Thought I would post a blurb about what brought me here, and why I consider myself a beginning prepper.
I have been I guess a closet prepper for a few years now. I openly discuss it with the other few people who will be at the BOL if anything happens. We have been doing prepping activities pretty much our whole lives, canning, hunting, foraging (mushrooms and fruit really) raising cattle and chickens and rabbits, gardening. Whenever work and travel allowed me to do it, anyway.
So I always have it in the back of my head. I don't live in fear, but I try to plan ahead, you know?
So as part of that, I took my BOB, with my base pack setup and an extra 25 pounds of food, beer, and baileys, and took the pistol (loaded, with 2 extra mags) and the AR (unloaded, NO ammo) and in the beginning of December I took a 3 day, 2 night trip. I walked, through woods, no trails just right out overland for a little under 8 miles, set up camp, spent a day doing whatever, and then fully loaded with pack and rifle, just bushwacked around and did stuff.
And it was a real wake up call. The pack was poorly adjusted, and destroyed either my hips, or my neck and shoulders. The rifle clunked around and got caught on everything. This was serious woods now, some spots I got into all I could do was fall over, stand up, and then fall forward again. Crouching under fallen trees, crawling, all of the good stuff.
And I suffered. I didn't have any gear failures, but it was not a walk in the park. I really felt like with some changes, I could perform better.
One thing was obvious, if there was an emergency, and I was going to have to go anywhere on foot, carrying my gear, and extra food for the wife and daughter and dog, and the rifle and extra ammo, and possibly wearing armor... it doesn't look good. Not right now.
And my base pack, it is nice lightweight stuff. My basic setup without food or water or gun stuff is 25 pounds.
Now leaving on foot is clearly my worst option. We have vehicles, and I maintain them. But for now, I am concentrating on a worst case scenario. I need to get into the nuts and bolts of getting the most bang for the buck when it comes to food weight, and I need to get familiar with not just shooting, but carrying the rifle, adopting it and the weight of the pack into my normal routine. I want some offensive and defensive tactics that allow me to keep the pack on, and stay mobile. And keep my head under stress, and just make it all work properly when the time comes. I know no battle plan survives first contact, but I'm searching around trying to do my best to not just instantly face plant if I actually have to do some of these things when it matters.
So I'm beginning. I look at this as stage one.
I picked this site basically because it seemed like it had the fewest things I was looking to avoid.
I have been I guess a closet prepper for a few years now. I openly discuss it with the other few people who will be at the BOL if anything happens. We have been doing prepping activities pretty much our whole lives, canning, hunting, foraging (mushrooms and fruit really) raising cattle and chickens and rabbits, gardening. Whenever work and travel allowed me to do it, anyway.
So I always have it in the back of my head. I don't live in fear, but I try to plan ahead, you know?
So as part of that, I took my BOB, with my base pack setup and an extra 25 pounds of food, beer, and baileys, and took the pistol (loaded, with 2 extra mags) and the AR (unloaded, NO ammo) and in the beginning of December I took a 3 day, 2 night trip. I walked, through woods, no trails just right out overland for a little under 8 miles, set up camp, spent a day doing whatever, and then fully loaded with pack and rifle, just bushwacked around and did stuff.
And it was a real wake up call. The pack was poorly adjusted, and destroyed either my hips, or my neck and shoulders. The rifle clunked around and got caught on everything. This was serious woods now, some spots I got into all I could do was fall over, stand up, and then fall forward again. Crouching under fallen trees, crawling, all of the good stuff.
And I suffered. I didn't have any gear failures, but it was not a walk in the park. I really felt like with some changes, I could perform better.
One thing was obvious, if there was an emergency, and I was going to have to go anywhere on foot, carrying my gear, and extra food for the wife and daughter and dog, and the rifle and extra ammo, and possibly wearing armor... it doesn't look good. Not right now.
And my base pack, it is nice lightweight stuff. My basic setup without food or water or gun stuff is 25 pounds.
Now leaving on foot is clearly my worst option. We have vehicles, and I maintain them. But for now, I am concentrating on a worst case scenario. I need to get into the nuts and bolts of getting the most bang for the buck when it comes to food weight, and I need to get familiar with not just shooting, but carrying the rifle, adopting it and the weight of the pack into my normal routine. I want some offensive and defensive tactics that allow me to keep the pack on, and stay mobile. And keep my head under stress, and just make it all work properly when the time comes. I know no battle plan survives first contact, but I'm searching around trying to do my best to not just instantly face plant if I actually have to do some of these things when it matters.
So I'm beginning. I look at this as stage one.
I picked this site basically because it seemed like it had the fewest things I was looking to avoid.