namelessfly wrote:Your shelter in place advice is right on unless the industrial infrastructure that supports you breaks down. Unless you have a well with a hand pump or have stockpiled water and fuel, canned goods and jerky rather than frozen foods, your preparations might be in vain. If rioting becomes widespread (happening now in Missouri), you will have your supplies taken from you and may be get infected too.
One horrific feature of Ebola is that it can be spread through semen, so anarchy could enable the fraction of male survivors to spread the disease through rape.
Shelter in place with your stockpile of supplies, but those supplies better include guns and ammo.
Well, I did say it did not guarantee survival, only that it was better than zero resources. It expands one's options. Short of utter catastrophe some sheltering at home is what has worked in the past as well as anything. Is it proof against riots etc on my street? Of course not.
If a meteor crashes thorough my roof I'm a goner also. No point gaming that I die, eh? In fact we do happen to have water resources and wood heat resources and are not in a city. Most of our food is not in a freezer.
However, one small freezer tip for power outages. Cook your meat before freezing it, then pack it in meal size packages for your household. Example, buy a big pork roast on sale. Roast. Cut and package. Saves you money and if the power goes out for a while cooked meat keeps longer than raw meat. Hopefully you have handled it in a hygienic manner and thus it is also much less germy than raw meat. This is also convenient for making dinner in perfectly normal times. Already cooked roast or whatever, in right amount for you, only needs to be thawed and thoroughly reheated.
With the power out you can also reheat thawing meat supply. Keep the lid on it with steam coming out. It is fairly sterile in there as long as you do not open the lid. After serving a meal from it put the lid back on and reheat well. Sterile-ish again. Got a wood stove or camp stove or grill, and fuel for it? There ya go. And have blankets etc to put on the freezer in power outages. Will stay cold a good long time. Doing this stuff in advance is better than just sitting there crying and wringing one's hands, watching raw meat spoil, etc. eh. We get storm power outages every darn year here.
Should I talk about fairly sanitary toilet substitute? 5 gallon pail, dry grass or peat or coir brick blocks -garden center item - sprinkle the dry stuff, sawdust anything like that on your ... donation to cover it. Cover pail with lid. surprisingly fly and stink free. See book, The Humanure Handbook, by Joseph C. Jenkins.
One hopes one never needs this, but if you do.... yeah, good to know how to deal with it.
It is scary to me how few folks have any fall back capacity at all, not even a few days. But, hey, they are big boys and girls and I sure cannot make anyone do anything, nor do I want to do that.
I also suggested having a bug out capacity. Full gas tank always, back pack of essentials and good shoes for walking should that be needed. Paper maps. I didn't say blankets and tarp etc in car but those do not hurt and might help in something or other ... including a winter wait for AAA to show up
In bad times do not announce you have resources -duh - . Do not grill outside. Cover your windows. Keep the lowest possible profile. If the neighbors are congenial, align with them for a neighborhood watch sort of thing if it seems useful in whatever the situation is. Have guns? Have them handy. And lots of ammo. Remember, I'm ex Navy and so is my hubbie. We are not pacifists, ok?
The Spanish priest died today in Madrid.
I do not have a cow's foggy if Ebola ... or anything else ... is gonna try for being a pandemic this year, here. Not psychic. I'm just in favor of being a bit more... having a few more options and resources on hand all the time and being situationally aware without turning into a paranoid, stressed out, tin foil hat person.
Call it a little insurance policy I wrote for us long ago and have kept current for over 45 years now. Perfect? Nope. But sure beats nuthin'.
edit by moi I have just read that people with Honorable discharges are former rather than ex. Ok, so hubbie and I are former Navy