My electronics (FRS, etc.) are powered by AA and AAA rechargeables, and I have low volume solar charging for essentials. Only my LRF requires electricity as far as shooting electronics goes, and I rotate a fresh stock of 9V and chargers for whatever batteries I have/need. I have made a point of keeping my shooting techniques/technologies in the 20th, rather than 21st, century.
Forty years of teaching Scouts that you can't plug your Game Boy into a tree, and that a cellphone is just a beacon for anyone who cares to home in and mess with you, has honed a set of standards, practices, and expectations that place minimal concern about the grid going down. The first thing I'd do if the grid went down would be to pull the battery out of my phone.
MRE's can be a bitch long term, but so were C-Rats, and we managed months in the field on them. We have guns, we can hunt. Eating people brings
prion disease (
Kuru, a very ugly way to go), so leave that long pig alone. If someone wants to join you and their hands are shaky; keep an eye on them. if they laugh uncontrollably, get them out.
Water is our biggest concern. Living here in the
High Lonesome, stockpiling for the first 30 days is crucial, after that, most of the competition for water has died of thirst. Owning cats means cat litter jugs. Washed out, filled, and a few drops of Clorox (32 drops per cat litter jug) allows for cheaper water storage; we just have to defend it. Men require a minimum daily water consumption for about a gallon (one quarter of a cat litter jug), women slightly less, usually a factor of body mass. People do not all come in one size, so these values vary, and this is a minimum. Rationing water is flat out dumb, the body is the best place to carry adequate water. Just as you don't drink all of your water at once, don't put it all away until some future time. Use what you need. For average people, thirty days, 120 gallons (30 cat litter jugs); and that's a minimum for human consumption; hygiene, etc., requires that much as well, or more. Clorox is not
the best water storage purifier.
I have no intention of retreating to a lifestyle that requires me to be totally self sufficient. That's for hermits, and as we should all understand, they all tend to die alone. Communities are what survive, and building a community is a better approach than individual total self sufficiency. You can't put off doing that until the emergency arrives; it's something you do every day.
Yes, some folks will need to curbed, or more; but when a community is already bonded as a unit, tough tasks get easier. When life threatening emergency arrives, and it's long term; tolerance becomes more of a luxury than a necessity.
I carry my weight, you carry yours; and don't be pestering me for some of mine, grasshopper... See that little hole in the front of this thing in my hand? Something lives down in there that you don't want coming your way, grasshopper.
First to the curb, collectivists. What's mine is not theirs, somebody could die if they try getting too insistent. Not my plan, but such things could happen. I am not planning to be steamrollered.
I expect to die one day. Nothing I do will prevent that. Some of the things I do will make it take longer, but nobody's perfect at that. Yet.
Greg