- Joined
- Oct 25, 2016
- Messages
- 6,474
is it a silo a military base airport or a nuclear power plant,,,,,,I have a nuclear plant about 40 miles away,if it were to get hit without a bunker I am screwed
I don't have a death wish,,,I have plans in the works for basement home complete with a concrete roof,it is not huge only around 1100 sf ,,,with luck I will get it built and never need itAlso, in retrospect, if nukes fly, I hope I'm standing under where the first one blows......
We all hope you don't my friend...
I built a root cellar here. It's filled block walls, with poured roof and buried on three sides and the roof. It stays amazingly cool all summer long. I'm sure it will be consistently warmer in the winter too. The only issue is moisture build up. You have to have air flow, which looses some of the thermal gains. My cellar is only 8x10' and was kind of an experiment for the next place I build too. I want a small cabin, probably 12x 36', but with a full basement and a poured roof. That will double the usable space.We're working on planning our 'retirement' spot, also at our current BOL. We're thinking about ICFs for the walls. A foot thick overall, about 9 inches of concrete in the wall. My experience with them tells me that if I can pull this off, heating and cooling is going to be easy.
after looking at a map of nuclear targets no one is getting away clean every state has multiple targets damned few people will be ready and less than 10% of the population will survive a all out Nuclear War,,,,,,,,,
I like your optimism. Only hope that we never test these theories. One thing does bother me though. The radiation gets washed away with rain, but it goes into the soil. There are islands in the pacific that you can live on, but can't eat anything grown in the ground. Plants absorbe enough to be poision. I have a feeling the cancer rates would go up dramatically. Anyways, with trump in office, maybe we will be able to get along with Putin and stop trying to provoke each other.Far more people will survive than 10%, the body can absorb a certain amount of RADs an hour before acute poisoning takes hold. If one stays indoors for 10 to 14 days, after that period of time one can venture out for a short times limiting exposure, everything is in the time of exposure generally referenced in hours, radiation doesn't stay in the body and in many cases people have survived acute poisoning without permanent damage. Remember, all the numbers out on the internet and in government books are hypothetical (worse case). If one isn't affected by the blast or gamma than the chances of survival are great with a few precautions!
I like your optimism. Only hope that we never test these theories. One thing does bother me though. The radiation gets washed away with rain, but it goes into the soil. There are islands in the pacific that you can live on, but can't eat anything grown in the ground. Plants absorbe enough to be poision. I have a feeling the cancer rates would go up dramatically. Anyways, with trump in office, maybe we will be able to get along with Putin and stop trying to provoke each other.
Far more people will survive than 10%, the body can absorb a certain amount of RADs an hour before acute poisoning takes hold. If one stays indoors for 10 to 14 days, after that period of time one can venture out for a short times limiting exposure, everything is in the time of exposure generally referenced in hours, radiation doesn't stay in the body and in many cases people have survived acute poisoning without permanent damage. Remember, all the numbers out on the internet and in government books are hypothetical (worse case). If one isn't affected by the blast or gamma than the chances of survival are great with a few precautions!
The odds of surviving may be debatable, but I tend to agree that if you weren't too close and can bunker down in a protected shelter for a few weeks for a lot of it to dissipate then you could stand a chance. The problem is what's left to eat? Growing plants in contaminated soil isn't wise. I wonder if canned goods on grocery shelves would be contaminated from a blast? And lots of the animals that normally are hunted for food would probably be killed off initially. I don't think figuring out how to survive a nuclear war is the answer here. It would be a heck of a lot smarter to figure out how to prevent one.
I don't know what to say about that except you are not in a favorable location,but if it makes you feel any better if the SHTF,,,we are all for the most part all in the same boat,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,SCREWEDtrouble is the fall out, the ground in Wales and parts of the Westcountry were contaminated by rainfall from Chernobyl for years, they may still be for all I know.
My closest nuclear target is Little Rock, but it's tertiary. The air force base there is mainly C-130 transports and their support wing.
LOL..............................get a room you pair!!