Gardening in the City

Basil in yogurt container

Gardening in the City, Guest Post by Garret Stembridge

Living in a city doesn’t mean you have to forgo your love of gardening. Regardless of whether you enjoy growing flowers for decoration or fruits and vegetables for consumption, virtually every home – no matter the size – has space available for gardening. Of course, living in a tiny apartment may require a little creativity, but there are many ways to convert urban living spaces into a gardener’s oasis.

Consider Your Location

Every urban area is different, so your gardening options may vary depending on the unique nature of your neighborhood. For example, if you live in a first level apartment or a detached single family home, you may have the luxury of creating a more conventional garden in a front, back, or side yard. However, renters should make sure they check with their landlord and review the terms of their lease before they start making substantial changes to the existing landscaping. For those in upper level apartments, patios, balconies, and fire escapes are the most likely places to capture sunlight. For either situation, window boxes are another possibility.

Contain Yourself

Novice gardeners may want to test the waters by growing plants in a few simple pots before investing a great amount of time and money in an urban garden project. Although you can easily find expensive containers to display your vegetation, buying inexpensive ones – or, better yet, borrowing used ones from friends or family members – is a smart economic strategy. In fact, you can even repurpose old mason jars, plastic food containers, or other materials you have around the house without spending any money.
When focusing your efforts on traditional container gardening, remember that size matters. For example, plants that grow rapidly need plenty of room for their roots to expand. In contrast, planting tiny herbs in a large container may waste space you could have used for some other plant.

Going Vertical

Because most city dwellers will find themselves pressed for space, using any available vertical space will help maximize your gardening possibilities. For example, convert a discarded wooden pallet into a vertical plant container. First, secure any loose wooden boards and make sure no nails are exposed to prevent injury. Next, install landscape fabric or some other material to the rear of the pallet to provide space for soil and root growth, and to minimize damage to the wall on which the pallet will hang or lean against. Then, plant vegetation that will thrive in this sort of environment. Although plants with large, heavy leaves might not grow well in that sort of semi-horizontal position, trailing or cascading plants and herbs with more delicate leaves will likely do fine.

The same concept can work for converting a hanging pocket shoe organizer into a vertical plant container. For that project, the key is to ensure that the fabric material permits proper drainage and that the hooks used to secure the shoe-organizer-turned-garden-masterpiece are strong enough to handle the weight of the soil, plants, and water.
Others have had similar success using a wooden riddling rack, traditionally used to store or hold wine bottles. In the holes where the necks of wine bottles would usually rest, inserting soil and planting vegetation is a simple solution to an urban gardening dilemma.

2007_community_garden_Boston_516674869

Organize Your Neighbors

If you want even more space than a container garden or a vertical garden can provide, consult with your neighbors and talk about teaming up to find a space that you can use together. For example, some high-rise residents have convinced building owners to permit them to create a rooftop garden, with each participating resident paying a fee for a small plot of space. Others have used the common areas of their building, like a courtyard, to create a community garden. In other instances, people in an entire neighborhood band together and find vacant, unused space to transform into a neighborhood planting project. When going this route, make sure that you obtain approval from the appropriate individuals, such as the property owners or government officials, before you break ground.

Growing seeds

Use Indoor Space Thoughtfully

Even if you have no available outdoor space, indoor plants are always an option. Obviously, a wide variety of decorative indoor plants are available. In addition, however, many different citrus trees that provide edible fruit can grow indoors. Because these trees can be pricey, it’s best to do your research about how to properly care for them before making a purchase.

Using these tips, residents of urban areas can enjoy the amenities of a vibrant, bustling city, while still enjoying the freedom to create a garden and grow their own food. What are some of the things you’ve grown indoors? Do you have any tips you can share with new gardeners?

About the Author  Garret Stembridge is a member of the Extra Space Storage (www.extraspace.com) Internet marketing team. He contributes regularly at blog.extraspace.com. Extra Space Storage owns and operates over 900 self storage facilities, with many in California, including a Long Beach self storage location.

 

 

Don’t Become a Boiled Frog – The Need to Respond Appropriately to Problems

 

It is said that if you slowly increase the water temperature, a frog won't notice and will eventually and passively die in the pot.

   It is said that if you slowly increase the water temperature, a frog won’t notice and will eventually and passively die in the pot.

 

The following is a guest post from David Spero at Code Green Prep.

Yesterday, Bernie wrote about Five Reasons Why You May Have to Bug Out Even Though You Don’t Want To.  It is very important to realize that sometimes we need to bug out, but our inertia, our fear of change, and our positive hope that problems will quickly abate – all these things prevent us from responding as quickly as we should.

Much of what we think about and prepare for involves a sudden massive disaster that occurs with little or no warning.  We consider the effects of a sudden EMP or power grid failure that almost literally switches our lives and lifestyles from normal to nothing as quickly as flicking a light switch.  Not only is the event sudden, but it is also ‘in your face’ obvious, and we know we have to respond urgently quickly.

But we sometimes overlook the slower sorts of disasters that might also overwhelm society as we know it, and end up, not immediately, but gradually over time, with a Level 2 or 3 scenario [ed: see David's definitions of Level 1/2/3 scenarios here] just as seriously as a sudden unexpected disaster.

The real danger of the slower unfolding disasters is that by the time we even realize they are enveloping us, we might find our options have become constrained and reduced.  This is akin to the story of how to kill and cook a frog – you place it in warm water, then very slowly increase the temperature.  The frog won’t even realize it is being cooked, and by the time the water has reached boiling point, the frog has succumbed.

Examples of Boiled Frogs

Although there is some debate as to the truth of being able to truly boil a frog this way, there is no debate that society as a whole has experienced some amazing 180 degree turns on issues.  Activists seeking to bring social change have learned that the best way to make a major change is not to attempt a sudden revolution in public thought, but rather to make a series of gradual changes.  There are many examples of this.  To offer up several – and without expressing any moral judgment, but merely observing the huge change in social values that have occurred, we point to :

(a)  Drunk driving.  Two or three decades ago it was normal and acceptable for people to drink as much as they wished and then to drive home, somehow.  People would boast about their crazy/dangerous driving the next day; and if they were pulled over, they’d usually be let off with little more than a warning.  As you surely know, today people are ashamed to admit to driving drunk; the fines and penalties (including imprisonment and alcoholism treatments) have gone up and up, and the permissible levels of blood/alcohol have gone down and down.

(b)  Gay marriage.  It is not all that long ago that people could be sent to prison in some western nations if they admitted being homosexual, and it was widely ridiculed and decried by most people in general.  Now the opposite applies – people can be sent to prison for ‘hate crimes’ if they express a dislike for gay people, and society is inexorably tilting towards allowing not just gay relationships but also passing to such people all the rights and privileges of marriage and allowing gay people to be married.  One advocacy method used by gay rights advocates is to ‘name and shame’ people who oppose them – people are now embarrassed and ashamed to admit they dislike the thought of gay sex.

(c)  Guns.  A couple of generations ago, gun ranges were to be found in the basements of many schools.  Guns were common in schools and in society as a whole.  Nowadays, if a child even draws a picture of a gun in a schoolroom, they are liable to be expelled under a ‘zero tolerance’ policy towards guns in schools, and anyone bringing guns into a school is likely committing both a federal and state crime.

Okay, enough on that – point well taken, we hope.  In all these cases, the changes did not occur overnight, but have instead evolved, little by little, over years and even decades and common social custom now is pretty much the complete opposite of what it was a generation or so back.

It can be the same thing with negative situations – they start off subtly and slowly, and at first seem temporary, but as time passes, what was temporary becomes permanent, what was a problem becomes the new normal, and so it goes.  By the time we realize we’re in a severe situation, our options and ability to respond positively have diminished.

We’re not saying that an EOTW disaster would happen quite that slowly (although it might), but we are pointing out that things have a habit of ‘catching us unawares’ if we’re not closely monitoring whatever the process is that is evolving and thinking through its implications.

Furthermore, the reality is that no matter how keen a prepper we are, few of us really want to activate our prepping plans, possibly prematurely, and there’s also a subconscious inertia and resistance to change that will unduly delay our responding to events that need a timely response.  We need to be alert to changes and ready/willing/able to respond to them at the appropriate point – a point which of course should be before rather than after the time at which it becomes too late!

Some Slow Disasters

Let’s now think about some types of slowly evolving ‘disasters’ that might occur.  These tend to be more economic in nature than anything else – the first two examples are country-wide in nature, the third is regional, and the last two are more personal.

Electricity cost/shortages

We have seen electricity shortages come and go over the years, particularly in California in 2000 – 2001.  With the continued restrictions on building just about any type of new power station these days, it is far from inconceivable that electricity may not become in short supply again – a situation initially masked by it simply becoming more and more expensive, and then perhaps becoming rationed.

The ugly flip-side of the moves towards ‘smart energy management’ is a shift away from our universal expectation that electricity should always be available to us, whenever we want it, and for whatever purpose we need it for.  As we know from our planning for ‘grid-down’ futures, at present electricity truly is one of society’s greatest blessings, and whether we pay 5c or 50c per kWhr, it is a great value.

At what point would you decide that electricity had become too expensive and too short in supply, and in effect respond by going ‘off-grid’ and ‘growing your own’?  For an apartment dweller, this is of course more difficult because you don’t have vast expanses of roof to line with solar cells, or much control over the energy efficiency of your dwelling.

Petrol cost/shortages

Some parts of the country have seen gas prices brush and even break through $5/gallon on occasion in the past, sometimes for months at a time.  How long will it be before gas prices reach $5/gallon, all the time, everywhere?  And then $6?  And $7?  Even $10 and $15?

If that sounds unlikely, think of this.  Less than 25 years ago, gas was under $1/gallon.  It has gone up in price almost five-fold in 25 years.  For decades, petrol and other oil products were steadily reducing in price each year (in real terms after adjusting for inflation), and then they sort of flattened out, and now they are increasing at rates greater than inflation.  Here’s a useful graph showing prices from 1896 forwards in the UK, and here’s a spreadsheet of prices in the US from 1949.

Proponents of the ‘peak oil’ theory predict that gas prices will skyrocket in the next decade or less.  At the same time, it will become in shorter and shorter supply.  The latest move towards shale recovery has bought us some more time, and some more oil, but the ‘greenies’ are objecting and fighting this as furiously as they can.  A large – and growing – sector in our society doesn’t wish us to have access to cheap oil products.  They wish us to become oil-poor, as a way of – they believe – ‘saving the planet’.  In any case, as we’ve seen, even our domestic oil is going up in price, simply to match the market increases in oil prices worldwide.

At what point, at what price, will you say ‘enough already’ and give up on your present gas-based lifestyle?  What will you have/use/do as an alternative?  If your apartment isn’t centrally located, or at least close to good public transport, how will you respond?

Water cost/shortages

One of the biggest constraints on growth in much of the country is the availability of fresh pure water.  It is hard to know which is the bigger blessing in our modern lives – abundant affordable electricity, or abundant affordable water.  Happily, we presently have both, with the worst form of water shortages typically being nothing more severe than some restrictions on washing our cars during some of the summer months.

But the cost of water is steadily increasing, while its availability is becoming more and more constrained.  Last year (2013) we saw some of the worst droughts in decades affect crop production in much of the mid-west; all that means to us as consumers currently is little more than increased prices for meat, wheat and corn based products.  But with a decent steak now costing $15/lb or more – three times what it cost a decade or so back – how much further will we allow the costs of the basic essentials of our diet rise?

Even if water (and sewage) costs are built in to the rent you pay, you know that if the landlord has to pay more, then your rent is going to go up too.  At what point do these costs (and possible use restrictions) cause you either to move to a new region, or to retreat from normal society and to set up an alternate lifestyle, independent of your increasingly problematic and expensive city water and sewer services?

Unemployment

Maybe you lose your job.  Maybe you don’t get another job.  Month after month, you see your savings dwindle, and also, month by month, as time passes you become less and less appealing to potential employers.  All employers prefer to hire someone who is already employed, and all employers feel uncomfortable and worried if they see a person who has been out of work for many months.

As each month passes, you have less and less remaining capital.  At what point do you switch gears and change objectives and either move to another city to find work there, or instead ‘bug out’ for economic reasons, and switch to building a self-sustainable low-cost life elsewhere?

Neighborhood Decay

This is an interesting one (it has happened to me).  What happens if the area you live in starts to suffer from evolving urban demographics and becomes increasingly down-market?  The good news is your rent might stay the same or drop.  The bad news though – the nice middle class people who used to be your neighbors are leaving, and are being replaced by people you’re less comfortable living alongside.  Crime rates start to increase, and so on and so on.

At what point do you bail out yourself?  Do you simply move across town, or to a different city entirely, or is that the point where you move to your retreat?

Faster Evolving Disasters Can Catch You Unawares Too

Although we’re talking primarily about how a slow change in something can catch you unawares, by gradually evolving from insignificant to significant without you realizing or anticipating it, similar affects can come from faster developing problems too.

For example, and as Bernie mentioned yesterday, a forest fire heading your way.  At what point do you respond to the potential of being trapped?  Sure, you could rely on waiting for the authorities to officially notify you and command you to evacuate, but you might then find yourself with too little time to do a well planned well prepared bug-out.

The Longer You Wait, the Fewer Your Choices

The longer you wait to respond to a negative event, the less well able you can do so.  As you burn through your cash, it becomes harder and harder for you to consider options that don’t immediately start to bring in a cash flow again; and as you get closer to certain doom, your alternative options become fewer in number and less desirable in nature.

Furthermore, when it comes to an actual bug out situation, there is a world of difference between getting out of Dodge a day before the hordes all start to mass-migrate, or being part of the throng of evacuees because you dithered and delayed.  The day before, you can drive out of town on relatively uncongested roads and with the rule of law still more or less in place.  The day after, the freeways will become parking lots, the mobs will be rioting, and the rule of law will be disintegrating.  Any successful bug-out plan must have, at its core, the ability to act quickly and before the main mass of people slowly sluggishly start to respond.

We’re not saying you should panic the first time things turn sour on you in any part of life and living.  But we are saying to be careful about slow creeping problems that take away your independence and freedom, little by little.

The biggest problem people face is knowing when to say ‘enough, already’ and to activate some sort of formal response to a problem that has been gradually worsening.  Let’s look at one more example before considering a solution.

Don’t Lose ‘The Auction of Life’

If you’ve ever attended an auction, or browsed eBay, you’ve probably ended up buying something you didn’t want to buy.  I’ve bought a ridiculous car that I could barely drive off the lot, and I’ve paid way more than I told myself I would for things that I didn’t need.

Even when not being foolish yourself, you’ve surely seen countless examples of other people getting caught with the ‘auction fever’ which is the reason why auctions can work so well (for the auction house and seller).  We get caught into the excitement of the event, and we are also influenced by the people around us.

How many times have you told yourself ‘I won’t bid on this because I have no interest in it, nowhere to put it, and no need for it’ and ended up leaving the auction with the item under your arm?  How many times have you told yourself ‘I’ll bid up to $xx and then stop’ and ended up bidding way over that amount?

We all know how and why this happens.  But somehow, that knowledge doesn’t stop it from continuing to happen into the future.  Now for the ‘Auction of Life’.  This is one auction you can’t afford to mishandle.

The real trap in the ‘Auction of Life’ is that we keep revising the ‘trigger events’ we set ourselves.  We run the risk of recalibrating them and pushing out further and further the scenario which triggers our response.  We keep ‘bidding’ more and more in the ‘Auction of Life’ long after we reached the point where we’d dispassionately and originally told ourselves we’d stop.

How can you prevent this from continuing into your future?  That brings us to :

The Need to Create Lines in the Sand

Enough of auctions.  Let’s look now not at an example of the problem, but an example of the solution.

If you’ve ever attended a good self-defense class, you’ve been taught about the need to create clear ‘lines in the sand’ – events that clearly signal that the person who you are concerned about has evil intent, and events which cause you to confidently respond appropriately.

For example, you don’t like the look of the people walking towards you, so you cross the road.  If they cross the road to intersect with your path, that’s a clear ‘line in the sand’ that has been crossed.  You then might choose to turn the corner or cross the road back again – if they cross the road again too or follow you around the corner, then you know, for sure, this is not random circumstance.  Two lines in the sand have been crossed.  You might then call out – ‘Stop, Back Off, Go Away’.  If they continue towards you, you then present your pistol and say ‘Stop or I shoot!  Back Off!  Go Away!’

If the person still moves towards you, you then know ‘Okay, so he crossed the road to follow me when I did, then he crossed the road back to keep following me when I did, he ignored my warning, and now, with my gun pointed at him, he is still ignoring me’ and that gives you the confidence to know that your next action – an extreme one, but now an essential one, is justified and appropriate.

The key thing is having the confidence to act decisively on a major life-changing event.  In the example above, if you don’t have the confidence to act decisively, you risk becoming a victim rather than a victor, and if you don’t have the clear decision making process in your mind, you’ll be dithering for too long and suffer the consequences.  If you keep ‘raising the stakes’ in this ‘Auction of Life’ you’ll find that you’ll be the loser.

It is the same with anything else.  You need to set lines in the sand so that when they are crossed, you are aware of the event and ready with an appropriate response.

For example, you might decide ‘If gas prices reach $x, I will get an ultra-fuel efficient car’ and you might further decide ‘if gas prices reach $(x+y) then I will move from my current suburban lifestyle in which I need a car to an alternate lifestyle where the essential things are either within walking distance or conveniently served by public transport, or reachable by bicycle’.

There are other things, too.  You might decide ‘When the taxes in this state exceed the taxes in (another state you’d like to live in) then I’m going to make the move’.  You might decide ‘If this state restricts firearms and my right to self-defense, then I’ll move to a state with a more enlightened social policy on such things’.

Summary

Don’t risk becoming a boiled frog.

Create ‘lines in the sand’ that will sound alarms in your life when events cross over them, so that you realize ‘Hey, this is very different to what it used to be and what I want it to be’ and to allow you the freedom and flexibility to respond to changes in your life and lifestyle and life standards before it becomes too late to do so.

In particular, monitor the changes in your local environment and compare/contrast them to the changes in possible bug-out locations.  Maybe things truly are better somewhere else in the US, and maybe you should act positively to respond to the chance of a life-style improvement in such a better location.

David Spero publishes the Code Green Prep website.  He has a masters degree in business, has lived and worked internationally, speaks several languages, is a nationally accredited firearms instructor, a licensed ham radio operator, and a respected voice in the Prepper community.

 

 

Get the real deal. Whether bugging out or sheltering in place, you can never have enough clean water for survival: For your water purifier needs, please visit:

 For beginning preppers

Visit SafeCastle for your preparedness supplies:

Visit SafeCastle for your preparedness supplies
Good ideas for building a food storage plan can be found here:

 

5 Reasons Why You May have to Bug Out Even Though You Don’t Want to

One of the most hotly argued points in the prepping community is whether it is advisable to “shelter in place” or stay in your home or bug out when there is an emergency.  Many preppers would readily choose to shelter in place to be close to their emergency supplies.   Staying put would also be easier if you have no bug out retreat or destination.  I say it really depends on the type of disaster you are facing, so there is no definite answer to the shelter in place versus bugging out question.  Even though we would all rather stay at home, there are five reasons you may have to bug out:

1.  Natural disaster in your immediate region.   When hurricanes approach, people are asked to evacuate if they are in the direct path of the storm.  We’ve seen from previous disasters that in some cases, people in the worst hit areas who decided to stay put and become stranded and drowned.

2.  Fire approaching.  If you live in an area prone to wildfires, and one is headed in your direction, you will be asked to evacuate.  Authorities go around the neighborhood announcing the threat and give residents about 15 minutes to pack up belongings and head out.

3.  Industrial accident causing chemical spills, poisonous emissions or nuclear disaster.  We’ve all heard about the recent anniversary of the Fukushima, Japan earthquake and many of the areas affected have still not recovered.

In Houston, certain neighborhoods that are close to industrial sites have been affected by chemical spills and noxious gases.  In some cases, these neighborhoods have been evacuated.  Residents are able to return only after the “all clear” has been issued.  If you live in an area that can potentially be affected by these short term emergencies, have your go-bag ready and in a handy place at all times.

4.  Infrastructure has widespread damage.  If you live in an area that was hit by a disaster and has no electricity or water, with no estimate on when the fix will be made, you may want to get out and stay with relatives or friends for a while if you can.  If there is no water for a long period of time, sanitation will become compromised.  Similarly, if you live in an area where it gets hot or cold enough to endanger your health, and there is no power to make the house liveable, then you will be forced to leave the area.

5.  Post disaster, widespread looting/crime with no law enforcement available.  If you decided to stay put during a disaster but later find that there is no longer any “rule of law” being enforced in the area, then it will become too dangerous to stick around.  You may want to stay and defend what’s yours but if there is a risk you become overrun by a greater number, then you must consider bugging out.

No one wishes for any of these situations to happen, but the possibility exists.  The choice whether to stay put or bug out is entirely personal and will change according to circumstances.   Picturing various scenarios and what you would do in each one will help you make your own decision when the time comes.

 

 

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Find products that are equally functional for wilderness survival as well as urban preparedness:

 

 

 

 

Monday Musings 2/18/2013: Here We Go Again

Welcome to another Monday Musings where we cover blog updates and interesting stuff to share with you.

First the blog updates.

Daily news box added.   I’m working on adding a news box with headlines from NewsMax.  Still a work in progress, I’m still trying to fit the box properly.   We don’t cover politics in our discussions but as preppers, we do pay attention to the news.

Updates from our sponsor Camping Survival:

  • New survival food blog.  This site is dedicated to bringing delicious recipes using survival food, which you can eat now or when an emergency strikes. See http://campingsurvivalrecipes.com/

Don’t miss the sale.  There still time to take advantage of the Mountain House Sale at Ready Made Resources.  Sale ends today, February 18th.

Now for the links…

Another threat to internet privacy.  Just when you thought SOPA and PIPA were no longer on the table, here comes CISPA, the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act.  Only this time, tech companies such as Facebook and Microsoft are in favor of this one.  See this article from Lifehacker for more details about this new threat:  All About CISPA, the Bill that Wants to Erode Your Online Privacy

While we’re on the subject of privacy threats  EXCLUSIVE: Your employer may share your salary, and Equifax might sell that data

And now for something we really like   It’s still winter, but start collecting containers for your spring garden now.  Great ideas for container gardening (Willem).  Also see http://greenroofgrowers.blogspot.com/

Points to ponder on bugging out   A couple of good articles from Prepared Christian about threats and bugging out:  When would You Say It has Hit the Fan  

and Two Great Emails from Readers.  I particularly liked the section on No BOL?  You Still have Options about halfway down the page of the second article.

Take care and have a great week everyone!

 

 

For beginning preppers

 

ReadyMade Resources is a trusted source for your preparedness supplies:

 

Find products that are equally functional for wilderness survival as well as urban preparedness:

 
Debt Free Living

 

 

The Importance of Groups and Community in a Collapse

Today is Day Two of Preparedness Blog Crossover Week.

The Question of the Day:  How critical will groups and community be during a WROL situation? If important, what suggestions do you have for fostering it?

If there were some kind of societal collapse that results in a “WROL” (Without Rule of Law) situation, like-minded people will band together and form groups and help each other.  On one hand, communities may reach out and share knowledge, but unfortunately, on the other side of the coin, criminals may also form gangs and take advantage of the situation.  There is security in numbers, and people will need to work together toward a common goal of safety and survival.  They can also form a barter system to exchange goods and services.

To foster a community, one would have to reach out to others who have common interests.  This is easier said than done.  It is common knowledge that “loose lips sink ships” so you don’t necessarily want to put out an advertisement.  At the same time, people who feel differently about being prepared may also scoff at you and call you an alarmist, or a nut.  If you have family or friends you care about and trust, you can start by with a friendly non-scary conversation about books you’ve read, or TV shows you seen (fiction or non fiction) that cover the subject and gauge their reactions.  If there absolutely no interest, then you may have to wait until they are ready or move on to others.  I admit is part is challenging but worthwhile.

What do you think?  Post in the comments below how you feel about communities during a collapse situation and if you’ve had any success finding other people who are interested in preparing just like you.

Don’t forget to check out the following sites participating and see what they think, in this week’s special blog crossover!

ModernSurvivalOnline.com

IfItHitsTheFan.com

The Retreat

reThinkSurvival.com

DoomandBloom.net

SeasonedCitizenPrepper.com

 

 Please visit LECOR by clicking here:

Let’s Talk Trash

Thinking about trash disposal is not the most glamorous side of emergency preparedness, but is worth some consideration and planning.   With literally tons of trash being generated daily, what would happen if garbage collection in your area were to be interrupted for a period of time?  Or if there were an economic collapse and cities could no longer afford to pay for scheduled trash pickup?  It was getting bad after Hurricane Ike, when it took about a week to 10 days for trash pickup to resume in many areas. It was such a relief when the trucks started coming around again.

If trash collection were to stop for an indefinite period of time, accumulating garbage in the streets will attract flies, rats, cockroaches and other pests.  These pests carry disease, and it will only be a matter of time before an epidemic starts to spread.

It only takes a couple of days between pickups for those apartment bins to fill up to overflowing.   Stock up on short term waste disposal supplies such as:

  • large heavy duty trash bags – lawn and leaf bags, or construction bags
  • an extra garbage can or two
  • bleach for sanitizing
  • gloves you can use for handling trash
  • insecticide for pest control

Longer Term Options

Burn it.  Burning trash is not be a good option in the city due to the danger of fire.  It would be even worse in a grid down situation, if there is no fire department available.

Bury It.  You may have to find an empty lot to bury the trash.

Composting.  You can deal with organic wastes such as food scraps, by composting.  This can be done outside if you have a yard or in a bucket.

Recycling and Repurposing.  People will find new uses for all sorts of items if the shops were closed or if they have no money to buy things.

It wouldn’t be a bad idea to form new habits and minimize our garbage output.

  1. Start being conscious of how much is getting thrown out in your household.  Are you overly dependent on packaged goods such as frozen entrees?  Try cooking from scratch and you will notice how much less waste and trash it generates.
  2. Think about how you recycle or re-purpose certain items.  I save 2-liter soda bottles and 64 ounce juice bottles for water storage.  I also keep spray bottles with the plastic nozzles so I can make homemade cleaners.
  3. Minimize food trash by using up leftover food instead of throwing it out.
  4. Get into the habit of consolidating and tearing up large pieces of garbage into smaller more manageable pieces.  As a bonus benefit, you will save money by using less  garbage bags.

 

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Can You Evacuate Your Home in 90 Minutes?

Listening to the news today about flooding in the wake of Hurricane Isaac, we heard about residents near Lake Tangipahoa Dam in Mississippi being ordered to evacuate, due to damage to the dam and possible flooding.  About 60,000 people were affected.  Fortunately, as of this writing, the dam has not failed as emergency management personnel are trying to patch it.

Mr. Apt Prepper and I had a long discussion about what we would do if were in that situation.  I was getting stressed out just thinking about it.

We came up with a plan on what we would do.  Here are some thoughts and ideas:

  • If you live in the ground floor or even the lower floors of the apartment building, in a low lying area, your home is at a high risk of flooding.  If you lived in a higher floor, your belongings may be spared getting soaked, but you’d still have to evacuate to avoid getting stranded.
  • Even if the home is spared from flooding, there is always a possibility of looters taking advantage of empty houses.  You’ll want to lock up your home as well as you can.
  • Make as list of anything you would not want to lose so you know what to grab in an emergency.
  • To avoid panic, each family member should have a designated task.  One can grab the computer and any small electronics, someone else can grab the safe that has important documents, smaller kids can go to their room and take their favorite stuffed animal etc.
  • Having a bug out bag or go bag ready for each family member will also save time, instead of having to pack clothes, shoes, first aid kit etc.
  • Most emergency shelters do not allow pets.  Make arrangements with relatives now, just in case.  Or, look up hotels or motels that are pet friendly, so your family and pets will have someplace to stay until it’s safe to return.
  • If you had to leave your pet behind, leave plenty of food and water.  Window stickers indicating the presence of pets can be left for emergency personnel.
  • A cash stash would really come in handy for a hotel stay.     Don’t leave home without it.
  • Most renter’s insurance does not cover flood damage – review your policy on what is actually covered; if you live in a flood prone area, you may have to consider flood insurance.
  • Don’t forget to notify family and friends regarding your whereabouts.

Hurricane and flood prone areas are not the only ones at risk for evacuation.  Brush fires, hazardous chemical leaks can also cause a sudden evacuation.  Everyone has different circumstances:  it is up to each of us to come up with a plan.  Give this some thought now, before anything happens.

 

 

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Help your College Student Prepare for Emergencies

Back to school season is in full swing, and these last few weeks were spent preparing kids for the first day of school.

We have a couple of nieces and nephews who are going away to college in a few weeks.  This got me thinking what can be done to at least get them prepared for emergencies.   I’ve listed a three layered approach, with the third choice is the most extensive but also the most encompassing.  It all depends on your relationship with the teen, the extent of their involvement with prepping, what you want to prepare for and how much you wish to spend.

I.  Give a prepping themed “going off to college” gift that will be useful in an emergency or at least get them started to think about being prepared:

  • solar cell phone charger
  • multi-tool or Swiss Army Knife
  • paracord bracelet

II.  Assemble a Power Outage/Earthquake/Hurricane Emergency Kit

Include in a small decorative box or basket, items that they will be able to use for a variety of emergencies such as power outage, earthquake or hurricane.  Include the following:  at least three days worth of water bottles, water purifier, easy to prepare foods (canned foods with can opener) or food bars such as Mainstay Energy Bar, high energy snacks such as peanuts, flashlight/radio/charger and batteries, and pocket sized First Aid kit.  Remember most dorm rooms or off campus apartments are small:  everything has to be reasonably sized and efficiently packed. The items have to be simple to use and do not require special preparations.  They may be in a panic when the emergency happens, so include a note with some instructions.

III.  Assemble a Get Home Bag

In the movie Zombieland, the beginning scene showed one of the main characters getting attacked by a zombie in his dorm room.  After this horrible experience, his first instinct initially was to just get home.  This is fiction, but in a real emergency, anyone would want to get home as quickly as possible.  I think the most efficient way to prepare in a dorm would be to assemble a Get Home bag.

In a backpack, include the following items:

  • personal water filter or set of Hydropacks
  • food bars
  • cash (to be used for transportation)
  • First Aid kit
  • a change of clothes and underwear (weather appropriate)
  • good wool socks
  • comfortable shoes
  • rain gear (umbrella and rain poncho)
  • flashlight/weather radio
  • solar charger
  • utility knife (check campus guidelines) or multi-tool
  • signal mirror
  • whistle
  • lighter or matches
  • tarp
  • self protection such as pepper spray
  • small hygiene items such as toothbrush, toothpaste, soap, floss, toilet paper (with cardboard removed), liquid hand sanitizer or wipes, contact lens solution etc.

Adjust the items according to the student’s needs and situation. Have a conversation about what is included in the backpack and situations where it may come in handy.  Include them in your texting tree and explain how it works as well as plans where the family can meet in case of extreme emergency.  As with any emergency preparations, we hope to never have to use them, but  good to have just in case.

 

 

Please visit LECOR by clicking here:

 

 

 

 

This $6 Item Will Help you Prepare for the Next Power Outage

Hurricane season has started on June 1st and we always update our supplies at this time.  It’s always a good idea to check your inventory, check for expiration dates for food and battery supplies. We’ve lost a lantern and other gear from leaking and corroded batteries, and have learned to remove batteries when storing for long term.

We have a fairly large supply of batteries from a couple of years ago.  We could not tell how fresh they are:  some are approaching expiration and some are partially used from a power outage or two.  Not wanting to just toss them out without checking their usefulness, Mr. Apt Prepper decided to pick up a battery tester from Lowe’s.  It costed around $6 plus tax and it works pretty well.

All you have to do is touch the top and bottom of the battery to the tester and the dial will show how much battery life is left.  He just checked each on while watching TV and was finished in a couple of hours.

Consider picking one up for your emergency stash and use it right away.  Whether your area is prone to hurricanes, ice storms, tornadoes or earthquakes, you will need to use batteries at some point.  Now we know our batteries will work when we need them the most.

For more preparedness tips, read my book:

 

 

Monday Musings 6/4/2012: Hurricane Season Begins Edition

Welcome to another Monday Musings where we take a look at noteworthy posts that I happen to come across.

Quick blog updates.   These next two weeks I will be busy with work projects but I will be posting as scheduled.  I may not be able to respond to most comments as normal.  I read them all (except for spam), so please do not hesitate to share what’s on your mind anyway.

We have a new banner ad, please welcome The Prepper’s Pantry to our family of sponsors.  Our banner ad sponsors help Apartment Prepper “keep the lights on” so I am grateful to everyone for your support.

Help out Apartment Prepper!   Sometimes I am not sure if I am reaching all the apartment preppers out there.   I hope to help out more apartment preppers become get ready for any emergencies.  Please vote for Apartment Prepper on SurvivalTop50′s Reader’s Choice Awards.  http://www.survivaltop50.com/readers-choice-awards/  Click on the right most star for Apartment Prepper  Thank you all!

It’s hurricane season!  This year’s hurricane season is predicted to be “average”   according to weather forecasters.  It doesn’t mean we can all be relieved and forget about preparing.  We’re reviewing and renewing our emergency supplies as we speak.  It’s also “taste test” week at the Apartment Prepper household.  This week we’re trying out a few entrees from Mountain House and Natural High that were bought on sale at REI.  eFoods Direct sent me a couple of samples that we will include in the taste test as well.

What’s up with all this zombie-like behavior? I was alerted to this article by fellow blogger Jack over at Suburban Survival.  It seems there has been a rash of bizarre, twisted behavior – people suddenly running amok and acting like zombies.  It almost sounds like fiction, if it weren’t on actual news article:  ‘Zombie apocalypse’: Horror movie genre becomes twisted, real-life news headlines.  Reminds me of a movie I recently saw on DVD called The Crazies.  Honestly, I don’t even know what to say.

Practice, practice.  I liked this post over a What if its todayThe more you rely on things…  Maybe we should practice going without certain things that we rely on heavily- car, electricity, internet etc. and try to survive without them for a short while.  I’m not ready to give up any of them, but it’s something to think about.

The nose knows.  I had to chuckle when I read Donna Freedman’s Don’t throw it out until you’ve smelled it.  We’ve experimented with expired foods here at Apartment Prepper- nice to know we’re not the only ones that test the limits!

Take care and have a great week!
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