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Thread: Prepper vs Prudent

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    At this point in time... gssixgun's Avatar
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    Lightbulb Prepper vs Prudent

    I was just pondering on this today, of all days 12/21/2012

    I was thinking everything I have done since June of this year could be looked at either way..

    Built a new re-loading bench and started re-loading more ammo

    Prepper = Always has stocks of ammo

    Prudent = I had torn down my old bench to make way for more Razor Restore areas, a few years back, reloading is much cheaper than buying retail and allows me to custom tailor my loads.

    Filled the 1000 gallon Propane Tank in July and topped it off on Dec 1st

    Prepper= Stockpiling for the Apocalypse

    Prudent= Propane is much cheaper in July and we top off before the snow gets deep every year



    All fuel tanks and extra tanks are filled and treated with Stabilizer by Dec 1st, the vehicles are never allowed to get below 1/2 tank after that

    Prepper = Hoarding fuel for the Doomsday

    Prudent = During the cold winter month the tanks can get water from condensation if allowed to go low so we treat them and keep them topped off.. Also if stranded during a blizzard you want to live through the night by keeping the heater running..


    All vehicles that are not driven weekly are set up with battery trickle chargers and full treated fuel tanks

    Prepper = Ready to Bug Out at a moments notice

    Prudent = Batteries cost money and fuel tanks have less problems if they are kept full over the winter

    The Pantry and Freezers are full and we have at least 6 months of food stocked at all times

    Prepper = Ready for the down fall of the food supply chain

    Prudent = Buying in bulk saves money and we have the room to keep in stocked by shopping the Sales

    We keep an emergency bag in the rear of all vehicles

    Prepper = A "Go Bag" should be stocked and at arms reach always

    Prudent = There is really a good chance of getting stuck in a Blizzard up here or having to hike home from the highway, we keep a bag with "Pink Lady Candles", extra socks, winter boots, extra gloves, a waterproof hooded jacket and an MRE in each Rig from Nov - May.. Cell phone service is spotty up here and is worse during snowstorms..

    Generators and Kerosene heaters are serviced and full

    Prepper = Ready for the power grid to collapse

    Prudent = The power goes down at least twice per year out here, if it goes down on a day we get 2 feet of snow (Monday Night) it could be down for days so you have to circulate water or lose the pipes..



    So really what is the difference between being Prepped for the Mayan Apocalypse (Dec 21st 2012) and being Prudent for the first day of Winter (Dec 21st 2012) Every time I watch the "Doomsday Prepper" show I smile a bit as I think "Yeah I do that, or I have that, but that ain't why" of course we all know that it would be boring if were just being Prudent..

    My answer is that to many people have given over their own survival to others and don't accept the responsibility to be ready for the unexpected.. Therefore what was once just plain common sense, is now looked upon by many as "Prepping for Doomsday"

    ps: I just picked the Mayan Apocalypse because of today's date you can "Prep" for many other doomsday scenarios..
    Last edited by gssixgun; 12-21-2012 at 08:02 PM.

  2. #2
    Senior Member tiddle's Avatar
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    I know where I'm headed when the zombie apocolypse/ wwz starts. Got room for one more?
    gooser likes this.
    Mastering implies there is nothing more for you to learn of something... I prefer proficient enough to not totally screw it up.

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    At this point in time... gssixgun's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by tiddle View Post
    I know where I'm headed when the zombie apocolypse/ wwz starts. Got room for one more?
    One more hehehe you will have to figure that out with all my city friends that have said the exact same thing

    "If the SHTF I am heading to Glen's place" they consider that a valid survial strategy
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    what Dad calls me nun2sharp's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by gssixgun View Post

    "If the SHTF I am heading to Glen's place" they consider that a valid survial strategy
    Although I am not into the "prepping" thing I do try to keep a full pantry and I hear the same thing, and I wonder if I should help or tell them to p off if something should happen such as tornadoes, ice storms, maybe even zombies. Any body with any sense knows to at least keep enough food and TP in the pantry. At least a 30 day supply of extras. I dont know how many times this has either saved us or helped someone else in times of job loss, health issues or other assortments of life's little calamities. Right now it may be the best savings plan out there considering interest earned versus rate of inflation. If I had to eat an investment I think canned foods would be the one most palatable.
    Last edited by nun2sharp; 12-21-2012 at 08:16 PM.
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    Senior Member tiddle's Avatar
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    One more hehehe you will have to figure that out with all my city friends that have said the exact same thing

    "If the SHTF I am heading to Glen's place" they consider that a valid survial strategy

    New reality show idea? sixgun survial showdown
    Mastering implies there is nothing more for you to learn of something... I prefer proficient enough to not totally screw it up.

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    Senior Member Havachat45's Avatar
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    Well the appointed time has passed and I'm still here and I hear traffic moving so, I figure, that the world hasn't ended yet or we are a bit behind the rest of you.....
    nun2sharp likes this.
    Hang on and enjoy the ride...

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    Senior Member blabbermouth Substance's Avatar
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    As long as everyone remembers your first job was to reload plenty of ammo
    For When they try come and barge in LOL
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    Senior Member blabbermouth 10Pups's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by gssixgun View Post
    One more hehehe you will have to figure that out with all my city friends that have said the exact same thing

    "If the SHTF I am heading to Glen's place" they consider that a valid survial strategy
    Of course you are well defended against being over run by friends ?
    Good judgment comes from experience, and experience....well that comes from poor judgment.

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    Having grown up in the Snow Belt, most of what Glen describes are part of the seasonal chores. Like changing the window screens for the storm windows in the fall and back again in the spring. Wasn't anything political about it. Just being ready to last until the county cleared the roads after a snowfall and you can get back into your daily routine.

    What's different, I think is the "us vs them" mentality. Where I grew up, if a farmer was hurt or ill at harvest time, the neighbors would spend a day out of their harvest time to bring in the others crops. If there was a death in the family, glazed hams and scalloped potatoes from the neighbors would be on the doorstep the morning of the wake to feed the visitors.

    I now live in the NYC area and I've seen that same "neighbor helping neighbor" attitude during any number of difficult times, from black outs and snow storms to 9/11 to Hurricane Sandy. It's part of the human make up to help each other. Like it or not, we live in a collective, we have mutual needs for each other and we come to the mutual aid of others. By instinct.

    So the questions I have for those who live in fear of the breakdown in the rule of law is this. Which laws? And how much fear do you enjoy?

  10. #10
    Senior Member blabbermouth 10Pups's Avatar
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    I have always been interested in nature and how people lived off the land. I believe I could do that but yikes, no practice planned. I have tasted things like cat tails and wild celery. I am with big spender when it comes to SHTF prep. I am 20 minutes walk to horse and how much crap do you need to carry ? Enough to get what you need to survive off the land and avoid everybody else. Including the spender clan.
    Good judgment comes from experience, and experience....well that comes from poor judgment.

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