What does your state do, as far as SHTF food...???
The problem is you need to have a way to get to it. A storehouse of food 30 miles away isn't much use to the average person if there is no available gasoline or a sleigh of reindeer.What does your state do, as far as SHTF food...???
We ate a lot of that CD food when in Scouts (1960s). I remember a sawdust texture bar that was sweet, a Tootsie roll type of stick, and a Tang-like beverage.Y'all shoulda been around in Alabama during the cold-war years!
Every fallout shelter was stocked with enough food for over a hundred people to consume over a month!
And they were everywhere!!!
Yes, the state did that, with help from the fed.
ALL states did that back then.Y'all shoulda been around in Alabama during the cold-war years!
Every fallout shelter was stocked with enough food for over a hundred people to consume over a month!
And they were everywhere!!!
Yes, the state did that, with help from the fed.
I wonder if that was similar to the bar I ate in the arctic rations I was issued as a Marine in Norway. AFAIK it was made by compressing a large amount of Frosted Flakes (or something similar) into a solid mass. It came in a spam type can with two other bars that seemed to be made from Corn Flakes. I think we were supposed to reconstitute them into a gruel type dish but we just ate them as they were. Which was a bit hard on the teeth.We ate a lot of that CD food when in Scouts (1960s). I remember a sawdust texture bar that was sweet, a Tootsie roll type of stick, and a Tang-like beverage.
Food supplies could be found at fenced-in 'camp' locations.I think most states have a certain amount of shtf supplies stockpiled to respond to those scenarios likely to be encountered. But none are laying in supplies to cover every eventuality nor to supply their entire populations.
And doled out in an unfair manner.Whatever any government has stored will be woefully inadequate compared to what is truly needed.