Posted on 07/22/2010 3:39:45 PM PDT by Kartographer
Natural disasters--such as a flood, hurricane, or blizzard--often come without warning. Stocking non-perishable food items ahead of time (and choosing wisely what you include) will help you weather the storm with less stress.
By: Vanessa DiMaggio
Fueling your body during an emergency is very different from your everyday diet. Because youll probably expend more energy than you normally would, you should eat high-energy, high-protein foods. And because you have a limited supply, the higher-quality foods you eat--and the less of them--the better. In a disaster or an emergency you want those calories, says Barry Swanson, a food scientist at Washington State University . You want some nutrients and some fibersomething to keep your diet normal.
(Excerpt) Read more at shine.yahoo.com ...
Chocolate has enough fat to balance it out with all the peanuts and other nuts in the trail mix. High fructose does me in many times more than white sugar. Sometimes I become a pure spiteful itch. So I am careful about when and what I eat. the fake pancake syrup on an empty morning stomach is a total disaster.
I agree.
Protein is a much needed component to the pantry
There were my only vice in life(g).
:^)
The hazards of being an unserious poster, like me...
That’s a great idea. Thanks!
Thanks. I don’t know what any of that means, but I will try to find that out.
I have to check out the night lights that stay on. We do have a crank radio, but the crank flashlights are a good idea too. Thanks!
Thank you! I’ve copied your suggestions and those of the other posters who responded to me. I’m very grateful to you all.
I’ve seen hand pumps albeit expensive some places on the internet. Our well is 120 ft, too deep for regular hand pumps.
What we do, since we lived here without electric for a few years, is have storage tanks (about 3500 gallons altogehter, maybe up to 4500 if we fill everything) and a generator to run the well pump. Even with intermittent electricity, if people have storage tanks, they can have water when power is out. If we are very careful, we can last a few weeks with our tanks (little to no laundry or watering).
Catchment from rain is very useful, need tanks or cisterns for that. Good for watering.
I highly recommend Berkefeld water filters, no high tech, works for most things that can get in water.
I remember something about solar powered well pumps and I would like to find one.
Ping to post #150. I neglected to include you.
I just saw your locale - try the “Ocean State Job Lots” stores for the ‘crank’ lights/nightlights, etc. I’ve been very lucky in getting heavily marked down lights at these stores.
That’s also where I got a bunch of emergency/nightlight setups.
Attention all shoppers
It’s Cancellation Day
Yes the Big Adios
Is just a few hours away
It’s last call
To do your shopping
At the last mall
You’ll need the tools for survival
And the medicine for the blues
The sweet treats and surprises
For the little buckaroos
It’s last call
To do your shopping
At the last mall
We’ve got a sweetheart Sunset Special
And all of the standard stuff
‘Cause in the morning-that gospel morning
You’ll have to do for yourself when the going gets tough
Roll your cart back up the aisle
Kiss the checkout girls goodbye
Ride the ramp to the freeway
Beneath the blood orange sky
It’s last call
To do your shopping
At the last mall
I’ve been to Ocean State Job Lots many times. Thanks!
No No No, don’t warn everyone! Someone has to stand on the bridge and wait for FEMA to come and save them!
Amazing how easily that gets lost in the flurry of people selling freeze-dried emergency rations. I think that was the point of the article -- basic emergency preparedness is something completely separate from stocking the doomsday bunker.
It's really simple: Just keep several days' supply of a few staples, and use the oldest (but not expired) ones first. My emergency diet would be a bit thin on meat (just tuna), but I have a pretty varied diet as long as I can find a means of boiling water. If the crisis lasts more than a couple of weeks, well, this area has a burgeoning squirrel and rabbit population.
I don't consider flour or corn meal emergency supplies, because I assume that in an emergency I'd only be able to boil water, if that. I'd add to your list:
- Ramen noodles, or cup-a-soup, or something of that sort;
- Ensure or Slim-fast or something of that sort, which is a meal replacement in a can, easy to chug down if you're ill, injured or just too busy to prepare a meal;
- Most importantly, potable water. One gallon per person per day.
One other tip: Ice. If you have an ice maker or ice trays, just get in the habit of filling any available space in the freezer with ice. It will keep your freezer cold longer in a power outage, you can use it in a good cooler for a couple of days, and the cost is infinitessimal. It's a luxury unless you have insulin or other meds that have to be refrigerated, in which case it's absolutely essential.
One very important item I left off my list is some kind of vegetable oil or shortening. As long as I have a fire I can cook corn meal and flour. In the civil war, the Rebs lived mostly on corn meal. They made it into “smush”. They cooked some bacon or salt pork in a pan, then stirred the corn meal into the grease and cooked it. They either ate it that way, or molded it onto their ramrods and baked it over the fire.
Flour can be made into flat bread by mixing it with water and heating it on a frying pan or flat stone that’s been in a fire for a while.
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