Most ramen goes bad after about five years or so. Ask me how I know. D:
that's interesting.
like rice, I'd assume dry, uncooked pasta would basically have a shelf life of infinity as long as it was properly stored and kept pest-free.
Most ramen goes bad after about five years or so. Ask me how I know. D:
I didn't know they had oil but I guess that explains it. Shelf life of white rice is essentially infinity. Brown rice much less. Pasta is basically infinity also, though maybe only the white stuff.Ramen noodles have a lot of oil, that causes them to turn rancid & nasty when stored too long.
When sandy happened, my folks were without power for about a month in the middle of winter. People were lining up for miles to get gas at certain gas stations (rationed to 1 gallon or $20 each) and a lot of basic necessities were in short supply, including water. But people adapted and carried on with their lives. They still went to work and whatnot.
You sound in good shape, but deer are irrelevant. Any game of any size would be hunted to extinction in no time at all if there was an end of society
Re. firestarters I have one of the swedish fire steel type things. Doesn't have magnesium shavings in a pile, but rather just a spark caused by running a knife down it. It is cool and very indestructible, but then a bunch of strike-anywhere matches kept water proof are probably better. Will last forever, and work on more materials than sparks.
Depends. Anything deadly enough to prompt an end to society will take a good chunk of humanity with it, and lot of whomever's left over would have no idea how to hunt, assuming they even had the materials to do so.
That said, I'd definitely make for the coast and find a good fishing spot. Fishing is a lot easier than hunting. In a good spot you'll get more calories/nutrition for a lot less effort.
I would say an EMP attack which is as likely to happen as anything else is a scenario where the majority is left alive to fend for itself.
Depends. Anything deadly enough to prompt an end to society will take a good chunk of humanity with it, and lot of whomever's left over would have no idea how to hunt, assuming they even had the materials to do so.
That said, I'd definitely make for the coast and find a good fishing spot. Fishing is a lot easier than hunting. In a good spot you'll get more calories/nutrition for a lot less effort.
I would say an EMP attack which is as likely to happen as anything else is a scenario where the majority is left alive to fend for itself.
Feb would have sucked, and it would also be different if the power outages had affected multiple large cities at the same time, then emergency response is spread out very thinly. Our reliance on the grid is sacrosanct and its upset causes immediate issues. Considering so many people think the grid is not terribly robust I think it is worth considering a real possibility of extended power outages affecting millions of people, and how to deal with it.Sandy happened in October.
it was cold for October, but even without heat, my house was more like "throw an extra blanket on top of the bed" than shivering and freezing... may have been a much different story if it happened in February and you had to deal with snow removal, ice, and all that on top of the power loss and gas shortages.
Probably true. Problem with being on open water in such a scenario is you're extremely visible.Fishing is a lot easier than hunting. In a good spot you'll get more calories/nutrition for a lot less effort.
Agree and I really have a hard time even seeing how a biological pandemic would take out humanity at this point. We can see from all the various outbreaks of various flus that CDC and equivalent are on it like a fat kid on smarties. If you really had some crazy The Stand type thing going out of control, the news would be hammering down 24/7 for people to stay in their homes, and quarantines I think would deal with the issue fairly effectively, while national guard or similar move around issuing food, so as to limit spread until those who have it die out and then we can all get back to life. Other than a fast-acting zombie plague (and it has to result in fast zombies, not the idiot walking dead kind, which pose zero threat), I think we're ok, and zombie plague seems unlikelyEnding society would take something equivalent to a massive bird flu epidemic, asteroid hit, or the Yellowstone caldera erupting.
The gov has researched it and I recall perusing some white paper issued to congress by some US EMP group. My recollection is that it's really not a terribly huge concern. You'll be able to find some people who think that North Korea can now release an EMP that takes out the US electrical system, but it's total nonsense. I think that there was some record solar flare a hundred years ago (?) though that, if it happened today, is generally agreed it would cause substantial blackouts, and it has something like a 5% chance of happening in any given decade (i.e. pretty good odds, really). My memory is fuzzy, though, and probably a convolution of actual facts and also total rubbish I read online or see people spouting on doomsday preppers, so don't take my word as gospel.What's the max effective radius of an EMP blast? I've always thought an EMP could at most knock out a single city.
If so, someone attacking the USA would require thousands of EMP's spread across the country to do significant damage.
Seems more likely a solar flair would fry the grid.
What's the max effective radius of an EMP blast? I've always thought an EMP could at most knock out a single city.
If so, someone attacking the USA would require thousands of EMP's spread across the country to do significant damage.
Seems more likely a solar flair would fry the grid.
Honestly that's like waiting for wild fires in the area to order fire insurance. Prepping, insurance, anything by the time you need it it's already too late to get it. A typical grocery store only has a few dozen to a few hundred items of a particular variety at any given time, and it can be exhausted quickly.I already have guns and ammo, and if it's going to last longer then 1+ months...my water supply would be an issue.
If there was something going on, I would try to hit up the markets as fast as I could and purchase as much canned/long term food as I can.
funny story though, when my dad bought his first car he received a letter from the ministry of defense stating that his car had been "drafted" and in the event of war the car had to report to the nearest army base.
Pretty sure he's in Denmark.russia?![]()
