John in Montreal
Well-known member
- Joined
- Sep 19, 2021
- Messages
- 106
- Reaction score
- 79
Once the apocalypse starts there will be lots of empty houses
I Applaud your dedication to readyness.
I agree, except the part about that 'if'.
I lived and worked all over this particular planet.
We were there for:
* a glacier release flooding major cities, after the volcano flattened everything above-ground for a hundred thousand hectares... during a blizzard
* civil collapse, until the end of the week...
...then, starving and filthy and dehydrated, civility was replaced by brutality...
... the transformation seamless...
... during a blizzard.
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How about:
* "We are all going to do the best we can DURING THE REMAINDER OF THIS COLLAPSE."
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I turn 71 in a few weeks.
My home is along the east coast of the Pacific.
I lived through multiple house-price super-skyrocketing and crashes.
I saw money for rent at 22% (twenty-two percent) from 'over-worked under-paid' bankers.
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September, 2022.
these united states of America.
A credit card offer has 32% (thirty-two percent) interest, plus skads of peripheral charges.
And house prices are a roller-coaster.
Based on only tiny fractions of the evidence, politicians and government agents are [redacted] and [redacted] and only care about their [redacted, then 'keister' inserted by alert editor].
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I saw your 'if', and thought of Oregon.
* Portland and their no-go zones.
* Eugene with [redacted] breaking into vehicles for sleeping.
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The society crash is now.
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Accordingly, we live in a traveling home.
We have nothing to disconnect, we can be moving in two minutes.
As we rehearsed, as in:
* dogs loaded
* start the rig to build air
* shift the dogs to their kennels
* put it in gear, and roll.
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August, 2022.
Three times in three weeks, [redacted] set fire to their squats surrounding our acreage.
Three times, as we rehearsed, the dogs were inside the rig, in their kennels, and we rolled in less than two (2) minutes.
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We scribbled our Disaster Plan, a flexible inventory and check-list for a couple dozen widely divergent catastrophic events:
* the inevitable tsunami... during a blizzard.
* the inevitable earthquake, breaking dams, flooding sewage treatment plants, zero transportation due to collapsed bridges and over-passes, zero electric, zero fresh drinking water... during a blizzard.
* the inevitable tsunami flattens Portland, three million refugees instantly joining the [redacted] in their tents downtown, the attrition unimaginable...
...the Columbia River blocks a northward trudge, east is desert controlled by generations of farmers/ranchers and Injuns (some over-lap) community...
... south through a flooded Willamette Valley, leveling small communities, eating everything in their wide swath.
At this point, we are in open warfare, everybody is a potential enemy.
During a blizzard.
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I think stocking fuel, food, water, security, community, is probably less effective during the festivities.
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I welcome your rebuttal.
We need community. We need to form communities BEFORE some catastrophic event.First of all I would like to say Bob is an amazing and genuine person. I have never met him, but I have watched almost all of his videos and seen all the help and information he has tirelessly given.
Bob is a beacon of hope and instruction for many people that have run out of hope and options.
I was recently watching a video from a couple of years ago where Bob explained how being a nomad and being on national land was pretty much the safest place in America. He made a point of saying an exit strategy of turning the key and leaving a bad situation or set of circumstances was paramount to one's safety. That moving to a better place was always a good option and nomads had a distinct advantage in that regard vs. someone grounded on a property.
This is all true and I agree with everything, but...
What happens if fuel is in short supply or God forbid completely unavailable? What happens if this drags on for weeks, months or longer? Don't say it isn't a real possibility, anything could happen in today's America.
The house of cards would come tumbling down and things would become extremely difficult if not impossible in short order. Carrying an extra 10 gallons of gas (if you had the room) isn't going to get you far...
Does anyone have a viable contingency plan?
The nomad lifestyle looks very fragile and insecure when considering this, perhaps it should be talked about more?
Also, it is good to get educated now about natural and locally available sources of food.One of the survival strategies that has always worked for humans is to be with a group so that resources can be harvested (as in hunting and farming) and then shared with others in the group, or barter goods with other groups, and accumulated assets can be protected.
Um, I live in Portland and think it is highly unlikely that a tsunami will reach the Willamette Valley. The earthquake will do some damage, but the tsunami is largely a threat to those on the coast. I also lived through a major earthquake that shut the normal utilities down for several days. We were OK. Not comfortable, but OK. The people who think they will solve all their problems with a gun are much more scary than natural disasters.I Applaud your dedication to readyness
Does anyone have a viable contingency plan?
The nomad lifestyle looks very fragile and insecure when considering this, perhaps it should be talked about more?
Um, I live in Portland and think it is highly unlikely...a tsunami will reach the Willamette Valley. The earthquake will do some damage, but the tsunami is largely a threat to those on the coast. I also lived through a major earthquake...
.with a gun are much more scary than natural disasters.
....What happens if fuel is in short supply or... unavailable? What happens if this drags on for weeks, months or longer?...
The house of cards would come tumbling down...
Does anyone have a viable contingency plan?
The nomad lifestyle looks very fragile and insecure when considering this, perhaps it should be talked about more?
<giggle>. Yes, the government folks are usually the least helpful when the chips are down. I think some of the "refugees" might have bicycles. But after the major earthquakes, we found most people to be more helpful to each other than they would have been under normal circumstances. If you watch any "prepper" Youtube videos, a lot of them look pretty crazy. One advocating for really stocking up on ammunition, because it will be hard to get. Gosh...can you eat ammunition? Can you run your refrigerator on it? He says this as he sits in front of what must be 20 long guns. Of course it is always so safe to be stockpiling explosive devices..
Several decades of research indicates the long-overdue off-shore earthquake -- Cascadia sub-duction zone -- will generate a significant tsunami, and obviously that tsunami will travel inland along any lowlands and rivers.
Based on the evidence from previous disasters, we anticipate a hundred foot (100'/35m) wall of water... pretty much obliterating anything, and leaving a fetid and festering swamp.
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Research indicates the primary tsunami will initiate a substantial reversal of water-flow in the Columbia River... through Portland and probably uphill further.
That river water -- a quarter-million cubic-feet a second -- needs to go someplace, and I expect it to seek an easy path laterally.
The average elevation of downtown Portland -- fifty feet (50'), some areas higher, many areas right at sea-level.
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Nobody has plans for secondary and subsequent tsunami events.
The devastation will be complete.
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We operate a small organic teaching farm near the outskirts of Eugene, Oregon.
The south Willamette Valley is a swamp, the elevation around us runs from about 30' above sea-level to about 70'asl.
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I think you make a valid point about 'discomfort' during a disaster.
And I think your trust in starving terrorfied refugees -- everything they knew is gone, no hope for a future, Without Rule Of Law -- remaining moral and decent and peaceful is... commendable.
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re -- 'much more scary'
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I think prepping for a broad-spectrum of disasters reduces the 'scary' factor.
I think rehearsing our routes and practicing with our equipment eliminates the 'scary' factor.
Based on our experience with our caravan chums, everybody we know is on the opposite end of your 'scary' scale.
We are solid, competent, resilient.
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Why do you mention 'a gun'?
During a grid-down catastrophe with millions of ruined lives, everything is a weapon:
* pencil
* tree root
* cast-iron skillet.
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An aside:
We work with Oregon disaster preparedness bureaucrats in the capitol of Salem.
Their 'best men' are on the job.
Their BrilliantPlan© for their Rally Point:
* an airport near Bend... on the east side of the Cascade mountain range.
Can you imagine several million refugees...
... starving, dehydrated, injured...
... walking over crashed bridges and over-passes...
... walking up the Cascades, then across the desert...
... during a blizzard.
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www.oregon.gov/oem/hazardsprep/Pages/Cascadia-Subduction-Zone.aspx
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And here they are again, blowing more smoke:
www.google.com/amp/s/www.bendsource.com/bend/apocalypse-when/Content%3foid=16113015&media=AMP%2bHTML.
Note their reliance on trucking and railroads for re-supply.
Delusional.
.<giggle>. Yes, the government folks are usually the least helpful...
... potable water. There is a street about 2 blocks from me where someone on the corner has a live spring in the ditch in their front yard....we could collect it, boil and filter it. Everyone will be "camping" for a time after such a devastating earthquake--i.e. catholes in their backyard... hope it doesn't happen in the dead of winter.
... Soil liquefaction is an issue...
OK, I won't say it... but...What happens if fuel is in short supply or God forbid completely unavailable? What happens if this drags on for weeks, months or longer? Don't say it isn't a real possibility, anything could happen in today's America.
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