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Wednesday, June 24, 2026

What Is Situational Awareness? The Prepper’s Complete Guide to Staying One Step Ahead

Most people move through the world on autopilot. They walk into a restaurant and sit with their back to the door. They fill up at a gas station with their face buried in their phone. They drive the same route every day without ever noticing what has changed. Then something happens, and they are completely unprepared because they never saw it coming.

Situational awareness is the opposite of that. It is the practiced skill of knowing what is happening around you, understanding what it means, and projecting where things are headed before they arrive. It is what separates people who react in the critical seconds of an emergency from people who are still trying to figure out what is happening.

For preppers, situational awareness is not an abstract concept. It is one of the most practical and immediately applicable skills in the entire preparedness toolkit. You can stockpile food for a year, have the best medical kit money can buy, and carry every day, and still get blindsided by a threat you never registered. The EBSCO Research overview of situational awareness describes it as the perception of one’s environment and the ability to make informed predictions based on that perception. That definition applies equally to a combat pilot and a parent walking through a parking garage.

The Definition: What Situational Awareness Actually Means

Situational awareness is most formally defined as the perception of elements in the environment within a volume of time and space, the comprehension of their meaning, and the projection of their status in the near future. This definition comes from cognitive psychologist Mica Endsley, who developed the foundational model of situational awareness in the 1980s while researching why highly trained aviation professionals were still making catastrophic errors despite having access to abundant information.

The key insight in that definition is that situational awareness is not just noticing things. It is a three-stage cognitive process: perceiving what is there, understanding what it means, and anticipating what comes next. All three stages are required. Noticing a man enter a convenience store aggressively is perception. Recognizing that his behavior pattern is consistent with someone about to commit a robbery is comprehension. Positioning yourself to exit quickly before anything happens is projection. Missing any of those steps leaves you operating with incomplete awareness.

In everyday terms, situational awareness is the mental habit of asking three questions continuously: What is happening around me right now? What does it mean? What might happen next, and how do I position myself accordingly?

The Endsley Model: Three Levels of Situational Awareness

Psychologist Mica Endsley’s three-level framework is the most widely applied model of situational awareness across aviation, military operations, emergency medicine, law enforcement, and disaster response. Research published through ScienceDirect confirms that Endsley’s model has been validated across all of these high-consequence domains as the foundational structure for how humans build awareness of dynamic situations. Understanding the levels gives you a concrete mental framework to evaluate your own awareness in any setting.

Level 1: Perception

Perception is the most basic level of situational awareness. It is the raw input stage, where you take in information from the environment through your senses. What do you see, hear, and smell? Who is in the room? Where are the exits? What is the body language of the people nearest to you? What feels different from how it normally looks or sounds in this location?

Most people operating on autopilot are stuck at a degraded version of Level 1. They are technically receiving sensory input, but their attention is filtered through their phone, their internal conversation, their assumptions about safety, or simple inattention. The information is available in the environment but never makes it past the filter into conscious awareness. Improving your situational awareness begins with deliberately increasing the quality and breadth of what you actually take in from your surroundings.

Level 2: Comprehension

Comprehension is where raw perception becomes meaningful information. It is the stage where you integrate what you have observed and ask what it means in context. This is the stage where experience, training, and pattern recognition matter most. Someone with no combat or law enforcement background might perceive a man standing near an ATM as simply a man standing near an ATM. An experienced security professional might perceive the same man and, at the comprehension level, recognize that his positioning, behavior, and attention pattern are consistent with waiting to follow someone after a withdrawal.

Comprehension depends heavily on your baseline. To know when something is wrong, you need to know what right looks like. Experienced preppers build this baseline deliberately by paying attention to how places normally function, how crowds normally move, and what normal human behavior looks like in specific environments. When something deviates from the baseline, it registers as significant even before you can articulate exactly why.

Level 3: Projection

Projection is the highest and most operationally valuable level of situational awareness. Having perceived what is happening and understood what it means, projection asks: where is this heading, and what needs to happen before it gets there? This is the level at which situational awareness becomes genuinely protective rather than merely observational.

Someone operating at Level 3 does not wait for a threat to materialize before responding. They recognize the trajectory of a situation early enough to change their position, change their plans, or take action that prevents the worst outcome entirely. In many cases the most valuable thing a high Level 3 awareness enables is a quiet exit before anyone else in the room even registers that something is developing.

Cooper’s Color Code: A Practical Framework for Daily Use

While Endsley’s model explains the cognitive structure of situational awareness, Colonel Jeff Cooper’s Color Code system provides the most practical daily framework for managing your own alertness levels. Cooper was a United States Marine who fought in both World War II and the Korean War and later became one of the most influential figures in the development of modern firearms training and personal defense doctrine.

Cooper developed the Color Code as a mental readiness framework originally intended for military and law enforcement use. As Police1 notes, the system was designed as a mental process rather than a physical one, applicable whether or not a person is armed. The goal was to give people a simple, internalized framework for understanding and adjusting their own alertness state as conditions change.

Condition White: Unaware and Unprepared

In Condition White, you are relaxed and essentially unaware of your environment. You are not processing threats, not scanning your surroundings, and not mentally prepared to respond to anything unexpected. Most people spend large portions of their daily lives in Condition White, particularly in environments they consider safe.

The problem with Condition White is not that it is always inappropriate. It is that people carry it into environments where it is actively dangerous. Walking through a parking garage at night with headphones in, staring at your phone, is Condition White in a context that warrants significantly higher alertness. If you are attacked in Condition White, the only thing that saves you is the inadequacy of the attacker. Your reaction time begins from zero, because you have to first process that something is happening before you can begin to respond to it.

Condition Yellow: Relaxed Alert

Condition Yellow is where you should spend the majority of your time outside of your own home. It is not paranoia. It is not anxiety. It is a state of relaxed, open awareness where you are taking in your surroundings continuously without focusing on any specific threat.

In Condition Yellow, you know who is around you. You have noted the exits in the room. You are aware of what is normal in this environment and would notice quickly if something changed. Your eyes are up. You are present. This state requires no specific threat to justify it. It is simply the baseline posture of someone who has decided that their environment is worth paying attention to.

Condition Yellow can be maintained for extended periods without significant mental fatigue. It is a habit rather than an effort once it becomes practiced. The people who maintain Condition Yellow as their default state rarely get surprised, because they have given themselves enough lead time to process a developing situation before it becomes a crisis.

Condition Orange: Specific Alert

Condition Orange is triggered when something in your environment catches your attention as potentially concerning. You have not identified a definite threat, but something is not right. A person is acting in a way that does not fit the context. A situation is developing in a direction that warrants closer attention. Your vehicle in the parking lot has been moved or touched. Something has changed from the baseline.

In Condition Orange, your awareness narrows to concentrate on the specific element of concern while you attempt to confirm or dismiss the potential threat. You simultaneously begin mental preparation: what will I do if this turns into a threat? Where are my options? Where is cover? What is my exit? You may cycle through Condition Orange many times in a normal day without those cycles ever escalating further. That is not a failure of awareness. That is awareness working correctly.

Condition Red: Action

Condition Red means you have confirmed a threat and are prepared to act or are actively responding. The mental trigger you established in Condition Orange has been reached. A decision has been made and execution is the priority.

The critical point about Condition Red is that if you have been operating through Yellow and Orange correctly, arriving at Red does not require you to start thinking from scratch. The decisions were largely made in Orange. In Red, you are running an existing plan rather than developing one under fire. That is the core tactical value of the entire Color Code system. It collapses your decision-making time at the worst possible moment.

Condition Black: Mental Shutdown

Condition Black is added in some versions of the model to describe the state of total cognitive overwhelm and psychological freeze. This is what happens when a threat arrives so suddenly and so completely outside of any mental preparation that the brain cannot process a coherent response. The person freezes. The moment passes. The outcome is determined by factors entirely outside their control.

The entire purpose of operating in Yellow and Orange is to prevent Condition Black by ensuring that no threat ever arrives as a complete surprise. A threat that was tracked through Yellow and Orange into Red is a threat you are already prepared for mentally. A threat that hits in White can drop you straight into Black before you have taken a single action.

Why Situational Awareness Is a Skill, Not a Personality Trait

One of the most important things to understand about situational awareness is that it is trainable. It is not something certain people naturally have and others do not. It is a set of specific cognitive habits that improve with deliberate practice. Law enforcement officers, military personnel, and experienced security professionals are not born with superior awareness. They develop it through training, experience, and conscious practice of specific observation and pattern recognition skills.

For preppers, this means situational awareness is not something you either have or you do not. It is a skill you build incrementally, the same way you build physical fitness or any other preparedness capability. The following section covers specific drills and practices that accelerate that development.

Practical Exercises to Build Situational Awareness

The Baseline Exercise

Every time you enter a new environment, take thirty seconds to establish a mental baseline. What is the normal level of activity? How loud is it? Who is here and what are they doing? Where are the exits? Where would you go if you needed to move quickly? This is not a stressful process. It is a brief mental snapshot that gives you a reference point for everything that happens afterward. Anything that deviates significantly from that baseline becomes immediately noticeable.

The Exit Survey

Make it a habit to identify at least two exits every time you enter a building, restaurant, store, or public space. Not just the main entrance you came through. The fire exit at the back. The side door by the kitchen. The window that opens onto the alley. This habit is a direct application of Condition Yellow. It requires no threat to justify. It simply ensures that if you ever need to move quickly, you already know where you are going.

People Watching with Purpose

Spend ten minutes in a public location, a coffee shop, a park, a train station, and deliberately observe people’s behavior without judgment. Notice how they carry themselves. Notice where their attention goes. Notice what normal body language looks like in that environment. Then notice anyone whose behavior does not fit. The person whose eyes keep moving in a scanning pattern. The person whose clothing does not match the weather or the context. The person whose body language is incongruent with the casual setting. This exercise builds the pattern recognition that makes Condition Orange activation faster and more accurate.

The What-If Habit

Cooper’s Color Code system is built on pre-made decisions. In Yellow, before any threat develops, you ask yourself: if X happens, what do I do? If someone stands up and starts shooting in this restaurant, which direction do I move? If this car tries to follow me out of the parking lot, where do I go? If the lights go out in this building right now, what is my path to the exit?

This mental habit is called pre-visualization, and it is one of the most documented techniques in both military and sports psychology for reducing reaction time under stress. By running the scenario mentally in advance, you remove the need to generate a plan in real time under pressure. You are running a pre-built response, which is always faster and cleaner than improvising from scratch.

Phone Discipline

The single greatest destroyer of situational awareness in the modern environment is the smartphone. A person looking at their phone in a public space is operating in Condition White regardless of their training or intentions. Their attention is entirely captured by a screen. They are not scanning their environment. They are not processing the baseline. They are not in Yellow.

This is not an argument for never using your phone in public. It is an argument for intentionality about when and where you use it, and for building the habit of eyes-up awareness as your default state when you are in motion or in unfamiliar environments. Sitting at a table in a restaurant with good sightlines and your back to a wall is an acceptable place to check your phone. Walking through a parking garage at 10 PM is not.

Situational Awareness in Specific Prepper Scenarios

Urban Environments

Cities present the highest density of people, which means the highest density of potential variables. In urban environments, situational awareness means understanding crowd dynamics: how does a normal crowd move versus a crowd that has been startled? What does a street that is unusually empty of its normal foot traffic indicate? What does the behavior of people coming toward you tell you about what is happening behind you?

Urban preppers should pay particular attention to choke points, locations where movement naturally concentrates and where escape options narrow: subway turnstiles, narrow alleyways, crowded crosswalks, building lobbies. These are locations where threats are disproportionately likely and where your movement options are most restricted. Condition Orange is often appropriate in these locations even without a specific trigger.

Rural and Homestead Environments

Rural situational awareness has different parameters but is no less important. On a homestead or rural property, awareness extends to the property perimeter and the patterns of the surrounding area. Who drives down this road regularly, and when does an unfamiliar vehicle warrant attention? What sounds belong in this environment, and which do not? What does the behavior of your livestock tell you about whether something is moving around the property perimeter at night?

The U.S. Army Research Laboratory’s situational awareness frameworks emphasize that awareness in any environment depends fundamentally on knowing what normal looks like. Rural environments have slower baselines and longer warning intervals, which gives more time to process developing situations but also creates more opportunity for complacency.

Vehicle Awareness

Your vehicle is one of the most vulnerable environments you regularly occupy. You are enclosed, your attention is largely directed forward, your movement options are constrained by traffic and road geometry, and attackers are aware that car windows and doors offer very limited protection against someone determined to reach you.

Vehicle situational awareness includes: keeping at least a car-length gap in front of you when stopped so you can maneuver out of a situation without being blocked, checking mirrors regularly rather than only when needed, being aware of vehicles that have been behind you through multiple turns, and knowing the difference between a traffic delay and a situation developing around your vehicle. Keep your doors locked and windows up in urban driving situations, not because you are paranoid, but because it increases your response time if something develops.

Crowds and Events

Large gatherings present specific situational awareness challenges because the crowd itself obscures your field of view and your movement options. Before entering any large crowd, identify a rally point outside the event where you would meet anyone in your group if separated. Identify exits in multiple directions. Position yourself on the edges of crowds where possible rather than in the center, which allows faster movement and better sightlines.

Crowd behavior changes in predictable ways when something goes wrong. People move away from threats. People look toward things that are unusual or alarming. A ripple of movement or a sudden change in noise level propagates through crowds in ways that can give you a few seconds of advance notice if you are paying attention. Those seconds matter.

The Relationship Between Situational Awareness and Stress

One of the most important things to understand about situational awareness under real threat conditions is that stress degrades it. When the body enters a high-stress physiological state, tunnel vision increases, peripheral vision narrows, fine motor skills degrade, and the ability to process complex information slows. These are normal responses of the autonomic nervous system to perceived threat. They are not signs of weakness. They are biology.

This is precisely why the Color Code system is valuable. By doing most of your thinking in Yellow and Orange, before the stress response fully activates, you ensure that your decisions are made with the clearest possible cognition. When you arrive at Red, the body is already in a stress state, but the decisions have already been made. You are executing, not planning. Execution under stress is far more reliable than planning under stress.

Training under controlled stress conditions, scenario-based training, force-on-force exercises, even well-designed tabletop scenarios, builds the ability to maintain higher-quality situational awareness even as physiological arousal increases. The nervous system learns that this state is manageable when it has been trained through it repeatedly. This is why law enforcement and military personnel spend significant training time in high-stress scenarios rather than only in controlled range or classroom settings.

Common Situational Awareness Mistakes

Assumption of Safety

The most common failure of situational awareness is the assumption that a familiar or apparently safe environment requires no awareness. Crimes and incidents occur in familiar neighborhoods. Fires start in homes you have lived in for years. Medical emergencies happen to people you know well. Familiarity creates complacency, and complacency is a genuine security risk. The habit of awareness should not be switched off based on how safe a location feels.

Single-Point Focus

When something catches your attention and triggers Condition Orange, there is a strong tendency to focus entirely on that specific element to the exclusion of everything else. This tunnel vision leaves you vulnerable to threats coming from other directions. A decoy is one of the oldest tactics in both criminal and military contexts: create a distraction in one direction while the real threat approaches from another. Maintaining 360-degree awareness even while concentrating on a specific concern is a trained skill, not something that happens naturally.

Normalcy Bias

Normalcy bias is the cognitive tendency to interpret ambiguous events as normal rather than threatening. When something unusual happens, the brain’s default is to find an explanation that fits the existing assumption of safety: that loud noise was probably a car backfiring, that person is probably just having a bad day, this crowd moving quickly is probably just late for something. This bias exists because being in a state of low-level alarm continuously is cognitively expensive and socially awkward. But it means people often spend critical seconds or minutes explaining away threat cues that warranted immediate action.

Recognizing normalcy bias as a cognitive tendency, not just something other people have, is an important part of honest situational awareness development. The antidote is not to assume threat at every ambiguity. It is to investigate ambiguity actively rather than passively resolving it in the direction of normal.

Post-Event Blindness

Once a specific event or concern has been dismissed or resolved, there is a tendency to drop back into Condition White because the brain registers the situation as having been handled. A more disciplined awareness practice returns to Yellow after each Orange resolution, rather than dropping all the way back to White. The same environment that just produced one unusual element can produce another.

Building Situational Awareness as a Household Skill

Situational awareness is most valuable when it is shared. A prepper household where all adults and older children practice basic awareness habits provides substantially greater collective security than one where only a single person is paying attention.

This means having family conversations about Cooper’s Color Code at an age-appropriate level for children. It means debriefing after outings about what each person noticed. It means establishing household protocols for ambiguous situations: if you notice something that concerns you, say it out loud, even if you are not sure it is significant. The habit of verbalization builds the team situational awareness that research in military and medical contexts identifies as substantially more effective than individual awareness alone.

According to the formal review of situational awareness research published in Medium’s Context Engineering journal, team situational awareness in complex environments requires that each member possesses the SA relevant to their individual responsibilities, combined with an awareness of what their teammates are seeing and doing. That principle applies to a combat unit and to a family moving through an unfamiliar city.

Economic Preparedness Starts Before the Crisis

Situational awareness isn’t just about spotting danger—it’s also about recognizing financial risks before they become emergencies. Dollar Apocalypse helps you prepare for inflation, banking instability, and economic uncertainty with practical strategies to protect your savings and strengthen your financial resilience.

Don’t wait until the next crisis is making headlines. Get your copy of Dollar Apocalypse today and take control of your financial preparedness!

The Bottom Line on What Situational Awareness Is

Situational awareness is the foundational skill of personal security and crisis preparedness. Every piece of gear you own, every skill you have built, every plan you have developed exists to be used in a situation you saw coming in time to respond. Without awareness, the plan never activates. The gear never gets deployed. The exit stays unknown until it is needed and not found.

It is also one of the cheapest and most immediately practical skills in the preparedness portfolio. It costs nothing to start paying attention. It requires no special equipment. It does not depend on physical strength, technical expertise, or financial resources. It depends on a decision to be present, to be observant, and to think one step ahead of the situation around you.

Start with Yellow. Learn your baselines. Build the what-if habit. Put your phone away when you are moving. Know where your exits are. Those habits alone, practiced consistently, will change your relationship to any environment you walk into, and give you a measurable, meaningful advantage when it matters most.


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The post What Is Situational Awareness? The Prepper’s Complete Guide to Staying One Step Ahead appeared first on Ask a Prepper.



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What Can We Gift To Those Who Need Food?

Donation Box With Medical Gloves and Face Mask

One of the most meaningful gifts we can give another person is food. Whether a neighbor has fallen on hard times, a family in our community is struggling, or a local food pantry is running low on donations, gifting food is a practical and heartfelt way to show we care. As someone who believes deeply in being prepared and self-reliant, I also believe that part of that mission is helping those around us. Today, I want to share some ideas for gifting food to those who need it most, along with suggestions on where to donate so your gifts reach the right hands.

I realize there are people in other countries who need help, but we have so many people in the USA who need help. If you have some options we should consider, I would love to add them to this post. If you know of a neighbor in need, quietly place a box of non-perishables on their doorstep and leave a note that says something like, “We’re so glad you live in the neighborhood.” Bags to use to donate: Large Grocery Bags

Box With Donation Food

Why We Need to Give to Those Who Need Food

Food insecurity affects millions of families across the country, including people right in our own neighborhoods. When we choose to share what we have, whether it’s something we grew in our garden, purchased from the store, or took from our food storage inventory, we’re doing something powerful. We’re saying that no one in our community should go hungry. Even small contributions add up to something significant when communities come together.

The Best Foods to Gift to Those in Need

When thinking about what to donate or gift, focus on shelf-stable, nutritious foods that are easy to prepare. Here are some excellent options to consider.

Canned Proteins

Canned tuna, salmon, chicken, and beans are wonderful gifts for families in need. They’re high in protein, require no refrigeration, and have a long shelf life. These items are often at the top of food bank wish lists because they provide real nutrition and help stretch a meal.

Canned Vegetables and Fruits

Canned corn, green beans, peas, tomatoes, and fruits like peaches are all welcome donations. Look for low-sodium options when possible. Canned fruits packed in juice rather than syrup are an excellent choice for families with children.

Whole Grains and Dry Goods

Rice, oats, pasta, and dried beans are budget stretchers that feed a family for many meals. These are filling, versatile, and store well. A five-pound bag of rice or a large container of rolled oats can be a genuine lifeline for families who are struggling.

Peanut Butter and Nut Butters

Peanut butter is one of the most requested items at food pantries across the country. It’s calorie-dense and protein-rich, and children tend to love it. Sunflower seed butter is a good alternative for those with nut allergies.

Cooking Oils and Fats

A bottle of vegetable oil or a can of shortening goes a long way in helping someone prepare scratch meals. These are often overlooked items that food pantries frequently run short of.

Sugar, Salt, and Basic Baking Supplies

Flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt are humble but important gifts. They allow families to bake their own bread, make pancakes, and stretch other ingredients further. These basic pantry staples can transform simple ingredients into real meals.

Shelf-Stable Milk

Canned evaporated milk or shelf-stable boxed milk provides families with a dairy option that doesn’t require refrigeration until opened. This is particularly helpful for families with young children.

Soups and Broths

Canned soups, broths, and stews are comforting and easy to prepare. They are especially helpful during cold weather months and for older individuals or those who are unwell.

Comfort and Snack Foods

Don’t overlook the emotional side of food. Crackers, granola bars, dried fruit, apple sauce pouches, and shelf-stable juice boxes are wonderful for families with kids. A little treat in the donation bag can bring real joy to a child who’s having a hard season.

Baby and Toddler Food

If you know a family with young children who is in need, formula, jarred baby food, and toddler snacks are invaluable. These are slightly more expensive items that food pantries often need more of.

Personal Hygiene Items Alongside Food Gifts

While not food, many food pantries and charitable organizations also accept and desperately need toiletries such as soap, shampoo, toothpaste, and diapers. Consider adding these alongside your food donation to make an even greater impact.

Garden Surplus

If you have a backyard garden, don’t let your extra produce go to waste. Fresh vegetables and herbs are treasured by food pantries and community organizations. Call ahead to confirm they can accept fresh produce, then bring your surplus zucchini, tomatoes, lettuce, or herbs. Many food banks have partnerships with local farms and gardens for exactly this reason.

Home-Baked Goods

There is something deeply personal about a homemade loaf of bread or a batch of cookies. If you know the family personally, home-baked goods are a beautiful and generous gift. For organized donation drives, check with the organization first, as some can’t accept homemade items due to food safety guidelines. Pre-packaged, commercially made baked goods are usually welcome.

Gift Cards to Grocery Stores

When in doubt, a grocery store gift card lets a family choose exactly what they need, including fresh produce, dairy, meat, and eggs that often can’t be donated in shelf-stable form. Even a ten or fifteen-dollar gift card can mean a great deal to someone who is stretched thin.

Where to Take Your Food Donations

Now that you have gathered your food gifts, here are some wonderful places to take them so they reach people who truly need them.

Local Food Banks

Your city or county food bank is the most direct path to getting food to families in need. They have systems in place to sort, store, and distribute donations efficiently. Most food banks post their current needs online so you can see exactly what they’re short on before you shop or gather donations.

Church Pantries and Community Food Closets

Many churches and faith communities operate small food pantries that serve people in their immediate neighborhood. These are often less formal than large food banks, which means your donation may reach a local family very quickly. If your own congregation operates a food pantry, ask how you can contribute regularly.

Neighbor Networks and Buy Nothing Groups

Neighborhood apps and local social media groups often have spaces where people can offer or request food. If you know of a neighbor who is struggling, a quiet, dignified drop-off at the door can make a world of difference without drawing unwanted attention to their situation.

Schools and Head Start Programs

Many elementary schools keep snack closets or food backpacks stocked for students who may not have enough food at home over the weekend. Reach out to your local school office or counselor to ask how you can help stock their pantry.

Homeless Shelters and Transitional Housing Programs

Shelters that serve individuals experiencing homelessness are always in need of both food and personal care items. Call ahead to find out their hours and current needs. Many shelters also welcome volunteers to help serve meals.

Senior Centers and Meals on Wheels Programs

Older individuals on fixed incomes often quietly face food insecurity. Local senior centers and Meals on Wheels programs accept food donations and welcome volunteer drivers to deliver meals directly to homebound older people.

Community Fridges

Community refrigerators, sometimes called free fridges, have become popular in many cities. These are shared refrigerators placed in accessible locations where anyone can freely leave or take food. They’re a wonderful option for sharing fresh produce, leftovers, or prepared meals.

Operation Underground Railroad and Other National Charities

Some national organizations accept monetary donations to purchase food for vulnerable families. While this differs from donating a physical item, it’s worth noting that a financial gift to a reputable organization can often go further than an individual donation because these groups buy in bulk.

Tips for Making Your Food Gifts Count

Check expiration dates before donating. Food that’s expired or nearly expired isn’t helpful and creates extra work for pantry volunteers.

Avoid donating items in glass jars when possible. Metal cans and cardboard packaging are safer for storage and transport.

Don’t donate items that have been opened or partially used.

If donating to a family directly, try to include a variety of foods that work together as a meal rather than random individual items.

Consider making food giving a regular habit rather than a once-a-year act. Food pantries experience a need every single month, not just around the holidays.

Involve your children in the process. Letting kids choose items at the store and helping pack a donation bag teaches generosity tangibly and memorably.

Preparedness Gift Ideas Every Family Needs

The Emergency Bucket Gift You Need

Final Word

Gifting food to those who need it is one of the most grounded and practical ways to serve our communities. It doesn’t require a big budget or a grand gesture. A few extra cans of beans, a jar of peanut butter, or a bag of rice set aside on your next grocery run can be the difference between a family eating well or going without. As people who care about food storage and self-reliance, we understand better than most just how much a well-stocked pantry means. Let’s share that blessing with others whenever we can. Even small acts of generosity ripple outward in ways we may never fully see. May God bless this world, Linda

Copyright Images: Donation Box With Medical Gloves and Face Mask Depositphotos_368309270_S, Box With Donation Food Depositphotos_290604736_S

The post What Can We Gift To Those Who Need Food? appeared first on Food Storage Moms.



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How Does a Wildfire Start? The Science, the Causes, and What Every Prepper Needs to Know

Understanding how wildfires start is not an academic exercise. If you live anywhere near wildland, forest, grassland, or scrubland, knowing the ignition mechanics and the conditions that turn a small fire into a catastrophic one is operational knowledge that can save your property and your life.

Wildfires are becoming more frequent, more intense, and harder to contain. The 2025 Los Angeles fires burned through densely populated neighborhoods with a speed that left thousands of people with minutes to evacuate. Entire communities have been wiped out not because people were unaware fire was a risk, but because they did not understand how fast conditions can change or how their own property contributed to the fire’s path.

This article covers the complete picture: the fire triangle that makes any wildfire possible, the natural and human causes of ignition, the conditions that allow a small spark to explode into a firestorm, and the concrete preparedness steps that can mean the difference between surviving a wildfire event with your home intact and losing everything. The U.S. Forest Service Fire Behavior Research program has spent decades studying these exact dynamics, and the science is clear: most of what determines whether your property survives is under your control before the fire starts.

The Fire Triangle: What Every Wildfire Needs to Start

Every wildfire, from a small brush fire to a catastrophic megafire, requires three elements simultaneously. Firefighters call this the fire triangle: fuel, heat, and oxygen. Remove any one leg of the triangle and the fire cannot start or will not sustain. Understanding each element explains both how wildfires ignite and how to reduce your vulnerability.

Fuel

Fuel is any combustible material: grass, dead leaves, pine needles, shrubs, timber, wooden structures, fences, and deck furniture. The critical variable in fuel is moisture content. Dry fuel ignites easily and burns fast. Moist fuel resists ignition and burns slowly if at all.

Fuel is categorized by firefighters into three types based on its vertical position in the landscape. Surface fuels are materials lying on or just above the ground: leaf litter, duff, dry grass, fallen branches, and low shrubs. These are where most wildfires start. Ladder fuels are mid-height vegetation that connects surface fuels to the forest canopy: shrubs, young trees, and low branches. When ladder fuels are present, a surface fire can climb into the tree canopy and become a crown fire, which is dramatically more difficult to control. Aerial fuels are the treetops themselves, where a crown fire travels at maximum speed.

The arrangement and continuity of fuel matters as much as its quantity. A fire needs continuous fuel to spread. Gaps in vegetation are natural firebreaks. Dense, continuous vegetation with ladder fuels connecting the layers creates the conditions for explosive fire growth.

Heat

Heat is the ignition source that raises fuel to its combustion temperature. Different fuels require different temperatures to ignite. Dry grass ignites at relatively low temperatures. Dense timber requires more sustained heat. When ambient temperatures are high and fuel is extremely dry, the threshold for ignition drops dramatically, and even a small heat source becomes capable of starting a fire.

Heat transfers from an active fire to surrounding fuel in three ways. Radiation transfers heat through the air as infrared waves, preheating fuel ahead of the fire front and making it easier to ignite. Convection moves heat through air currents, carrying hot gases upward and outward, drying and preheating vegetation in the fire’s path. Conduction moves heat directly through solid contact between burning and adjacent material, though this is the least significant mechanism in wildfire spread across a landscape.

Oxygen

Atmospheric oxygen at roughly 21 percent concentration is essentially always available in outdoor conditions. Wind, however, is not just an oxygen supply mechanism. It is one of the most powerful drivers of wildfire behavior, compressing the fire triangle into a situation where all three elements are abundantly present and continuously renewed. Wind dries fuel, supplies fresh oxygen to the combustion front, pushes flames into unburned material, and carries embers miles ahead of the fire to start new ignitions.

Natural Causes: How Does a Wildfire Start Without Human Involvement?

Before human presence altered the landscape, wildfire was a natural ecological process. The ignition sources were fewer but powerful. Understanding natural ignition clarifies what makes conditions dangerous regardless of human activity.

Lightning

Lightning is the dominant natural ignition source for wildfires worldwide. A single lightning strike delivers enormous heat energy to a small point, easily exceeding the ignition temperature of dry vegetation. Most natural fires that are not human-caused are started by lightning. According to ClimateCheck’s wildfire analysis, 78 percent of lightning-induced wildfires historically occur during summer months, June through August, when dry thunderstorms are most common in the western United States. A dry thunderstorm produces lightning without meaningful rain, delivering ignition without the moisture suppression that normally accompanies a storm.

Some lightning-ignited fires smolder in duff or deep organic soil for days before conditions trigger visible surface spread, a phenomenon called a holdover fire. These are particularly dangerous because they are not detected until conditions become extreme.

Volcanic Activity

Lava flows and volcanic eruptions can ignite vegetation directly through contact with molten material at extremely high temperatures. Volcanic ignitions are geographically limited but have caused large fires in Hawaii and other volcanic regions. They are not a meaningful factor in most of the United States.

Spontaneous Combustion

Under rare conditions, biological decomposition in deep, dry organic material can generate sufficient heat to cause spontaneous ignition. Coal seam fires, which occur when exposed coal deposits ignite underground, are another natural source. These are uncommon but notable because they are difficult or impossible to extinguish once established.

Human Causes: Why Most Wildfires Are Our Fault

Here is the number that matters for preparedness: research cited by fire ecologists suggests that human-caused ignitions are responsible for the vast majority of wildfires that threaten homes in the United States. A fire ecologist at the University of California noted that human-caused wildfires spread twice as fast as naturally caused ones, burn more intensely, and kill substantially more trees. This is partly because human activity introduces ignition sources in conditions and locations that maximize fire spread potential.

Power Line and Utility Infrastructure Failures

Utility infrastructure is one of the leading causes of catastrophic wildfire in the United States. When power lines contact vegetation, experience equipment failures, or come down during high winds, they create sustained, high-temperature arcing that can ignite dry vegetation instantly. The 2018 Camp Fire in Paradise, California, which killed 85 people and destroyed over 18,000 structures, was caused by a Pacific Gas and Electric transmission line failure. The 2025 Los Angeles fires were linked to power infrastructure failures during extreme Santa Ana wind conditions.

The mechanism involves two events in sequence: a line fault followed by ignition of nearby vegetation. Power flowing in a faulted conductor can find an alternative path to ground through surrounding vegetation, creating an arc that directly ignites plant material. As the National Park Service’s wildland fire behavior resource documents, wind is the most influential weather factor on fire behavior, and the combination of wind-caused line failures with extremely dry conditions during high-wind events creates worst-case scenarios.

Unattended or Escaped Campfires

Campfires that are not fully extinguished remain a significant ignition source, particularly in the western United States during summer and fall. A campfire that appears out can still harbor live coals under the surface that retain heat for hours. Wind can revive a smoldering campfire long after the camper has left. The standard for extinguishing a campfire is water poured over the coals repeatedly, stirring with a stick between pourings, until the ashes are cool to the touch. If it is still warm, it is not out.

Equipment and Machinery

Sparks from equipment operating near dry vegetation are a consistent ignition source throughout wildfire-prone regions. Lawn mowers striking rocks, angle grinders, chainsaw use in dry conditions, and vehicle catalytic converters contacting dry grass have all started wildfires. During periods of extreme fire danger, many local fire agencies issue burn bans and equipment restrictions that include prohibitions on mowing, grinding, and certain types of power tool use during the highest-risk periods of the day.

Fireworks

Fireworks introduce high-temperature sparks over a wide area and are responsible for a disproportionate number of ignitions around major holidays, particularly the Fourth of July. Even consumer-grade sparklers, smoke bombs, and fountains can start fires in dry grass. Professional fireworks displays are conducted with fire suppression equipment staged on site. Consumer use in fire-prone areas carries significant risk.

Arson

Intentional fire-setting is a meaningful fraction of wildfire ignitions. Arson-caused fires are particularly dangerous because they are often set in multiple locations simultaneously or in conditions specifically chosen to maximize spread. Treating any suspicious smoke or fire report seriously and reporting it immediately is part of responsible community preparedness.

Discarded Smoking Materials

Cigarettes thrown from moving vehicles are a documented ignition source, particularly along highway corridors where airflow from passing vehicles can fan a dropped cigarette into adjacent dry roadside vegetation. This cause has declined with reduced smoking rates and fire-safe cigarette mandates, but it remains a factor in certain regions and conditions.

The Conditions That Turn a Spark Into a Disaster

Ignition is only the beginning. The question of whether a wildfire stays small or becomes catastrophic is determined almost entirely by conditions: fuel moisture, wind, temperature, humidity, and terrain. A fire in moist conditions with calm winds can be controlled in minutes. The same ignition during a red flag event can be uncontrollable within hours.

Fuel Moisture: The Most Critical Variable

Fuel moisture content is the single most important factor in determining whether a fire starts and how fast it spreads. Live vegetation contains water that must be evaporated before the plant material can ignite. Dead fuel, including leaf litter, dead grass, and fallen branches, equilibrates to ambient humidity. During drought conditions or extended dry heat, fuel moisture can drop to single-digit percentages. At that level, ignition thresholds plummet and fire spread rates accelerate dramatically.

Extended drought creates what fire managers call a critically dry fuel condition. Multiple consecutive years of below-average precipitation allow dead fuel to accumulate and existing vegetation to become moisture-stressed. This is the underlying condition behind the most catastrophic fire seasons in recent history.

Wind: The Accelerant

Wind is the most powerful accelerant in wildfire behavior. It supplies fresh oxygen to the combustion front, physically pushes flames into unburned fuel, removes moisture from vegetation ahead of the fire through evaporation, and carries burning embers far beyond the active fire perimeter to start spot fires. The Idaho Firewise program notes that wildfires can spread at speeds up to 14 miles per hour under wind-driven conditions, fast enough that a fire one mile away can reach a property in under five minutes.

Terrain-driven winds amplify this further. Santa Ana winds in Southern California, Diablo winds in Northern California, Chinook winds in the Rockies, and similar offshore or downslope wind events occur when high-pressure air masses push dry, warm air down slope through mountain passes and valleys at high speed. These events are directly correlated with the most catastrophic wildfire days on record. When a red flag warning is issued, it is because these conditions are forecast and the risk of rapid, uncontrollable fire spread is extreme.

Terrain: How the Landscape Steers Fire

Fire moves faster uphill than on flat ground or downhill. This is because hot gases and flames rise ahead of the fire front on uphill terrain, preheating the fuel above the fire through convection and radiation. For every 10 degrees of slope, fire spread rate approximately doubles. A fire that starts at the base of a steep slope can reach the ridgeline at explosive speed.

Terrain features also create localized wind patterns that affect fire behavior. Canyons and drainages can funnel and accelerate wind. Saddles and gaps in ridgelines can create wind tunnels. Understanding the terrain around your property and how wind moves through it is a critical component of personal wildfire assessment.

Low Humidity

Relative humidity below 15 percent is considered a threshold for high fire danger. At low humidity, vegetation loses moisture rapidly, ignition thresholds drop, and fire intensity increases. Red flag conditions typically involve a combination of low humidity, high temperature, and high winds, each of which amplifies the others’ effects. Many wildfire incidents begin as manageable fires that become catastrophic when afternoon heat and low humidity combine with terrain-driven winds.

How Wildfires Spread: From Spark to Firestorm

Most wildfires are caught and suppressed when small. The U.S. Forest Service estimates that 98 percent of wildfires are controlled before reaching 100 acres. What makes the remaining 2 percent so destructive is the presence of the conditions described above, combined with fuel loads that reflect years of fire suppression policy that allowed combustible material to accumulate.

Spot Fires: The Ember Problem

One of the most dangerous wildfire dynamics is spotting, where wind carries burning embers from the active fire front far ahead of the main fire and starts new ignitions. Embers can travel miles under extreme wind conditions. Some tree species, particularly eucalyptus, produce large, fibrous bark strips that catch fire and can be carried significant distances. A single structure fire or burning tree can generate thousands of embers, each capable of starting a new ignition if conditions are right.

This is why the first five feet around your home are the most critical defensible space zone. Research has consistently shown that homes ignite primarily from embers landing on or near the structure, not from the main fire front directly. Combustible materials touching the house, wood decks, dry vegetation, and gaps in vents and soffits are the primary pathways by which embers ignite structures.

Crown Fires

When surface fuels connect to ladder fuels that reach the forest canopy, a fire can transition from a manageable surface fire to a crown fire moving through the treetops. Crown fires travel faster than surface fires, produce more radiant heat, generate more embers, and are effectively impossible to directly attack with ground resources. Aerial suppression can slow but rarely stops a crown fire in extreme conditions. The presence of continuous ladder fuels connecting low shrubs to mid-height vegetation to the canopy is one of the most dangerous fuel configurations on a landscape.

Wildfire Preparedness: What Preppers Should Be Doing Now

Understanding how wildfires start and spread informs every practical preparedness action. Here is what the science translates to in actionable terms.

Create and Maintain Defensible Space

The defensible space concept, formalized by CAL FIRE and incorporated into FEMA guidance, establishes two concentric zones around structures. Zone 1 extends 30 feet from all buildings and structures. Within this zone, the goal is to eliminate continuous fuel that a fire can travel along. The FEMA Wildfire Awareness guidance specifies removing all vegetation and combustible material within the first five feet of the structure, keeping grass shorter than four inches within 30 feet, and removing shrubs and vines under trees that create ladder fuel pathways.

Zone 2 extends from 30 to 100 feet from the structure. Within this zone, the goal is to break up fuel continuity so fire cannot travel easily from plant to plant. Space trees and shrubs so that their canopies do not touch, remove dead plant material, and thin vegetation to interrupt continuous fuel pathways. The minimum spacing between plants should be approximately three times the plant’s height or width.

Harden Your Home Against Embers

Because most home ignitions start from ember intrusion rather than direct flame contact, hardening the structure against embers is as important as clearing vegetation. Cover all vents with wire mesh with openings no larger than one-eighth of an inch. Screen the space under decks and porches. Clean gutters and roof surfaces of accumulated dry debris. Replace wood shake roofing with fire-resistant materials. Move combustible furniture and materials away from the house exterior. These steps reduce the number of entry points and ignition-susceptible surfaces that an ember storm can exploit.

Know Your Evacuation Route Before You Need It

The USFA FEMA evacuation guidance is explicit: leave early. Do not wait for an evacuation order if you feel the situation is deteriorating. People die in wildfires because they wait too long and roads become impassable due to traffic, smoke, and fire. Identify at least two evacuation routes from your property. Drive both routes so you know them under normal conditions. Know which direction leads away from the most likely fire approach given the prevailing wind patterns in your area. The USFA FEMA wildfire evacuation resources recommend keeping vehicle gas tanks at least half full at all times during fire season and parking with the vehicle pointed toward the exit direction.

Build and Maintain a Go-Bag

A wildfire go-bag needs to be grabbable in under two minutes, because that may be all the time you have. At minimum it should contain:

  • Copies of critical documents: identification, insurance policies, property records, medical prescriptions.
  • Medications for all household members covering at least one week.
  • Cash, because ATMs and card payment systems may be down or inaccessible.
  • Phone chargers and a portable battery bank.
  • N95 masks for smoke inhalation protection.
  • Water and food for at least 72 hours per person.
  • Pet supplies if applicable, including food, water, carriers, and vaccination records.
  • Change of clothing and sturdy footwear.
  • A battery-powered or hand-crank weather radio for emergency alerts when cell networks are overloaded.

Subscribe to Early Warning Alerts

Download the FEMA app and configure it for your location and any other locations where family members may be. Sign up for your county’s emergency notification system, which may operate under names like Wireless Emergency Alerts, Nixle, or a county-specific platform. The Ready.gov wildfire preparedness resource recommends having multiple alert pathways because cell networks can become overloaded during major incidents, and relying on a single notification method is a single point of failure.

Know what your local alert levels mean before an emergency. Some areas use Ready-Set-Go terminology. Others use color codes or numerical tiers. An evacuation warning and an evacuation order are different levels of urgency with different expected responses. Knowing this before the event means you do not lose time figuring it out during one.

Monitor Fire Weather Conditions

Red flag warnings and fire weather watches from the National Weather Service are your earliest warning that conditions are approaching extreme. A red flag warning is issued when a combination of low humidity, high temperatures, and elevated wind speeds creates conditions for rapid fire spread. These warnings do not mean a fire will start, but they mean that if one does, it will be extremely difficult to control. During red flag conditions, take all preventive actions: avoid anything that could generate sparks, do not operate machinery near dry vegetation, and be in an elevated state of readiness to evacuate.

The Wildfire Threat Is Expanding

Wildfire risk is no longer confined to the traditional western fire states. Drought conditions, accumulated fuel loads, and shifting weather patterns have expanded meaningful wildfire risk into the southeastern United States, parts of the Midwest, and areas that historically saw fires rarely. Communities that have not historically needed to think about wildfire preparedness are now in zones where the threat is real.

The combination of human ignition sources and increasingly dry conditions is the driver of this expansion. Power infrastructure runs through every populated area. Dry grass burns whether it is in California or North Carolina. The fire triangle does not care about geography. What matters is whether the three elements align.

Prepare Your Home Before the Grid Fails

Wildfires, storms, and other emergencies can leave you without electricity, running water, or outside help for days or even weeks. Having practical off-grid skills before disaster strikes can make all the difference.

No-Grid Survival Projects is packed with easy-to-build DIY projects that help you generate power, secure clean water, cook without electricity, preserve food, and keep your family safe when modern infrastructure fails.

Whether you’re preparing for wildfire season or simply want greater self-reliance, these proven projects can help you stay ready for whatever comes next.

👉 Get your copy of No-Grid Survival Projects today and start building real resilience before you need it!

Final Assessment: What You Control

Most of the factors that determine how a wildfire behaves are outside your control. You cannot stop lightning. You cannot prevent power line failures. You cannot change the wind.

What you can control is whether your property provides a hospitable environment for fire to reach your structure, whether you have created the defensible space and structural hardening that gives you and firefighters the best chance, whether you have a plan and a go-bag ready to execute immediately, and whether you have the situational awareness to leave before the window closes.

The preppers who fare best in wildfire events are not the ones who planned to defend their property with a garden hose. They are the ones who understood the science, reduced their fuel load, hardened their structure, and drove away from the fire with their family and their documents while others were still deciding what to do.


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The post How Does a Wildfire Start? The Science, the Causes, and What Every Prepper Needs to Know appeared first on Ask a Prepper.



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Tuesday, June 23, 2026

25 Prepper Items You Can Find At Garage Sales

Estimated reading time: 14 minutes

25 Prepper Items You Can Find At Garage Sales

Prepping doesn't have to cost a lot of money if you know how to look for bargains. Garage sales and yard sales are great places to scoop up cheap survival items you might need for an emergency. The old saying that one man's junk is another man's treasure certainly applies here.

Many people holding garage sales don't know the true value of what they're selling, or they simply don't see items for how useful they are and end up selling them for next to nothing. Yard sale season is here, so now is the time to get out there and start hunting down the things you need.

Make a list and take it with you. Don't assume you will remember because there are quite a few prepper items to look for. Here are 25 of them…

1. Bicycles

If an EMP attack were to knock out most vehicles, or if gasoline were to become scarce and expensive, bicycles would become a decent option for transportation. And while you can purchase bicycles at virtually any grocery store with a sports aisle, you will spend significantly less money buying used bikes in good condition from a garage sale.

When inspecting a used bike, check the tire condition, brake pads, chain wear, and whether the frame has any cracks or serious rust. A little bit of surface rust on metal parts is usually fine, but if there's deep rust on the frame then don't bother. Also look for bike pumps, helmets, repair kits, and spare inner tubes.

2. Board Games and Puzzles

You need something to do during the long hours without electricity and all of those gadgets we've come to depend on. Good old-fashioned board games and puzzles will be an ideal way to pass the time. You can find these for under a dollar in most cases. The more you have on hand, the less you will be dealing with bored family members.

Don't overlook card games, dice games, and chess sets either. These take up almost no space and can provide hours of entertainment. Books of crossword puzzles or Sudoku are another great find. During a prolonged grid-down situation, keeping morale up is a real concern.

3. Bug Out Bag Gear

You are sure to find things like lighters, matches, rain ponchos, knives, and other things you can put into your bug out bag. You could also look for small tarps and even backpacks that can be used to make a bug out bag.

When evaluating backpacks, look for ones with padded shoulder straps, a hip belt, and multiple compartments. Frame packs and military-style MOLLE bags are ideal if you can find them. Test zippers, check for torn seams, and make sure the bag can hold real weight without the straps pulling away from the fabric.

Related Article: 5 Things to Consider When Choosing a Bug Out Bag

4. Camping Gear

Anything that has to do with camping, i.e. cookstoves, tents, lanterns, sleeping bags, and so on can all be major assets to your emergency stash. When the power is out or you are forced to bug out, camping will be the way of life and any gear you can bring along will make life easier.

Pay special attention to camp stoves and their fuel compatibility. Propane, butane, and white gas stoves all use different fuel, so make sure you can actually source fuel for whatever stove you pick up. When buying used tents, set them up in the driveway when you get home and check for broken poles, torn mesh, or a compromised rainfly before relying on it in an emergency.

Related Article: 15 Camping Essentials for Beginners

5. Canning Supplies

There are plenty of people who don't want grandma's old canning jars, canner, and all the tools that go with it. Home preservation is something preppers need to do in order to store up enough food to last them for several months. Jars can also be used to store water.

When buying used canning jars, inspect every jar carefully for chips or cracks along the rim. Even a small nick can prevent a proper seal and lead to spoilage. Avoid reusing old lids; new lids are cheap and the seal is critical for food safety. Look for jar lifters, funnel sets, bubble removers, and lid wands as well, since these tools make the canning process much easier and safer.

6. Cast Iron Cookware

This stuff tends to be pretty pricey when buying brand new, but you can get it for about half the price at a garage sale. Cast iron pans are exactly what you need for cooking over an open fire, which is going to take the place of your kitchen stove when the power is out.

Keep in mind that if you buy used cast iron cookware, it will probably be very old and in need of restoration and seasoning. Here's how to do that.

7. Emergency Supplies

Look for things like candles, lighters, flashlights, radios, first aid kits, and so on. Even the half-used candles can be bought for cheap and melted down to make larger candles.

When it comes to flashlights, check whether they still work and note what batteries they take. Ideally, you want everything standardized to one or two sizes (AA and AAA are most common) so you're not managing a dozen battery types. For radios, look specifically for hand-crank or solar-powered models, which don't depend on batteries at all.

Related Article: 50 Survival Supplies You Can Never Have Enough Of

8. Firearms and Ammunition

These are extremely difficult to find at garage sales for real steals, but you can always look. Consider saving up some cash and setting it aside so you can make a purchase when you do happen to come across a really good deal. Look for reloading equipment as well.

If you do find a firearm at a garage sale, research your state and local laws beforehand. Private sales are legal in many states but not all, and some require background checks even for private transactions. If you're unfamiliar with a particular firearm, pass on it unless you can have it inspected by a gunsmith before purchase. A cheap gun that misfires is worse than no gun at all.

9. Food Dehydrator

You may have to look extra hard for this one at garage sales, but old food dehydrators in good condition will be available for only a fraction of the cost than if you were to purchase them new. A food dehydrator is essential to have because it removes moisture from food (meats, fruits, vegetables, etc.) in order to preserve them so they last significantly longer for storage purposes. 

When inspecting a used dehydrator, plug it in and make sure the heating element actually works and that the fan runs evenly. Check that all the trays are present and intact. Missing or cracked trays significantly reduce the unit's usefulness. Stackable circular models are the most common at garage sales; box-style dehydrators with horizontal airflow tend to dry food more evenly and are worth prioritizing if you find one.

10. Gardening Tools

Buy extra hoes, rakes, shovels and other gardening equipment. Your prepper garden will need tending and you will likely not have gasoline to run your equipment. These tools tend to break after time so you want to have backups. You also want to have plenty of tools so more than one person can tackle a big job at the same time.

Beyond the basics, look for hand trowels, cultivators, and kneeling pads. Seed storage containers and old seed packets are also worth picking up. If you spot a manual push-plow or wheel hoe, grab it. These are invaluable for working larger garden plots without power equipment and can be hard to find new at a reasonable price.

11. Hunting Gear

When there are no grocery stores, you may have to hunt for your food. Buying new hunting gear at a big box store can be very expensive. Fortunately, there are plenty of hunters who grow tired of the sport and prefer to rely on the market for their meat. Look for bows, ammunition, trapping supplies, and camouflage gear.

Field dressing kits, game bags, and skinning knives are often sold alongside hunting gear. Binoculars are another excellent find. They're useful for hunting, scouting, and general situational awareness. If you spot fishing gear, grab that too. Fishing rods, tackle boxes, and nets can all be lifesaving if you're near water and need a reliable protein source.

12. Lawn Mowers

You may be surprised by how many people decide to sell off their old lawnmowers, and for a significantly discounted price than if you were to purchase one new. While keeping your lawn in good condition may not be high on your list of needs after a disaster happens, you also most likely won’t want your lawn turning into a jungle either.

In addition to lawnmowers, you can also look for other pieces of equipment such as weed eaters, leaf blowers, hedge clippers, and so forth.

13. Manual Kitchen Tools

Visit garage sales where older people have lived. You are sure to find old hand grinders and a variety of other hand kitchen tools that will come in handy when you don't have electricity. Look for can openers, meat grinders, graters, manual hand mixers, and so forth.

A hand-crank grain mill is one of the best finds you can stumble across. It lets you grind whole wheat berries or corn into flour, which dramatically extends your food options if you're storing bulk grains. Mortar and pestle sets, manual juicers, and old-fashioned butter churns are also worth picking up if the price is right.

14. Medical Supplies

Garage sales that are held following someone passing away who had a long illness are great places to find unused medical supplies. You can often find crutches, splints, slings, and bandages that are all unopened.

Look for boxes of gloves, face masks, and unopened packages of alcohol wipes and syringes. People will typically sell these items for very cheap just to get rid of the evidence of a loved one's illness and passing.

Check expiration dates on anything consumable like antiseptics, medications, or sterile dressings. Some items like sealed bandages are fine well past their date, while others like certain medications are not. Durable medical equipment like crutches, blood pressure cuffs, and stethoscopes don't expire and are worth grabbing in any condition.

Related Article: 11 First Aid Supplies You Can't Have Too Much Of

15. Outdoor Furniture

Patio sets and other outdoor furniture could provide extra seating and surface area, not to mention potential materials for other projects. Look for pieces made of sturdy materials like wood or metal, as these will stand up better to the elements.

16. Quality Knives

It’s no secret that quality knives can be very expensive. But again, it’s possible to find quality blades for discounted prices when you go to garage sales. Even if the blades have become rather dull (hence why people may be selling them), you can still easily sharpen them yourself if you know or learn how to do so.

Look for a whetstone or sharpening steel while you're there. These often get sold separately from the knives themselves and are just as valuable. When evaluating a used knife, check for a solid handle (no cracks or loose rivets), a full tang if possible, and a blade that's not chipped or warped. A dull edge is easily fixed; a damaged blade usually isn't worth the effort.

17. Sewing Supplies

While stocking up on spare clothing is essential, just as critical is purchasing sewing supplies so you can repair clothing, blankets, towels, and anything else made out of fabric. Look for old sewing machines in good condition, needles, canvas, fabric, and so on.

Remember, when disaster strikes, your clothing will inevitably become torn and dirty, and there won’t be any resupply from online or physical department stores. Learning how to repair your clothing, and having the necessary supplies to do so is not something to overlook.

18. Silver and Gold Jewelry

If the dollar fails, silver and gold will be the only currency that has any value. You wouldn't want to exchange a silver dollar for something like a pack of toilet paper, which is why you want those bits and pieces of old jewelry.

Handing over an earring or a broken silver necklace makes much more sense. You could also melt down the broken silver and gold jewelry and make your own bars.

19. Solar Panels and Generators

Old solar panels or generators could be worth their weight in gold in a long-term power outage situation. You might need to learn a little bit about refurbishing solar panels or fixing generators, but the potential benefits far outweigh the initial time investment.

For generators, check the oil level, pull the starter cord, and try to run it briefly (if they let you, of course). A generator that hasn't been started in years may need a carburetor cleaning or new spark plugs, but that's usually a straightforward fix. For solar panels, look for visible damage like cracked glass or delamination (bubbling beneath the surface), which can significantly reduce output. Even a partially functional panel may still be worth the price if you can wire multiple panels together.

20. Storage Buckets

Storage buckets of varying sizes are among the most useful items a prepper can have. They can be used for storing literally anything (food, water, coffee, flour, herbs, soil, etc.) while keeping them protected from the elements. You’re also likely to spend significantly less money per bucket when you go through a garage sale as well. 

Prioritize food-grade buckets (look for the recycling symbol with a “2” or “5” on the bottom, or HDPE labeling) if you plan to store food or water. Gamma-seal lids, the kind with a spin-off center, are far more practical than standard snap lids for items you access frequently. If you find buckets with lids already attached, that's a bonus, as lids are often sold or discarded separately.

Related Article: 15 Brilliant Uses for Buckets

21. Tools

After a major storm, you will need to take care of any repairs around your house. You may even need to build a shelter. Pick up extra screws, nails, hammers, wrenches, axes, screwdrivers and so on. Keep in mind that you can never have too many tools. If you have six hammers, you could always use one to barter with to get something else you need.

Hand tools are always worth picking up. Manual saws, levels, tape measures, and chisels don't wear out quickly and are universally useful. If you spot a hand drill, brace and bit, or any other non-electric tool, grab it. Power tools are useful now, but in a grid-down situation, hand tools become the backbone of any repair or building project.

22. Used Books

From wilderness survival guides to edible plant identification, there's a plethora of information to be gleaned from books. Don't overlook old cookbooks either – learning to cook without modern conveniences is a skill unto itself. There's also a good chance you'll find a wealth of DIY and home repair manuals, perfect for when you have to handle repairs on your own.

Medical and herbal medicine references are especially valuable. Look for field guides to medicinal plants, wilderness first aid manuals, and veterinary guides (useful if you have livestock). Old military field manuals like the FM 21-76 Survival Manual are gold if you find them. Don't overlook amateur radio (ham radio) handbooks either, as getting licensed and setting up communications is an underrated prep.

23. Water Collection Supplies

Rain barrels, buckets, or even kiddie pools can be used for collecting rainwater, a potentially invaluable resource if public water supplies are compromised. Tarps and other large, waterproof materials can also be rigged up to funnel rainwater into your collection containers. Remember to have a plan for purifying any collected water before consumption.

At garage sales, also look for water filtration equipment like old camping filters (Katadyn and Sawyer models hold up well used), ceramic filter housings, and even simple pitcher-style filters. Colloidal silver generators, iodine tablets, and pool shock (calcium hypochlorite) are occasionally found as well and can be used to treat large quantities of water. The more purification methods you have, the better.

24. Winter Clothing

Old flannel shirts, coats, gloves, and hats are very inexpensive at garage sales. Stock up on these things when you can. Buy several in varying sizes, especially if you have children that are going to be growing like weeds. Having plenty of coats ensures you will always have something dry to put on if you have to go out and chop wood, hunt, or look for water.

Wool clothing is particularly worth seeking out. It retains warmth even when wet, unlike cotton, which loses nearly all insulating value when soaked. Wool sweaters, wool socks, and wool blankets are all excellent finds. Also look for base layer thermals, waterproof rain pants, and rubber boots. Buying a range of sizes means you're covered as kids grow or if you need to outfit someone who shows up to your group unprepared.

25. Wood Burning Stove

Though not as common, a wood-burning stove is a fabulous find at a yard sale. When the power goes out and you're in need of a warm meal, a wood-burning stove is a wonderful asset. Make sure to pick up a chimney cleaning kit, too. You'll need it for proper maintenance.

When evaluating a used wood-burning stove, inspect the firebox for cracks, check that all door gaskets are intact and sealing properly, and make sure the damper operates smoothly. If it's a cast iron model, surface rust can be cleaned and re-seasoned with stove paint or paste wax. Keep in mind you'll also need proper stovepipe, a thimble, and a heat shield depending on your installation.

We hope you found this list helpful. If you're a homesteader, check out these 17 Homestead Items to Look For at Yard Sales.

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The post 25 Prepper Items You Can Find At Garage Sales appeared first on Urban Survival Site.



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