WriterMs
Well-known member
Corky,
Depending on your budget, you might want to consider donating the "yukky" food to a food bank. Your yukky might be someone else's tasty. Then you can feel good that someone can use it and you have cleaned your storage for foods you'll enjoy. You are right -- a disaster is when you especially want food you can look forward to.
In a true extended emergency, it is not necessarily a bad thing for your emergency food to be high in fat or calories. You want extra calories since they extend your survival time. And there is likely extra "exercise" that you'd be doing in an emergency to burn more calories than usual (like you climbing up and down the washout). The salt is usually the worry for most folks and some manufacturers load up on the salt. It pays to compare sodium content. Though more physical work may well mean you will sweat more and could use some extra salt, this gets way too tricky for a layperson like me to figure out.
About "servings:" this is another important thing to consider when you compare products. A LOT of emergency food manufacturers label a serving to be something that is about 120 calories or one-fourth cup or similar. If the food product is meant to be the entre or main ingredient, THEIR serving size may be much smaller than any of us would consider reasonable.
I was amazed at the output you got from your solar still. In a desert like the Mohave, a day's total water from a 3-foot deep pit might be a quart withOUT vegetation. Since you mention that you worked for 3 hours to get your solar still to produce a gallon and you mention vegetation, you obviously were in a place where you could gather a lot of green stuff to up your water result. One must also be careful seasonally not to sweat away more water than is being produced. Sounds like you did a great job and a gallon could sustain one person per day. Folks in an area with limited vegetation should not, however, rely on getting a gallon a day. (Though don't foget you can pee in the pit and the urine is distilled into drinkable water, too.)
Great job on using this as you said -- a "safe test."
Depending on your budget, you might want to consider donating the "yukky" food to a food bank. Your yukky might be someone else's tasty. Then you can feel good that someone can use it and you have cleaned your storage for foods you'll enjoy. You are right -- a disaster is when you especially want food you can look forward to.
In a true extended emergency, it is not necessarily a bad thing for your emergency food to be high in fat or calories. You want extra calories since they extend your survival time. And there is likely extra "exercise" that you'd be doing in an emergency to burn more calories than usual (like you climbing up and down the washout). The salt is usually the worry for most folks and some manufacturers load up on the salt. It pays to compare sodium content. Though more physical work may well mean you will sweat more and could use some extra salt, this gets way too tricky for a layperson like me to figure out.
About "servings:" this is another important thing to consider when you compare products. A LOT of emergency food manufacturers label a serving to be something that is about 120 calories or one-fourth cup or similar. If the food product is meant to be the entre or main ingredient, THEIR serving size may be much smaller than any of us would consider reasonable.
I was amazed at the output you got from your solar still. In a desert like the Mohave, a day's total water from a 3-foot deep pit might be a quart withOUT vegetation. Since you mention that you worked for 3 hours to get your solar still to produce a gallon and you mention vegetation, you obviously were in a place where you could gather a lot of green stuff to up your water result. One must also be careful seasonally not to sweat away more water than is being produced. Sounds like you did a great job and a gallon could sustain one person per day. Folks in an area with limited vegetation should not, however, rely on getting a gallon a day. (Though don't foget you can pee in the pit and the urine is distilled into drinkable water, too.)
Great job on using this as you said -- a "safe test."