Originally Posted by
armygreywolf
If you wanted to know what you SHOULD stock up on....basically nothing...just keep your gas tanks full, buy an extra first aid kit, maybe a live trap, I've been through alot of scares, russian aggression when I was a kid, y2k, 9/11, sars, housing bust (which was probably the legit scare) and a few small scares until now. Stupid(uninformed) people buy tp and water, smart people buy filters and medicine, first aid stuff, extra fire extinguishers...car parts, bicycle parts...etc. Buy a fishing pole, line and some hooks if you dont have one. Buy a live trap. Just saying.
Maybe all of the bruhaha about the Corona virus is just media hype. It's like the little boy who cried wolf. There comes a point where you get deaf to it.
The "norms" are a bit different here. It's life by the seasons so you work hard in the spring,summer, and fall so that you can put up enough provisions to get you through the winter when there's no money coming in. We buy food , water, soap, & TP by the case cause it's cheaper that way. Fill the freezer & fill the oil / propane tanks. All that good preppin' stuff so we're all set to get through the winter.
It's normal for the power to go out during a winter storm. We had an easy winter this year, but it's not unusual for the power to be out for a week or more. The first thing you notice is that you have no water because there's no electricity to run the well pump. The second thing you notice is it gets cold FAST.
You have to be able to do for yourself in a rural area. I would set the priorities a bit differently.
1: Water
2: Food
3: Shelter from the elements
4: Energy .... stockpile firewood, diesel, heating oil, gasoline, propane, and so on. ( It won't go to waste. You'll definitely use it up. )
5: A generator or generators. They work hard and tend to fail at the worst possible time. It costs about 350.00$ a week in fuel to run one.
6: Emergency equipment like chainsaws and snow plows. That way you can either cut or plow your way out.
Sad to say ... but the time of transition from winter to spring is the worst part of our cold & flu season here. It's a normal year after year thing in this place. That's where we are right now. Our local nursing home went into lockdown yesterday. Nobody in or out except employees. I don't quite believe it .... but they claim that the mortality rate can hit 90% when any flu strain gets loose in there. I have seen a high mortality rate in years past but not that high.
My son lives over on the mainland and he's been down with the flu for the last couple of weeks. He's on the mend but it's two weeks of lost wages.
Seeing as it's coming this way ... i stocked up on cold medicine last night. It stinks because we just don't stock enough medicine in our store. Te shelves go empty once the various seasonal illnesses have hit the community. It happens every year.
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