TheBuddyExpedition
Adventurer
When you have foolish amounts of flow, this is how you roll!
If I thought I had a remote chance of a decent living, not just surviving, I'd head up to the mountains. I'm less than an hour away from clean water filtered by mother nature at 7,000ft.
My bug out vehicle is the same as my expo vehicle, my offroad vehicle, my camper and my run around town vehicle. I keep is stocked all the time and fueled when I bring it home. This is not because I think I will have to bug out in an emergency event it is just that I am too lazy to remember what I am low on or what I ran out of on the last trip. The first thing to do when getting home is to resupply. I even keep a drag bag with my clothes and sundries supplied so if someone calls and says lets hit the trail I can be out the door in just minutes.
I'm ole school and unconventional to boot so;
"I'd not worry about such things because any potential enemy will bring everything you'll possibly ever need you just have to take it"!
THESE ARE NOT THE TIMES FOR THE MEEK AND TIMID!
You might be in to something. How are you gonna keep that much beer cold?
These are the most meek and mild times in the history of this country. Buncha lazy entitled slobs.
No question that life has never been more comfortable or safe. But things change now much faster than in any time in the past, so people feel more vulnerable even though the risks and threats to life itself are far less.
R
We are much safer than at almost any point in history -however- nothing that we have done or developed has removed the most basic premise of life on our planet: Competition. We compete to live and although most of our surroundings contemporarily remove that idea from our thinking, the fact is immutable. In dire enough consequences people, in any setting, will resort to the most base competitive drives. We will kill each other for tiny parcels of food not to mention the horrors that we will inflict on each other when water is not in ready supply.
Nothing encourages me more along this line of thinking than the outright denial of it's possibility in our society. I hope- more than anything that I can hope for- that nothing like this ever happens but I refuse to be unprepared for the possibility. When and if it does it will happen with a speed and violence that most Americans can't conceive.
As far as goes the original question: I think that the key to a successful BOV is the early use of it. I live (when not deployed to some other part of this seemingly sandy globe) in an area subject to hurricanes. Our rule is 4 days. If a big enough storm is coming and the models hold it on us...my wife and kids head for the hills in her Toyota Sienna. If we are wrong...so be it...we were wrong. If we are right, everything turns out.
Best,
HC
Yep, the competitive instinct remains in place, and anything is possible in theory. But these truths have not broken or reversed the secular trend towards greater comfort, security, health, etc. over the past 1,000+ years.
Any preparation for adversity should be heavily (maybe even entirely) influenced by the likelihood of various adverse scenarios we might actually face.
That means that different types of natural disasters should dominate any planning or preparation exercise. For you hurricanes are the big deal. For me, earthquakes top the list.
Nevertheless, any thread of this sort is quickly and inevitably filled with people discussing "defensive perimeters" against, or tactics to avoid, the roaming bands thugs that will surely be coming to kill them and steal their stuff.
Maybe this is just a harmless expression of escapist fantasy? Who knows?
To each his/her own; but in my own planning, 99% of the time/effort/cost is focused on earthquake and natural disaster prep.
And for those remaining ugly 1% probability scenarios, my assumption is that my hobbies and outdoor interests already tilt the odds significantly in my favor.
R