What's in Your Bug-Out Bag?
Your ideal bug-out bag depends on your needs. Here's what J.D. Tuccille puts in his.

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Whether you call the result a bug-out bag, a go bag, a 72-hour bag, or something else, there's no such thing as an ideal assortment to grab in emergencies. It depends on you and your needs. Since I consider my residence a refuge, I keep a get-home bag in the car in case I need to head to family and safety. If the emergency is at home (probably from a wildfire), my wife and I have a list of items, including important papers, that we'd add to the vehicle with the bags.
My get-home equipment is largely repurposed from my desert-appropriate backpacking gear, keeping in mind that I'm at least as likely to be in a motel as in a wilderness campsite.
Go through your bag from time to time. Check for gear that, like my rain jacket, might wander. Batteries need frequent swapping, and expiration dates on food and medical supplies should be checked.

1. My old 50-liter, internal-frame panel loader is no longer made, but Mountainsmith offers the similar Scream 55. Packs are personal, so visit an outfitter and try before you buy.
2. Cash is potentially the most important tool to have in an emergency. How much you should carry—in a baggy stored in the pack—depends on what you think you might need and how much you can afford.


3. It's hard to beat a Swiss Army knife as a handy, compact multitool. I also have a Cold Steel Master Hunter because sometimes you need more knife.

4. Because challenges might come in the dark, I carry a Princeton Tec Vizz headlamp. Cheaper alternatives are available, as are rechargeable models. I recommend lights that let you control brightness.


5. A no-name fire steel and striker, plus Vaseline-soaked cotton balls in a baggy, make fire possible anywhere.
6. A pocket-sized copy of the SAS Survival Guide can help with navigation, first aid, signaling, and more.


7. Polyester should work whether I stay in motels or camp under the stars. I packed two Old Navy Go-Dry polos and a pair of Old Navy Go-Dry chinos.

8. Weather protection comes from the Red Ledge Thunderlight Jacket. A Frogg Toggs poncho would be an inexpensive alternative.


9. What you wear next to your skin should be useful for casual, formal, and apocalyptic occasions. For me, that's REI boxer briefs and old hiking socks I rotated into the bag when they started to get worn.

10. Mechanix Wear work gloves, which often come in handy.
11. Old tennis shoes and some thermal layers.



12. After years with a homemade alcohol stove, I bought a no-name model that burns twigs, fuel tabs, alcohol—anything flammable. You can get name-brand versions, but why be fancy about a hobo stove? It even fits inside an MSR Alpine 775-milliliter pot. A plastic spoon and Bic lighter join them in the stuff bag.


13. I hope to never have to eat my SOS Food Labs Emergency 3,600-calorie food bar. For actual food, I have four Mountain House backpacking meals with long shelf lives and several packs of Quaker Instant Oatmeal. All you need to add is boiling water.



14. To make sure that water is safe, I carry a Sawyer Mini Squeeze Water Filtration System and Potable Aqua chlorine dioxide tablets. Water storage is handled by a three-liter Camelbak reservoir.


15. For bathing, I keep a bar of soap in a sandwich bag along with a Cascade Designs PackTowl.

16. My travel toothbrush stores in its own handle. I carry whatever toothpaste sample my dentist gave away at the last visit.


17. A sample tube of SPF 50 sunscreen and a baseball cap keep the sun at bay.

18. I assembled my first-aid kit from our home supplies. (The Prepared offers a good checklist.)

19. A Eureka Solitaire tent is superior to the "emergency bivies" advertised for bug-out bags, without carrying the high price often attached to outdoor shelters.

20. For sleeping, I repurposed my old Eastern Mountain Sports Downtime bag, a version of which is still available. Campsaver often runs deals on good sleeping bags. My bag goes over a Therm-a-Rest Z pad.

21. When we spent a lot of time in Phoenix, we kept road maps in the car as well as U.S. Geological Survey topographic maps of the cross-country route home and a UST map compass. If you know your likely route, make sure you have maps.

22. I haven't mentioned firearms because it's unwise to keep an expensive weapon unmaintained in a go bag when I typically have a carry pistol (Springfield XD-S 3.3 in .45 ACP) with me. The Henry AR-7 U.S. Survival Rifle would also be a good choice.

23. For similar reasons, my (since superseded) RAVPower 13000 mAh power bank and folding X-DRAGON 20-watt solar panel for charging the power bank are kept outside the pack for use, but close to hand.
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My plan is to just stay home.
The rule in Medicine is "First, Do No Harm" and in First Aid, this means to not move the patient unless it is too dangerous to stay in place.
When it is too dangerous to stay, move the patient carefully, keep cuts above heart level, keep burns and wounds clean and protected, and keep fractures still.
This rule also applies with the choice to either stay or go in a disaster.
Stay in place until it is too dangerous and when you move, move carefully until away from threats and do things and carry things to survive away from home and to minimize damage and loss.
I don't know about other portions of the country, but I see all over New England blue "Evacuation Route" signs. I get wanting to evacuate a city, but a rural town in eastern Maine or southeastern New England? Evacuate from what? to Where?
These all showed up during Oh-Bumma!'s "shovel ready" jobs fiasco that led to mileage markers every 0.2 miles along interstates (and other roads) at a time when everyone was starting to carry phones with GPS. Just one more jobs boondoggle.
I'm with you JD on being prepared, depending on your area (I still carry jumper cables, chocolate bars and wax dipped strike anywhere matches from my days as a starving teacher driving a beatup Buick in central Maine, but for most suburanites, staying home seems a better idea unless they live at low elevation along he east coast, or in a fire zone in the west.
People in a small town in Ohio probably couldn't imagine needing to evacuate until a train carrying toxic chemicals crashed. Settlers around New Madrid in 1810 never imagined their homes could be destroyed by a magnitude 7 or 8 earthquake in Missouri. Survivors are ready for things they could not imagine.
If you’re going to carry a battery and/or solar panel, probably should carry some form of radio or satellite comms, besides your cell phone, as well. If you aren’t able to just plug your phone into a wall for some reason, chances are pretty good that you aren’t going to have LOS and/or that your nearest relay(s) isn’t(aren’t) going to have power either.
Need more power for the laptop gaming computer and not enough room for that Peloton bike. Also missing is a genuine itchy wool shirt.
Need more power for the laptop gaming computer
Come Hell or high water, Tuccillle's Reason articles will get published.
Also missing is a genuine itchy wool shirt.
Considering that, while probably OK for his locale, his sleeping bag runs a decent chance of getting him killed in the upper ~1/3 of the country, ~1/3 of the year, a wool shirt probably is missing.
I have my own BOB and I keep updating it periodically.
One thing: Mountain House foods are very expensive. Try 4 Patriots or Patriot Foods for better prices and just as good with 25 year storage. You can get them in 72 hour , one week and longer food kits.
On the other hand, that SOS Food Labs ration he's got, at $12 for 3600 calories, is less than half the cost of Burger King.
Pro-Tip: In a cool, dry place, and for as long as it is cool and dry, all food is "Survival Food."
People exploring around in the old bomb shelters of London left over from World War II found left-over 60-year-old cans of Spam, opened them, and the Spam was still good!
As long as cans are are not bloated or leaking, what's inside is safe, though I do rinse out the tin-can taste from tuna and canned chicken. Expiration dates are just a rough guide, not dogma. I have safely partaken from cans that are years beyond their expiration date.
Archaeologists have found 2600-year-old grains in the Pyramids of Egypt that sprouted when brought to the surface and watered! No Supernatural "Pyramid Power" involved, just the dryness of the atmosphere in Egypt combined with a constant 59°Fahrenheit under many feet of Pyramid blocks.
As Grace Slick of Jefferson Airplane observed: "Preservatives might be preserving you"...as well as methods of food preservation.
Jefferson Airplane--Eat Starch Mom
https://youtu.be/qMb7iunzAss?si=iDpj6S1RLuhUgM9t
Since we're doing pro-tips, I'll share some of my own experiences (some acquired by losing bets) that might come in handy.
(1) Dry cat food, while safe, tastes quite bad.
(2) Canned, wet dog food is kind of OK. Really the only issues are that they aren't super careful about keeping out sandy grit and little chips of bone, and it could use more salt.
(3) Some of the fake "bac'n strips" and "pepperoni sticks" for dogs are actually delicious. A couple times I bought a canister for the puppy and ended up eating most of it myself. Sometimes there are small bone chips in the pepperoni sticks.
Blech. Quote from when I was pledging a fraternity a billion years ago. "What's worse than Deli-cat? Stale Deli-cat."
Your recollection and ducksalad's are all the more reason to practice Survivalism/Preparedness, so you are not reduced to such desperation and so you can, to paraphrase H.L. Mencken, look bet-making, dare-making frat boys in the eye and tell them to go to Hell.
🙂
😉
I don't have a "bug-out bag." Much like the last place I lived, where I live now is more likely a place people would bug-out TO, rather than from.
Which means you need lots of ammo to discourage squatters...
Got it covered, as do most my neighbors.
+1
A Bug-Out Bag still might be good because there is not a Square Inch on this Planet that is not at risk for some kind of natural disaster, such as an earthquake in South Carolina in the 1880s that rang church bells in Boston, volcanic activity at Yellowstone, etc. And if a natural disaster happens, Bug-Inners would have to be suicidal to want to come.
Don’t forget your critical documents – passports, car titles, deeds, birth certs, insurance policies, account numbers. You may not want to carry them, so you should also have means to stash them securely for later retrieval.
Extra socks, and a second pair of shoes.
Binoculars.
Unobtrusive clothing.
The last item gives away the game. Because just what does that mean? It could mean Earth toned gore-tex and fleece outdoor gear. It could also mean clean khakis, bucks, and a sport coat.
While many people immediately think about overland travel and wilderness type survival when they hear “bug out bag” the reality of such situations will rarely if ever be of that sort of nature.
Never mind that wilderness survival for the vast majority of people (including backpackers, hunters, and other outdoor enthusiasts) – should they ever attempt it – will involve about 3-7 days of being cold, wet, dirty, hungry, lonely and isolated before they finally give in and start wandering towards whatever organized humanity is nearby.
People go for the wilderness type gear because it is a recognizable paradigm that people think they understand, and so preparing for it lends some sense of comfort and security.
It is also mostly dead wrong and wholly unrealistic. Even more so in an actual TEOTWAWKI moment. Where venturing into the unknown, especially if you have small children, is probably a worse choice than whatever you might be facing in the place you know and are known. Your better choice might be dying where you stand while making it clear to anyone nearby that that is what it will take.
Good idea on the documents. Food Saver™ bags are perfect for preserving either hard-copy documents or electronic thumb drives. Water-resistant mini-safes or plastic-lined metal ammo boxes which function as Faraday Cages are good storage spots.
Unobtrusive clothing would mean different things in different settings. In the wilderness, it would mean camouflage fitting with the particular climate and environment, even a ghillie suit.
But for an urban setting, unobtrusive clothing would mean clothing to help you "go grey," such as literally grey T-shirts, hoodies, casual pants or jeans, things that help you move on the edge of a crowd that could turn to a mob, nothing that would make you a target for human predators.
I guess wilderness living is the paradigm in Survivalism/Preparedness because it is the lowest common denominator of how humans have always lived and if you can survive at this level, then surviving in more civilized and urban settings is a cinch.
And no, for any being that lives and isn't suffering without end, and for any rational being that values freedom for himself, his society, and future generations, dying is something to be avoided where possible. It's called Survivalism, not Deathism.
Yeah, you're not getting it. But maybe I was not clear.
Indeed survival is the goal.
With rare exceptions if you are going to die in the place you know then odds are you'll only die sooner trying to go elsewhere. Even more so if you don't a have a very specific travel plan and defined destination.
As other have noted, if you are making a planned (even minimally) evacuation to a know destination then most of that listed stuff is superfluous at best, and possibly a hinderance to movement.
Five gallon jerry cans of stabilized fuel, a large wad of Jacksons, and a pistol will get you very far on the highway.
The meaning of "making it clear to anyone nearby that that is what it will take" is not a 'come kill me sign' it is simply letting approaching people (and yourself) know that those are the stakes involved. Thereby raising the bar for anyone or anything that might disturb your attempt to go on living. Home field advantage makes for hard targets, reduces your energy needs, and will allow you more rest.
Beyond that anyone who is prepared to ride it out where they live will have the makings of a bug out bag, multiple ones really. And one that is not a silly, minimalist one-size-fits-all, but one or more that can be tailored to the particular situation and tasks at hand.
But unless you have been burned, smoked, flooded, irradiated, or otherwise have less than zero chance of living where you are at when things go south then plan and prepare to stay put.
I see what you're saying now. Very compatible with the rule of Medicine andxFirst Aid I mentioned above.
Whether a Bug-Out Bag (BOB) would be an impediment for escape all depends on what's in the Bag. A well-planned BOB with items tightly in place shouldn't be a barrier to movement. Taking up rucking as an exercise also helps prepare the body for SHTF too.
It would take a little more for the highway than just gas, cash, and a pistol for a safe Bug-Out, though. I include tire tools, a jack, Fix-A-Flat or Slime and an air pump, a jumper box for the battery, spare fuses, a CB radio, and road signals such as cones or glass markers to send a distress message. 24-hour foadside assistance service is a plus for everyday emergencies, but no guarantee in a bad enough scenario. Every vehicle needs these things, SHTF or not.
The Jacksons should also include Hamiltons, Lincolns, and Washingtons, plus every denomination of coinage. Change ran out quick during COVID-19 and will in other scenarios too. Some convenience stores in rough areas won't accept $20s at all, since it pegs them as having lots of cash to rob and because of counterfeiting.
And the pistol should include a protective case, cleaning supplies, and spare magazines or Speed-Loaders. Depending on your jurisdiction, your permit will avoid scrapes with Ossifer Friendly.
Beyond those enhancements, you have the basic right idea. Survivalism/Preparedness requires a Janus-Faced approach, while also standing in a firm spot.
See above for the First Aid rule of thumb on staying vs. bugging out. Yes, leaving for the wilderness is bad when safety prevails at home, but as the bumper sticker says: "Shit Happens," so Survivalism/Preparedness accounts for all possibilities.
It is also mostly dead wrong and wholly unrealistic.
Yeah. Your 72-hour bag is for where and when you’ve got a place to bug out *to*. TEOTWAWKI, by definition, means that wherever you go, the world is pretty generally ending there too.
The ideas of flares and signal mirrors (and condoms) is laughable. You either hiked *away* from a relatively typical, non-TEOTWAWKI disaster (where everyone in the world that is not ending would be sending emergency aid and services) and *then* decided to do a mirror-and-flare “HELP!” dance, or you hiked out into the woods in a worse-than-9/11-and-COVID-combined situation and plan on doing your mirror-and-flare “HELP!” dance for approximately fewer planes than were in the air over the US on 9/12/01.
Guns and ammo.
(Springfield XD-S 3.3 in .45 ACP) with me.
Same gun I carry as well. Gun is very reliable, never jams. Capacity is a little low (single stack .45 in a very small package), only complaint is trigger is NOT very good.
trigger is NOT very good.
“Not very good” as in “NYPD-issue 12 lb. pull weight” or “not very good” as “Not as good as my $4,000 Staccato.”? The two XD-S's I’ve fired were, for off-the-shelf specifically-not-competition guns, OK.
Not crisp. It drags through the break a millimeter or two (I don't know of my estimation of measurements is correct, but it feels that way).
Well the trigger would be the most important part, with the firing pin and the action being right next to it in priority, so I'd have those checked and/or repaired yippy-skippy.
I probably should, but I live in a place with real, no-shit street crime. If I'm going to use it (and there have been a couple of incidents where, let's just say I was glad I had it on me, thank god I didn't have to use it and face a Seattle prosecutor (does Catholic cross across my chest) it's going to be at VERY close range.
So all the more reason to both get the trigger, firing pin, and action checked and fixed and to Bug-Out.
*Genuflects to Fate with a raised middle finger.*
Sounds like it isn't malfunctioning, but just isn't the nicest trigger in the world.
Correct. It's never once malfunctioned. But a competition shooter would not be happy with the trigger.
Oh, for people commenting on the trigger, the newer models may be better. I bought one of the very first models released. Many years ago. It's possible Springfield has improved things. And I heard the trigger wasn't bad on the 9mm model. Just the .45 for some reason.
I have one of the first-issue XDS's myself. The trigger got moderately better after the recall, but it's still a little graunchy. And with my big hands, it's not a particularly fun piece to shoot. The Sig P365 in 9mm is a far, far better EDC pistol for me.
small/micropistols aren't fun to shoot, period.
The first time I took my tween daughter shooting, like a dumbass, I thought, "give her the smallest pistol I have". So I gave her a .380 micro. The recoil made her cry. Realizing my mistake, I put a full sized, 14 round magazine .45 in her hand, she was fine.
You can tell a lot about a person from their bug out bag.
Some would have a signal mirror and some flares. Not J.D. Tuccille; he’s too cynical to believe anyone is coming to the rescue.
Some would include a fine print pocket Bible, Torah, or Koran. J.D.Tuccille sneers at such false comforts.
Some would have a second plastic spoon and some condoms, to share a meal and the sleeping bag with some damsel in distress they rescue. Not J.D.Tuccille; he’s married and to his credit does not plan to use TEOTWAWKI as an excuse to cheat. One assumes his wife has her own bag including spoon.
On the other hand, he’s got soap, a towel, and a toothbrush. WIll this be some kind of sissy clean apocalypse? Is JDT a germophobe? Well, the soap and towel could be handy in case of radioactive fallout. But what’s that toothbrush for – world domination through proper oral hygeine?
You can tell a lot about a person from their bug out bag.
Or even someone else confusing a 72-hour bag with TEOTWAWKI and their own, bad self-as-apocalyptic-hero narrative.
Hey, my own bug out bag is a pair of shorts, a Visa card, and the address of the closest Walmart.
My bugout bag is my house. It's loaded with supplies, it's got a huge generator with four wheels sitting in the driveway. Thousands of rounds of ammo. I mean, don't get me wrong, I like to camp, but I'm not going to survive more than a week in the woods with nothing but a bag on my back.
Signalling devices would be a wise addition. Mylar space blankets not only reflect heat both inward and outward, but are a shiny surface for airplanes to see. Flares could also function as a starter for a fire, which, in turn, could make a bigger signal.
However, don’t knock sanitation and hygiene in a Bug-Out Bag.
Soap and shampoo will keep away insects with infectious diseases, as well as skin diseases that require Mideaval medical tomes to treat, as some in England discovered when there was a thankfully brief Eco-Wacko craze of shunning baths.
Also, soap such as Dead Down Wind™ Brand sold in sporting goods stores can keep you from being detected by wildlife, which is indispensable whether you are the hunter or the prey.
Early Man and his predecessors also died at early ages because of tooth infections dangerously close to the brain, so oral hygiene is a must. If you have nothing else, you could always use paper towels around the finger and salt or baking soda to keep the teeth clean and to gargle.
Thanks, man. I feared it was the start of Alzheimer's and now you've informed me it's just failure to brush my teeth.
For a 72-hour bag, it seems like 2-3 "giant wet wipes" would cover bodily sanitation in a more transportable and maybe less bulky manner than bar soap; just keep the sequence right (face/neck, then arms/legs, then pits/feet, then taint) when using them.
Check out solid toothpaste as a good solution for emergency bags as well. They can be stored with other pills and won't blow out all over the other contents if the bag gets squeezed wrong.
Also, certain sizes of prescription bottles are perfect for stashing rolls of cash in an airtight container (not that wet bills are a big deal) that's easier to seal and more durable than a ziploc.
Wet Wipes are indeed a good option, especially in scenarios when water is scarce and needs to be reserved for drinking.
I never heard of solid toothpaste. That a neat idea, although if it wasn't available, the box the tube comes in would also provide some protection for the tube.
Prescription bottles I've found are good for storing cotton balls dipped petroleum jelly to use as fire tinder.
These bottles as you said are good for protecting paper money too and that's even better than you think for survival, since bill acceptors at vending machines and self check-outs usually don't accept wet, torn, or taped bills. Humans might be averse to accepting wet bills close to human bodies in a pandemic too.
I’d never heard of solid toothpaste until fairly recently; it’s dosed out into tablets, and you just crush one in your mouth then brush with the resulting slurry. There’s several versions available on amazon. I kind of suspect that there’s been a wave of development of soild/powdered replacements for a lot of the kinds of liquids that people carry while travelling since the TSA restrictions which some people might have expected to be temporary are still in place (and doing little more than giving the appearance of “government doing something”) 20 years later.
Another interesting option for bug-out, or especially “pocket prepper” kits is something like this, very low bulk and probably keeps forever:https://www.rippak.com/
I’ve also switched over to using solid “shampoo” (in the form of a puck of highly-lathering soap that comes in a screw-top can), but that may or may not have been something that existed for a long time but just never gained popularity. The motivation for that change is as much about reducing packaging waste as making it more travellable, as the one puck claims to be equivalent to 5 bottles of liquid.
As far as emergency cash, I keep some on hand because it’s better to have and not need… but most of the kinds of things that would lead to me trying to “bug out” from my house are situations where the utility of paper currency may have a very short window, and I’m not 100% sure that even bits of precious metals would really be great to barter with. I've got so many other versions of fire tinder (parrafin plugs, fat ropes, even some semi-liquid and paper-based versions) and magnesium bars which will ignite almost anything, and would be originating in a city where flammable trash will always be easy to find that I don't have any need for vaseline cotton balls.
In a “societal breakdown” scenario, things like ammunition, canned food, water or water purification and maybe useful items (I’ve accumulated a decent collection of mechanical wristwatches and folding knives that will keep working even after something like a EMP) that would be hard to loot (or likely to be cleared out first) from stores.
I'd keep the toothbrush. Having dirty teeth sucks. Even if I can't bathe for extended periods, I still want to brush my teeth.
Plus, the end of all civilization isn't the only reason for a BOB.
Plus, the end of all civilization isn’t the only reason for a BOB.
Cmon, don't kill the dream.
The BOB could also make you the go-to guy for boo-boos, Rico Suave's savior when he has a flat tire, or even the life of the party with canned heat for the nacho dip and a flask of vodka for mixed drinks.
Just make sure to replenish everything ASAP for the next Shit Hits the Fan (SHTF) scenario. "Store what you eat and eat what you store" and "Rotate for freshness."
Plus, the end of all civilization isn’t the only reason for a BOB.
Again, the opposite. The bug out bag specifically assumes you've got a place to bug out to.
The idea that civilization collapses tomorrow and yourself and/or your family just wander into the woods with one bag each and just homestead until civilization re-establishes itself or whatever is ridiculously out of touch. As in "The Donner Party should've received the Bryant letters and didn't." out of touch.
The idea behind the Bug-Out Bag is having that ability to survive anywhere, regardless of a particular destination.
And the idea behind Survivalism/Preparedness, as well as Extropianism/Transhumanism/Singularitarianism, is to preserve a little piece of what's good about civilization with you.
Anything worth having and doing is worth having and doing for as long as you can get away with it...and maybe forever.
Yes, you are right. And if you are not in too vulnerable of a spot, being prepared to hunker down at (well stocked) home seems like the best bet if shit really goes south.
You never know who or what you might kiss in the woods... best to be safe.
Flares are a good idea. I saw my father start a fire in pouring rain using one; it stayed with me. Better than anything Gandalf could come up with.
What's in Your Bug-Out Bag?
Speaking for myself, I have a lot more thanks to the Beautiful™ Air Fryer/Roaster/Dehydrator and the Food Saver™ Vacuum Sealer and bags.
I have made dried apples, blueberries, bananas, and beef jerky with my Dehydrator and I have sealed this food as well as First Aid Supplies, medicines, sewing supplies, fire-starting materials, small tools, and instructions with the Food Saver™.
The bags, combined with silica gel packs from commercial food, medicine, and clothing, help keep moisture and air decay and corrosion from survival supplies and the vacuum sealing means you can fit more gear in less space. This declutters the Bug-Out Vehicle and declutters the mind as well.
National Preparedness Month in September and Spring Cleaning in March and April are my times to inventory my gear and this September, the Food Saver™ is working overtime!
I never go anywhere without a P-38 can opener on my key ring, and a small folding knife (except on a plane) in my pocket.
I stash several P-38s amidst both Bug-Out items and in my cupboard and I make sure a can opener and a bottle opener are on every pocket knife and multitool. P-50s are a good bigger version of the P-38 for less nimble, older hands. P-38s and P-50s are made of Ferrous Metal so they are magnetizable and can function as a compass when suspended from a string.
Pro-Tip: Keep P-38s and P-50s duct-taped or otherwise sheathed when in your pockets to keep the blade from cutting your pants or your thigh.
Need more layers for winter or I would be dead.
A good idea, with the proviso that it be moisture-wicking on the inside and moisture-resistant on the outside, with layers of dead air in-between. Moisture on skin in freezing weather is a prescription for frostbite and hypothermia.
Also, a moisture-resistant insulated hat is a must, since the majority of the body's heat goes out of the head. Moisture-resistant gloves also enable necessary tasks and prevent loss of digits to frostbite.
100% UVA/UVB shielding sunglasses or goggles are required for snow in sunshine, since the Sun reflecting off snow can cause snow-blindness, which is dangerous in an automotive civilization and even worse in the wilderness, since it impedes the ability to build shelter, find water or food, avoid danger, etc..
The Inuits knew well the danger of snow-blindness and used shaped whale bones with small slits for goggles.
Mine includes solid salt, a canteen of bleach, a 2-foot machete & stone, soap & repellent, bug netting & hammock, rope, magnesium firestarter, slingshot, nunchaku. Anywhere in the tropics a machete splits common spiny palms to yield up the palm heart. Missing is a low-maintenance radiation detector. The sheetrock and tinfoil kind just barely work where it's dry, as in Arizona. Cellphone screens need charging. Has anyone here charged a cellphone using a bike wheel generator?
I've done it using hamsters, but it's slow, like charging an EV.
If you mean the bike wheel generators that clamp to the frame and have a spinner that rubs on the tire, make sure run it through a 5V output buck converter like this one:
https://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B087RHWTJW/reasonmagazinea-20/
The specs you are looking for on the converter are a wide range of input voltages, to be effective at all speeds, the keyword “buck” or “buck/boost” for efficiency, and max current of at least 1A. No use going for super high current converters since the little generator isn't going to do more than 5-10W and 5V x1A = 5W.
If you keep up decent speed it should charge about as fast as a standard 1A charger.
Except for your wise choice of nunchuku and netting, I have all of that, so I'll add those deficiencies to my wish list.
I have seen Geiger Counters for sale at American Science & Surplus. There are bike-mounted and hand-cranked dynamos for USB-connected electronics, but how long they take to charge, I don't know. In the meantime, keeping them charged via AC power, auto DC adaptors, and charged battery packs and extra USB cable is a best practice.
Good you see you think about these things, Hank. Keep up the great work.
If you don't have time to put something together before you bug out then having a prefilled bug out bag is worthless.
By "prefilled bag" do you mean one that you have prefilled or a commercially-sold prefilled bag?
Either would be better than nothing, but one suited to your particular needs is best. And one that you shop for and fill yourself can be a fraction of the cost of prefilled commercial bags.
The things no one can afford in Survivalism/Preparedness is Fatalism and Futility.
Apparently no one has learned lesson one from covid:
Toilet paper will quickly disappear in every mass emergency even for a respiratory virus where people expect to stay home. Long before any poobahs declare an emergency. The reason why it will disappear in all future emergencies will always be valid. TP is too low-value to ever be anything more than just-in-time type retail inventory – and retailers will never break it down into selling one roll at a time until the shelves are emptied out..
I always had a big stash of toilet paper at home before COVID-19 and big bags of fast-food napkins on the road. Although I never used it for such, during the pandemic, I also bought a removable, flexible shower head for possible use as a bidet. There was no shortage of those in my area.
When people see that toilet paper is a little piece of civilization that keeps us from having Saudi superstitions about left-handedness, it will be a very valued commodity.
I think it may have happened already post-pandemic, since Scott now sells 48-roll boxes of it's 1000-sheet rolls. It is, quite literally, just what's needed in a Shit Hits the Fan (SHTF) scenario.
🙂
😉
The man with TP in the land without TP is king.
Indeed. And it goes for any desired commodity and it especially applies to knowledge of how to "use less, spread it out, make do, or do without."
What belongs in your bag depends largely on where you're coming from and heading to. The bag I keep in my truck around L.A. is very different than the bag I have in case I ever need to hike out from somewhere while off-roading but both are essentially a "get home" bag.
trying to escape a dense urban area in the event of some kind of societal collapse would require a very different kit than getting from a suburb to an isolated "bug out" spot. Certain items are fairly universally useful (first aid, water filtration/purification, multitool, cordage/duct tape, and fixed blade knife of some kind), but other items are going to depend on the setting (emergency cash is more important in town and tinder is more important in the woods, for example).
I'm mystified what Tuccille is trying to accomplish. I mean, his "bug out bag" is inadequate for camping, travel, or natural disaster.
Please explain.
It looks to me like 2Chilli has the makings of meeting Abraham Maslow’s Heirarchy of Needs for at least 3 days, which is the average time it takes for disaster relievers to get to people. And it’s not like everyone never leaves Stepford.
Multitools are indispensable for Bug-Out Bags, but get serviceable but inexpensive ones on clearance. Leatherman, Schrade, and Victorinox Wenger are so damn good that if you lose them anywhere around other humans, you will never get them back. Save those beauties for use on the homestead.
Kershaw, Camillus, Sheffield, and Hyper Tough Knives, Multitools, Flint-and-Steel Sets, Axes, Machetes with Sawblades, and Folding Shovels, are all reasonably priced, perform well, and are sometimes on clearance.
Entering "Survivalism #shorts" in The YouTube search engine is a great way to learn some fantastic knots, fire making tips, and other great information for Survivalism/Preparedness.