools for a survival situation, you might picture large equipment. But the tools you’ll reach for every single day are the small ones. Hand tools are indispensable for the close, precise work that keeps a vegetable garden productive.

A hand trowel is the most fundamental of these. You’ll use it to transplant seedlings, dig planting holes, and scoop amendments into beds. Choose a trowel with a solid metal blade attached firmly to the handle, rather than one riveted in a way that loosens over time. A stainless steel head will resist rust far longer than a carbon steel one.

A hand cultivator, which looks like a small claw, is essential for breaking up the soil surface between rows, working in amendments, and uprooting small weeds before they establish. This tool does the same work as a full-size tiller in a small footprint, and it’s gentle enough to use close to plant roots without disturbing them.

A hand weeder, sometimes called a dandelion digger or Cape Cod weeder, allows you to get beneath the root of a weed and extract it cleanly. In a survival garden, weeding is not cosmetic maintenance. Weeds compete directly with your food crops for water, nutrients, and light. Staying ahead of them with a good hand weeder is critical to maintaining yield.

The Small Pitchfork: Heavy Work Without a Big Footprint

A small pitchfork, often called a border fork or hand fork, is one of the most useful tools in a compact garden toolkit. Where a full-size digging fork would be overkill in a raised bed or a tight row, a small pitchfork gives you the mechanical advantage to break up compacted soil, turn compost, and loosen root vegetables at harvest without disturbing the surrounding plants.

When amending your beds, a small pitchfork is the right tool for working compost or other organic material down into the upper several inches of soil. The tines penetrate where a flat spade would just skim the surface. If you’re harvesting root crops like carrots, parsnips, or beets, sliding the tines in alongside the roots and gently levering them out pulls them out cleanly without breaking or bruising them.

In a long-term food growing situation, you’ll use your small pitchfork almost daily during soil preparation and harvest seasons. It’s a tool worth investing in. Look for forged steel tines rather than stamped steel, which can bend under pressure. A comfortable handle length that matches your working posture will save your back over hundreds of hours of use.

The Small Rake: Seedbed Preparation and Surface Care

A small rake, whether a shrub rake or a short-handled bow rake, is the finishing tool that gets your garden beds ready for planting. After you’ve turned your soil and worked in amendments, the surface needs to be leveled and broken into fine, even particles so that seeds make good contact with the soil and germinate reliably.

A small rake is also invaluable for clearing debris from bed surfaces, smoothing out footprints and disturbances between plantings, and spreading a thin layer of mulch evenly around transplants. In tight spaces where a full-size rake would be unwieldy, a compact version gives you full control.

Look for a rake with a head between eight and twelve inches wide, which is manageable in narrow beds and rows. Tines should be firmly attached and evenly spaced. Like all your metal tools, wipe the head clean and apply a light coat of oil periodically to prevent rust, especially if you’re storing tools over a wet winter.

Garden Tools Rack of Garden Tools

Building Your Crisis Garden Toolkit Now

The time to gather your tools and improve your soil is before you need them urgently. Start by working amendments into your beds this season. Build a compost pile and let it develop. Pick up a quality pair of garden gloves, a hand trowel, a cultivator, a small pitchfork, and a small rake. Add a “Hod” to your setup, along with a handful of tomato cages, for your next summer planting.

None of this requires a large investment or a lot of space. A focused, well-equipped kitchen garden measuring even a few hundred square feet can produce a meaningful portion of a family’s caloric and nutritional needs, especially if you grow calorie-dense crops like tomatoes, squash, potatoes, and beans alongside greens and herbs.

Growing your own food is a skill that takes seasons to develop. The gardeners best positioned for a crisis are those who started practicing years before they needed to rely on what they grew. Start now, build your toolkit, feed your soil, and learn the rhythms of a productive garden while the stakes are low.

If we have a war, what you need to grow food is an important issue to deal with now. When the shelves run empty and supply chains collapse, the people who survive are the ones who know how to grow their own food. A war or large-scale crisis can disrupt grocery distribution within days.

Final Word

There is no guarantee of peace. There never has been. History is a long record of ordinary people caught off guard by extraordinary disruptions, and the ones who endured were rarely the ones who waited for someone else to solve the problem. They were the ones with dirty hands and full root cellars.

A garden isn’t a political statement. It’s not a gesture of fear. It’s the oldest form of self-reliance human beings have ever practiced, and it’s available to nearly anyone willing to bend down and work the earth. The tools described in this guide are not survival fantasy gear. They are the same implements gardeners have used for generations to feed their families through hard times.

You don’t need a farm. You don’t need perfect soil or a sprawling backyard. You need a patch of ground, a willingness to learn, and the foresight to begin before you’re desperate. Amend your soil this season. Learn which vegetables produce the most calories per square foot. Get comfortable with your tools. Grow something this year, even if it’s small, even if it fails the first time.

If you don’t have access to garden space, try growing food in pots large enough to accommodate the roots of the produce you’re trying to grow. I’ve always tried to grow my food products in pots that are at least 18 inches deep. Small plants can grow together, where larger ones may need their own pot. You’ll need to hand water them if the only space is an apartment deck, but that’s ok and a good way to learn.

The seeds you plant today are an investment in a version of yourself that is harder to frighten, harder to starve, and more capable than the one standing in a checkout line hoping the shelves stay stocked. That version of yourself is worth growing, too. Start digging. May God bless this world, Linda

The post If We Have A War: What You Need To Grow Food appeared first on Food Storage Moms.



from Food Storage Moms

Raising Adorable Mini Highland Cows From A to Z

When it comes to livestock, cows can be some of the most intimidating animals around for homesteaders. It’s easy to see why: they are huge, expensive, need tons of room and lots of food. Plus, they can be genuinely dangerous and hard to handle. And at the end of the day, if you aren’t keeping ... Read more

Raising Adorable Mini Highland Cows From A to Z can be read in full at New Life On A Homestead- Be sure to check it out!



from New Life On A Homestead

Friday, March 27, 2026

100 Survival Skills and Life Hacks

Estimated reading time: 19 minutes

100 Survival Skills and Life Hacks

Who doesn't love life hacks? They offer clever solutions to everyday problems, making life easier. Unfortunately, most “life hack articles” are aimed at people who just want to fix scratches on furniture (use a walnut) or freshen their shoes (use baking soda). There aren't any life hack articles that are specifically for preppers and homesteaders… Until now.

In this guide, I’ve compiled 100 life hacks that preppers and homesteaders will find very useful. These hacks cover everything from food storage to home security. You’ll learn how to turn a trash bag into a poncho, how to use a crayon as a candle, how to use bay leaves to keep pests away from your emergency food, and much more.

So whether you’re new to prepping or a seasoned homesteader, these life hacks will make your self-sufficient lifestyle easier and more efficient. From simple garden tricks to unique storage solutions, this list has something for everyone who wants to be prepared, resilient, and ready for disaster.

To make this list easier to navigate, I organized them into 9 categories, which you can view in the table of contents below. For most of these life hacks, I also included links to articles with more details for those who are interested.

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Energy and Light

Aluminum Foil to Fit AAA Batteries in AA Slots

If you only have AAA batteries but need AA batteries, you can fold up a small piece of aluminum foil and place it at the negative terminal end of the battery compartment. The foil will bridge the gap and allow the device to work with AAA batteries. Here's how.

Crayon as a Candle

If you run out of candles, you can use crayons instead. Just light the paper wrapper and the crayon will burn for about 30 minutes. Here's how.

Crisco as a Candle

If you have a can of Crisco, you can turn it into a long-lasting candle. Insert a wick or piece of string into the center, light it, and the fat will burn for hours. Here's how.

DIY Lantern from Headlamp and Milk Jug

Fill a clear milk jug with water and strap a headlamp around it with the light facing inward. The water will diffuse the light, creating a DIY lantern. Here's how.

Glow Sticks to Mark Pathways at Night

Glow sticks can be incredibly helpful during a power outage or at a campsite after dark. If there are any paths used frequently, such as the path to and from the bathroom, hang glow sticks along the path so people can find their way. Here are some more uses for glow sticks.

Olive Oil as Fuel for a DIY Oil Lamp

If you run out of lamp oil, you can use olive oil instead. It is clean-burning and lasts a long time. Here are some more uses for olive oil.

Solar Garden Lights for Indoor Lighting

Get some solar-powered lights for your garden or walkway. If there’s a power outage, you can bring them inside at night for a battery-free light source.

Fire and Cooking

Buddy Burner with a Tuna Can and Cardboard

Cut a long piece of cardboard that is about the same width as the height of a tuna can. Roll it up, place it inside the tuna can, pour melted wax over it, and light it. This will create a makeshift burner that can be used for light, heat, and even cooking. Here's now.

Build a Haybox Cooker for Blackout Cooking

If you can’t use your slow-cooker due to a power outage, use a haybox cooker instead. Simply insulate a pot inside a box filled with hay or blankets. Heat up the pot, place it inside the haybox, and close it. The pot will stay hot for hours, slow-cooking the food inside. Here's how to build a haybox cooker.

Chips as Kindling

If you’re in a survival scenario and are having trouble starting a fire, greasy chips like Fritos, Doritos, and potato chips can be used as kindling. They catch fire quickly and burn hot due to the high fat content.

Construct a Brick Rocket Stove

If you don’t have a stove, you can quickly construct one from a few bricks or cinder blocks. This is called a rocket stove, and it will create enough heat to cook just about anything. Here's how to build a rocket stove.

Create a Portable Stove with a Tin Can

Another way to construct a makeshift stove is with a large tin can. Simply cut holes in it for air flow and place kindling inside. Use it to heat small meals or to boil water. Here's how to make a tin can stove.

DIY Solar Oven with a Cardboard Box

If you don’t have any kindling or firewood, make a solar oven by lining a cardboard box with aluminum foil. Place a dark pot of food inside and cover the top with plastic wrap, then leave it in the sun. The reflective surfaces will focus the heat and cook the food in the pot. Here's how to make a solar oven.

Dryer Lint as Fire Starter

If you need some good tinder, try dryer lint, which lights very easily. As you use your dryer, save the dryer lint in a plastic bag so it stays dry.

Egg Cartons as Fire Starters

Fill the cups of a cardboard egg carton with dryer lint or sawdust, then pour melted wax over them. Once they cool, break off the individual cups and use them to help start fires. Here's now.

Hand Sanitizer as a Quick Fire Starter

Alcohol-based hand sanitizer is flammable, making it a great fire starter. Just apply a small amount to your kindling, and it will light easily, even in damp conditions.

Pencil Shavings as Lightweight Tinder

Pencil shavings make for great tinder. If you haven’t already, put a pencil and mini pencil sharpener in your bug out bag so you’ll always have a good source of tinder.

Pine Resin as Fire Accelerant

Collect dried pine resin to use as a natural fire starter. Pine resin is highly flammable and can help you start a fire even in damp weather. Here's how.

Steel Wool and a Battery to Start a Fire

Stretch out a piece of steel wool and touch it with the terminals of a 9-volt battery. The electrical current will cause the steel wool to spark, making it an easy way to light tinder. Here's how.

Store Apples with Potatoes to Prevent Sprouting

Store apples and potatoes together to stop potatoes from sprouting. The ethylene gas from the apples slows down the sprouting process.

Use a Shoe Lace as a Bow Drill for Fire Starting

Remove a shoelace from your boot and use it as the cord in a bow drill. This ancient fire-starting method takes practice but has stood the test of time for a reason. Here's how to use a bow drill.

Vaseline-Coated Cotton Balls as Fire Starters

Soak some cotton balls in Vaseline and save them to use as fire starters. The Vaseline will make them burn hotter and longer. Here's how.

Food and Storage

Acorns as Survival Food

If you can’t find anything to eat, look for an oak tree and gather acorns. Once you prepare them properly, you can grind them into flour and use them in any recipe that calls for flour. Here's how to eat acorns.

Bay Leaves to Repel Insects

To keep insects out of food storage containers, place a few bay leaves inside of them. Many insects hate the smell of bay leaves, so they’re likely to stay away.

Canning Jars for Dry Goods

You can use canning jars to store dry goods like pasta, beans, and flour. Use a vacuum sealer, or seal them up and place them in an oven set to low. Here's how to dry can food.

Dental Floss as Emergency Fishing Line

Dental floss can be used as fishing line in a survival scenario. As long as it’s good quality floss, it should be durable enough to catch small fish.

DIY Food Dehydrator Using a Window Screen

If you don’t have an electric dehydrator, use two clean window screens to air-dry fruits, vegetables, and meat. Simply lay the food between the two screens to protect it from insects, and let it dry in the sun. Here's how to build a solar food dehydrator.

Freeze Flour to Kill Pests

If you plan on storing flour long-term, first put it in the freezer for 48 hours to kill any insect eggs.

Make a Zeer Pot to Keep Food Cool

If you need to keep food cold without electricity, make a Zeer pot refrigerator from two clay pots and some sand. This will keep food cool and significantly extend its shelf life. Here's how to make a Zeer pot refrigerator.

Open a Can by Rubbing it on Concrete

If you don’t have a can opener, you can rub the top of a can on rough concrete to weaken the seal. After several minutes, you should be able to pry open the lid. Here's how.

Pantyhose for Storing Root Vegetables

You can make root vegetables like onions and potatoes last longer by hanging them up inside pantyhose. This allows air circulation and prevents rot. Just be sure to tie a knot between each vegetable. Here's how.

Soda Can Tabs as Fishing Hooks

If you don’t have any fishing hooks, you can use a soda can tab by cutting away part of the tab to form a sharp hook shape. File down the edge to sharpen the point and attach it to your fishing line. Here's how.

Turn an Old Fridge or Freezer into a Root Cellar

If you have an old non-working chest freezer or mini fridge, you can bury it in the ground for a makeshift root cellar. Just be sure to bury it so that the lid is on top, making it easy to open. Here's how.

Use a Coin to Check if Freezer Food Thawed

If you have to evacuation due to an impending disaster, place a coin on top of a frozen cup of water in your freezer. When you get back, if you find that the coin has sunk to the bottom, that means your freezer food thawed and refroze, meaning it’s no longer safe to eat.

Gardening and Composting

Banana Peels as Fertilizer

Bury banana peels around plants in your garden, or blend them with water to create a natural fertilizer rich in potassium, which is important for healthy fruits and vegetables.

Build a Compost Bin from Pallets

You can build a compost bin by arranging 4 wooden pallets into a square frame, allowing you to recycle food scraps and yard waste into rich compost for your garden. Here's how.

CDs to Deter Birds from Your Garden

If you have any old CDs or DVDs, hang them up around your garden to keep birds away. The reflective surfaces create flashes that scare off birds.

Coffee Grounds to Acidify Soil

Add used coffee grounds to your compost or to your soil around acid-loving plants like blueberries and tomatoes. Coffee grounds will acidify the soil and provide important nutrients.

Create Seed Bombs with Paper and Soil

Mix seeds with a bit of soil and wrap them in small pieces of paper. When tossed into neglected areas, they will break down and the seeds will take root. This method is perfect for guerrilla gardening or reseeding pastures. Here's how.

Eggshells as Seed Starters

Use eggshell halves as tiny biodegradable planters for seedlings. Once the seeds sprout, place the entire eggshell in the soil. Here's how.

Eggshells to Deter Slugs

Crush eggshells and sprinkle them around your plants. The sharp edges will keep slugs and snails away.

Epsom Salt as a Magnesium Boost

Sprinkle a bit of Epsom salt around the base of plants. The magnesium in the salt will help plants like peppers and tomatoes.

Fake Snakes or Owls Around Garden to Deter Pests

Place some rubber snakes or plastic owls around your garden to scare off small animals and birds. Be sure to move them occasionally or they’ll stop working.

Grow Potatoes in a Trash Bag

If you don’t have any good planters, you can grow potatoes in plastic grocery bags or even small garbage bags. As they grow, add more soil to cover the stems. Here's how.

Mini Greenhouse from a Plastic Bottle

Cut off the bottom of a large plastic bottle and place it over seedlings in the garden. This will create a mini greenhouse that protects young plants from the cold. Here's how.

Newspaper for Weed Control

Lay sheets of newspaper around your garden plants and cover them with mulch. This will suppress weeds and retain moisture in the soil.

Old Tire as a Planter

Fill an old tire with soil and plant vegetables inside. This will create a raised bed that warms up faster in spring.

Sprout Seeds for Fresh Greens

For some fresh fiber and nutrients, sprout seeds like alfalfa, lentils, or broccoli in jars. It takes very little space and only takes a few days. Here's how.

Repurpose Old Windows for Cold Frames

If you have some old windows, you can use them to create cold frames for your garden. This will significantly extend the growing season by keeping soil warmer during cold months. Here's how.

Turn Toilet Paper Rolls into Seed Starters

You can use empty toilet paper rolls as biodegradable seedling pots. Just fill them with soil and plant your seeds. When the plant is ready, transfer the entire roll into the ground. Here's how.

Wine Bottle Slow-Drip Watering System

You can repurpose an empty win bottle to create a slow-drip irrigation system for your plants. Just fill the bottle with water, quickly turn it upside down, and push the neck a few inches into the soil near the plant. The water will gradually release as the soil dries. Here's how.

Wood Ash as Natural Fertilizer

Sprinkle wood ash around your garden to enrich the soil with nutrients such as potassium. Here are some other uses for wood ash.

Health and Hygiene

Baking Soda as Toothpaste

If you run out of toothpaste, mix baking soda with water to create a DIY toothpaste that will neutralize acids, freshens your breath, and even whitens your teeth. Here's how.

Clove Oil for Toothaches

If you have a bad toothache, rub some clove oil on the affect area for temporary pain relief. The clove oil will keep the area numb until you can get to a dentist.

Cornstarch as a Natural Deodorant

If you don’t have any deodorant, apply some cornstarch to your underarms to absorb moisture and neutralize odors.

DIY Saline Solution for Wound Care

If you run out of saline solution, dissolve 2 teaspoons of salt in 4 cups of boiled water and allow it to cool completely. You can use this for cleaning wounds or flushing out eyes. Here's how.

DIY Toilet with a Bucket and Pool Noodle

Create an emergency toilet but cutting a pool noodle to fit the rim of a five-gallon bucket. Don’t forget to put a trash bag and kitty litter (if you have it it) in the bucket before using. Here's how.

Dried Sage as Mosquito Repellent

The smell of sage can repel mosquitoes and other insects. Take a small bundle of dried sage leaves and place it near the edge of the fire or on a hot rock next to the flames. You can also sprinkle a handful directly into the fire if you’d like a quicker burst of smoke.

Essential Oils as a Mosquito Repellent

Mix essential oils like eucalyptus, tea tree, and citronella with a bit of water for a natural mosquito repellent. Simply apply a little bit to your skin or clothing.

Honey as a Wound Dressing

You can use honey as a natural antiseptic to cover wounds and prevent infections. Honey has antibacterial properties that promote fast healing. Here are some medical uses for raw honey.

Poultice from Plantain Leaves

Crush plantain leaves and apply them to bug bites, rashes, or small wounds. Plantain has anti-inflammatory and antiseptic properties, making it great for first aid. Here's how to make a DIY poultice.

Sanitary Pads as Wound Dressings

Sanitary pads are highly absorbent and can be used as an emergency bandage. However, be sure to use pads and not tampons, which can do more harm than good.

Use Saponin-Rich Plants as Soap

If you run out of soap, look for a plant that contains high amounts of saponins. You can boil pieces of these plants in water to create a natural soap alternative. Here's how.

Vinegar to Neutralize Odors

To neutralize bad odors, soak a cloth in white vinegar and leave it in smelly areas. The vinegar will absorb and mask odors.

Security and Defense

Broken Glass or Gravel Near Entry Points

Scatter broken glass or gravel near doors or windows. The noise when someone steps on it will alert you that someone is outside.

Create a Fake Wall or Floor Panel

Create a hidden compartment in your home by creating a fake wall or floor panel. Use this to hide emergency supplies, weapons, valuables, etc. Here's how.

Create a Perimeter Alarm with Fishing Line and Bells

Attach small bells to a fishing line and string it up around your camp or home’s perimeter. If someone crosses the line, you’ll hear the bells. Here are some more DIY trip wire alarms.

Fake TV Light to Deter Intruders

Use a small LED device that mimics the glow of a television screen. If you place this near a window, it will look like someone is home with the TV on.

Install Motion-Activated Sprinklers

Use motion-activated sprinklers to deter intruders or animals. The sudden burst of water will usually cause intruders or animals to leave.

Thorny Bushes as a Natural Barrier

Grow thorny plants like blackberry bushes or roses in front of windows or fences to create a natural barrier. These plants can make breaking into your home seem like more trouble than it’s worth. Here are some more home security plants.

Use a Decoy Safe to Distract Intruders

Place a decoy safe in an obvious spot with a small amount of cash or inexpensive items inside. This will distract intruders and hopefully cause them leave before finding your real safe.

Storage and Organization

Altoids Tin as a Mini Survival Kit

Fill an empty Altoids tin with survival items like a fire starter, fishing hooks, a small knife, etc. This compact kit will easily fit in your pocket or bug out bag. Here's how.

Binder Clips to Seal Bags and Organize Cords

Use binder clips (or “chip clips”) to reseal bags of food or seeds, or to bundle or organize small cords or other items.

Create a Vertical Storage System with Shoe Organizers

Use a hanging shoe organizer in your pantry or storage area to organize small items like bags of food, toiletries, first aid supplies, etc.

Create Emergency Supply Caches

Stash some survival caches filled with food, water, or gear in hidden locations so you have backups in case your main supplies are stolen or destroyed. Here's how to make a survival cache.

DIY Fishing Kit in an Altoids Tin

Fish an Altoids tin with fishing essentials like hooks, lines, weights, and a few lures. Here's how.

Keep Documents in Ziploc Bags

Store important documents such as IDs, passports, insurance papers, etc. in Ziploc bags. This will ensure they don’t get wet when you’re bugging out.

Old Pill Bottles for Storage

Use old pill bottles to organize small items like buttons, needles, matches, etc. You can even use them to make a mini survival kit. Here's how.

Store Important Documents on an Encrypted Keychain Drive

To keep your important documents safe, scan them and store them on an encrypted flash drive that’s attached to your keychain. This way you’ll always have them with you and they can’t be stolen.

Store Spices in Drinking Straws

Seal small amounts of spices inside sections of drinking straws. This is a great way to bring along some spices when bugging out. Here's how.

Tools and Gear

Bandana as a Multi-Tool

Keep a bandana with you at all times. It can be used for dozens of things including: as a tourniquet, pre-filtering water, tying things together, protection from the sun, etc. Here are some other uses for bandanas.

Can Lid as a Cutting Tool

If you don’t have a knife, take the lid from a tin can and fold it in half to create a sharp edge that can be used for cutting.

Dental Floss as a Clothesline

String up some dental floss between two trees or poles to create a temporary clothesline.

Hide Cash or a Survival Card Inside Your Phone Case

If your phone has a case, slip some folded bills or even a survival card between your phone and its case. This creates a discreet hiding spot for cash or essential tools.

Knife as a Screwdriver

If you don’t have a screwdriver, you can use the flat edge of a sturdy knife as a flathead screwdriver. Just be careful not to cut yourself.

Plastic Bottle as a Funnel for Transferring Liquids

If you need a funnel, cut the top off of a plastic bottle for an instant funnel that you can use for transferring water, fuel, dry goods like rice, etc.

Sharpen Knives with the Bottom of a Ceramic Mug

Flip a ceramic mug upside down and use the rough ring on the bottom as a sharpening stone. This quick hack will keep your blades nice and sharp.

Turn a Trash Bag into a Poncho

Create an emergency poncho by cutting three holes (one for your head and two for your arms) in the bottom of a large trash bag.

Turn Trash Bags into Rope

Twist and braid heavy-duty trash bags to make durable, improvised rope. This can be used for securing tarps, building shelters, or even tying down gear. Here's how.

Wrap Duct Tape Around a Lighter for Emergency Repairs

If you don’t have room in your pockets or bag for a roll of tape, wrap your lighters with duct tape. Then, if you need a piece of tape, you can just cut a section of it off your lighter.

Water Collection and Purification

Boil Water Using Stones

If you don’t have pot for boiling water, heat up some stones in a fire, then place them in a container of water to bring the water to a boil and kill any pathogens. Here's how.

Coffee Filters for Water Pre-Filtering

Before purifying water, be sure to pre-filter them. Coffee filters are great for this as they will catch debris and sediment.

DIY Water Filter with Charcoal and Sand

Create a simple emergency water filter by layering charcoal, sand, and gravel in a container. Pour dirty water through to filter out contaminants before boiling or further purification. Here's how.

DIY Water Purification with Bleach

In an emergency, you can purify water by adding 8 drops of unscented household bleach (5.25–8.25% sodium hypochlorite) per gallon of water, shaking it, and letting it sit for 30 minutes. Make sure the water smells slightly of chlorine to ensure it’s been disinfected. If not, add a few more drops of bleach and wait another 30 minutes.

Disinfect Water with Sunlight

Fill a clear plastic bottle with water and place it in direct sunlight for 6-8 hours. The UV rays will kill harmful bacterial. Here's how.

Get Emergency Water from Your Water Heater

In a pinch, you can drink the water in your water heater. Most tanks hold 30-50 gallons that can be drained in an emergency. Here’s how.  

Hydrogen Peroxide for Water Purification

Add 10 drops of 3% hydrogen peroxide to a gallon of water and let it sit for 30 minutes. This will kill bacteria and make water safe to drink.

Plastic Shower Curtain for a Solar Still

If you run out of drinking water, use a clear plastic shower curtain to create a solar still. This will allow you to extract a bit of water from plant material. Here’s how.

Solar Shower with a Black Trash Bag

Fill a black trash bag with water and leave it in the sun to warm up. Tie it to a tree branch and poke small holes in the bottom to create a simple solar shower.

Store Water in Reused Plastic Bottles

Save 2-liter soda bottles or juice containers, thoroughly clean them, and use them to store water for long-term emergencies.

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Originally published on Homestead Survival Site.

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