Howdy Bob -
<font color=blue>you could go nuts if you tried to plan for a complete meltdown.</font color=blue>
I agree. All depends on what degree of problems you're thinking about. Even in a "short-term" situation though (more than a few days), if gas stations are closed, I'd be willing to bet all that diesel you have stored up may very well "disappear" during the night some time.
Your attitude about sharing is certainly an admirable one, but as you point out, it raises all sorts of moral dilemmas (i.e. if you have enough food to sustain your family for a month, but would only sustain the neighborhood for a few days, what do you do if you foresee more than a few days worth of problems? /w3tcompact/icons/hmm.gif)
Getting back to your original thought though, I'd offer up 3 possible suggestions.
1) Since water is the most important thing needed for life, even though your neighbor says he would share his well with you, it wouldn't be a bad idea to get a few 55 gallon drums (food grade) you could fill up around "times of concern." They only cost around $30 each and you might find them handy for transporting H20 around your place for other uses.
2) The canned goods is a good idea, especially those things that can be eaten without heating/cooking. (Fuel may be in short supply.) Anyway, what I was going to say is that you can get stuff you normally eat and "circulate" it out every so often (e.g. FIFO). That way none of your canned stuff ever gets old.
3) Barter? Consumables - fuel, alcohol, and food. Shiny coins and paper money may seem like good options, (and they might be if things are only "lightly" bad), but if things are truly devastating in an area, I think those are the things folks would go for. Just look at history - both way back and recent. A boatload of script was worthless during the civil war, Russians would fight each other in the market lines for bread, and people hoarded/killed others in Somalia over grain/rice.
If the power is out, your gas stations are closed, and stores are locked up for a couple of days, I think that a few cans of food and jerry cans of H20 are fine. If things go in to the multiple weeks, or worse, months, well.../w3tcompact/icons/sad.gif
<font color=blue>you could go nuts if you tried to plan for a complete meltdown.</font color=blue>
I agree. All depends on what degree of problems you're thinking about. Even in a "short-term" situation though (more than a few days), if gas stations are closed, I'd be willing to bet all that diesel you have stored up may very well "disappear" during the night some time.
Your attitude about sharing is certainly an admirable one, but as you point out, it raises all sorts of moral dilemmas (i.e. if you have enough food to sustain your family for a month, but would only sustain the neighborhood for a few days, what do you do if you foresee more than a few days worth of problems? /w3tcompact/icons/hmm.gif)
Getting back to your original thought though, I'd offer up 3 possible suggestions.
1) Since water is the most important thing needed for life, even though your neighbor says he would share his well with you, it wouldn't be a bad idea to get a few 55 gallon drums (food grade) you could fill up around "times of concern." They only cost around $30 each and you might find them handy for transporting H20 around your place for other uses.
2) The canned goods is a good idea, especially those things that can be eaten without heating/cooking. (Fuel may be in short supply.) Anyway, what I was going to say is that you can get stuff you normally eat and "circulate" it out every so often (e.g. FIFO). That way none of your canned stuff ever gets old.
3) Barter? Consumables - fuel, alcohol, and food. Shiny coins and paper money may seem like good options, (and they might be if things are only "lightly" bad), but if things are truly devastating in an area, I think those are the things folks would go for. Just look at history - both way back and recent. A boatload of script was worthless during the civil war, Russians would fight each other in the market lines for bread, and people hoarded/killed others in Somalia over grain/rice.
If the power is out, your gas stations are closed, and stores are locked up for a couple of days, I think that a few cans of food and jerry cans of H20 are fine. If things go in to the multiple weeks, or worse, months, well.../w3tcompact/icons/sad.gif