Karma,
A few points, but as far as my background: I've been a backpacker in SE LA for years, done some light caving and very light climbing. But more importantly I lived through Katrina times (we evac'd but I was back here pretty quick). Nothing will make you focus on survival like that storm did.
First, you might as well toss that cell phone. In the case of a natural disaster the towers will either be down or overloaded. Ours went down during the evac while the storm was still 2 days away. While an iridium is out of my budget, I'm intrigued by the SPOT. Assuming cell coverage is probably going to be problematic after a natural disaster, who would you call anyway?
Your plan of only being stuck for 3 days is based on what? I thought I was evac'ing for a few days and would be back at work the next week. Instead we had an area of destruction bigger than you can imagine. We had government agencies pulling guns on each other trying to find fuel. Gas, food, water, ice, power, communications, etc. was down for a week as far north as Jackson, MS.
Don't discount your firearm. Nothing wrong with a good .22 rifle. It'll take down a deer or discourage a human. Wouldn't be my first choice as a defensive weapon though. A slug loaded 12ga was my go to gun during Katrina.
Clean water is always the first priority in a survival situation. Get yourself a pack of 'Potable Aqua' to start with, then start looking at water filters.
Finally, go camping. Take your truck out. Pretend you just broke down. Try surviving. Make a list, what would make your life more comfortable.
Things that worked well for me during the recovery:
My pelican head lamp (w/ Duracell batts, not energizer). A camp saw. A bunch of carabiners and some climbing rope. Crystal Lights and Poptarts. Duct Tape. A good first aid kit. Spyderco pocket knife. My favorite crow bar.
Something I wish I had at the time: more tire repair plugs. A V6 in my ranger (rolling trees with a 4 cyl was not good but I do miss that truck <totalled while parked in a hit and run>).
A good dog. I didn't have one at the time, I do now. Nothing like having someone watching your back for you.
A few points, but as far as my background: I've been a backpacker in SE LA for years, done some light caving and very light climbing. But more importantly I lived through Katrina times (we evac'd but I was back here pretty quick). Nothing will make you focus on survival like that storm did.
First, you might as well toss that cell phone. In the case of a natural disaster the towers will either be down or overloaded. Ours went down during the evac while the storm was still 2 days away. While an iridium is out of my budget, I'm intrigued by the SPOT. Assuming cell coverage is probably going to be problematic after a natural disaster, who would you call anyway?
Your plan of only being stuck for 3 days is based on what? I thought I was evac'ing for a few days and would be back at work the next week. Instead we had an area of destruction bigger than you can imagine. We had government agencies pulling guns on each other trying to find fuel. Gas, food, water, ice, power, communications, etc. was down for a week as far north as Jackson, MS.
Don't discount your firearm. Nothing wrong with a good .22 rifle. It'll take down a deer or discourage a human. Wouldn't be my first choice as a defensive weapon though. A slug loaded 12ga was my go to gun during Katrina.
Clean water is always the first priority in a survival situation. Get yourself a pack of 'Potable Aqua' to start with, then start looking at water filters.
Finally, go camping. Take your truck out. Pretend you just broke down. Try surviving. Make a list, what would make your life more comfortable.
Things that worked well for me during the recovery:
My pelican head lamp (w/ Duracell batts, not energizer). A camp saw. A bunch of carabiners and some climbing rope. Crystal Lights and Poptarts. Duct Tape. A good first aid kit. Spyderco pocket knife. My favorite crow bar.
Something I wish I had at the time: more tire repair plugs. A V6 in my ranger (rolling trees with a 4 cyl was not good but I do miss that truck <totalled while parked in a hit and run>).
A good dog. I didn't have one at the time, I do now. Nothing like having someone watching your back for you.