A good stockpile of food will go a long way toward helping you survive the aftermath of any disaster or life crisis, especially when grocery stores are emptied.
In fact, I’d go so far as to say that there are people who are not preppers who nevertheless instinctively know to stockpile food. This really isn’t surprising when you consider that through most of mankind’s history, stockpiling food was essential to survival — specifically surviving the winter months. During those months, wildlife is bedded down trying to stay warm and plants are dormant. If one didn’t have a good stockpile of food, their chances of survival were pretty darn slim.
During a SHTF situation, pain could become an annoyance for some, but unbearable for others.
If doctors are scarce and medicine becomes even scarcer, this one little weed, found all over North America and similar to morphine, could be a saving grace.
But knowing to stockpile food and knowing what to stockpile are two different things. The vast majority of what the average American family eats is unsuitable for stockpiling, because it falls into one of three categories:
Junk food – Lots of carbs, lots of sugar, lots of salt and lots of chemicals, but not much nutrition.
Fresh food – Foods that won’t keep without refrigeration.
Frozen food – It will begin to spoil within two days of losing electrical power.
So we need to come up with other foods — foods that will give us a lot of nutrition and also have the ability to be stored for a prolonged period of time. Here are what we consider the 15 most important ones:
1. Beans – This is one of the more common survival foods. Not only are beans plentiful and cheap, but they provide a lot of protein — something that’s hard to find without meat.
2. White rice – The perfect companion to beans. An excellent source of carbohydrates, and it stores well. [Note: Don’t store brown rice, which contains oils and will spoil.]
3. Canned vegetables – A good way of adding micro-nutrients to your survival diet. Canned goods keep well, long past the expiration date on the label.
4. Canned fruit – For something sweet, adding canned fruit allows you a nice change of diet. Being canned, they keep as well as the vegetables do.
5. Canned meats – Of all the ways of preserving meat, canning is the most secure in protecting the meat from decomposition. While it doesn’t typically have as good a flavor as fresh meat, it still provides animal protein at the most reasonable price you’ll find.
6. Honey – As long as you can keep the ants out of it, honey keeps forever. Plus, it is beneficial during cold season.
7. Salt – Nature’s preservative. Most means of preserving foods require the use of salt. In addition, our bodies need to consume salt for survival.
8. Pasta products – Pasta is a great source of carbohydrates, allowing you a lot of variety in your cooing. Besides that, it’s a great comfort food for kids. Who doesn’t like spaghetti?
9. Spaghetti sauce – Obviously, you need this to go with the pasta. But it is also great for hiding the flavor of things your family doesn’t like to eat. Pretty much anything, with spaghetti sauce on it, tastes like Italian food — whether you’re talking about some sort of unusual vegetable or a raccoon that you caught pilfering from your garden.
10. Jerky – While expensive to buy, jerky is pure meat, with only the addition of spices. Its high salt content allows it to store well, making it a great survival food. It can be reconstituted by adding it to soups and allowing it to cook.
11. Peanut butter – Another great source of protein and another great comfort food, especially for the kiddies. It might be a good idea to stockpile some jelly to go with it.
12. Wheat flour – For baking, especially baking bread. Bread is an important source of carbohydrates for most Americans. Flour also allows you to shake up the diet with the occasional batch of cookies or a cake.
13. Baking powder & baking soda – Also for making the bread, cookies or cakes.
14. Bouillon – Otherwise known as “soup starter,” this allows you to make the broth without having to boil bones on the stove for hours. Soups will probably be an important part of anyone’s diet in a survival situation, as they allow you to eat almost anything. Just throw it together in a pot and you’ve got soup.
15. Water – We don’t want to forget to stockpile a good supply of water. You’ll go through much more than you expect. Experts recommend a minimum of one gallon per person per day, but remember: That’s just for drinking.
While this doesn’t constitute a complete list of every type of food that you should stockpile, it’s a good starting point. You’ll want more variety than this, but in reality, your family can survive for quite a while with just the 15 things on this list.
As your stockpile grows, add variety to it. One way of doing that is to create a three-week menu, with the idea of repeating that menu over and over. If you have everything you need to cook everything on that menu, you’ll have a fair assortment of food, and enough so that your family shouldn’t grow tired of it.
Preparedness Hacks: Once a nuke is heading your way, you might think that there isn’t much left to do, but you would be wrong!
When you are ready to prepare for any SHTF situation, there are particular items that are absolutely vital. These items often fall into a few categories. The four pillars of survival are food, water, fire, and shelter. These are four priorities that must be secured to survive in any situation. In addition, other priorities might be first aid, self-defense, land navigation, and signaling for help. If you can cover these categories, you can survive just about any scenario.
In addition to covering these categories, you want to be as efficient as possible. This means that items covering more than one need are especially valuable. It also means you want your survival items to be small, lightweight, and inexpensive. One of the other priorities in prepping is redundancy. You never want to have to rely one just one item for fire, or just one item for purifying water. You want several layers of protection to ensure that your needs are covered. Here are the items I suggest for your prepping kit:
Full Tang Knife: One of the most valuable items you can have is a quality knife. It is one of the items that is most difficult to recreate with only natural materials. A full tang knife means that the blade extends all the way to the end of the handle. This ensures that is will not break when put to the test. I prefer a heavy, long blade if it is the only blade I bring.
Folding Saw: When processing wood, there are several products you can use. A large knife will work, but a good saw is better. A small, flexible folding saw is ideal for cutting logs and branches up to about six inches thick. It is lightweight, safe, and effective.
Hatchet: Having a second way to process wood is a good idea, and a hatchet gives you another option. Hatchets are ideal for splitting firewood once you have it cut down.
Ferro Rod: This small fire starter is waterproof, windproof, and never needs additional fuel. It is the most reliable fire starting tool you can have.
Zippo lighter: The Zippo is windproof and can stay lit without having to hold down a button. It can also be refilled with several different flammable liquids. This makes it ideal for long term use.
Bic lighters: These disposable lighters are reliable and very inexpensive. You can easily afford to have several lying around.
Wetfire cubes: These waxy cubes are great for quickly starting a fire in adverse conditions. You shave some of the wax off of the corner and light the pile with just a few sparks. Then you can put the rest of the cube on top and it will stay lit for several minutes.
Firesticks: These fire assistance products are very helpful in windy and wet conditions. They can be doused in water and still will stay lit in strong winds for around 20 minutes. This product can allow you to skip over tinder and move straight to your kindling and larger wood.
550 Paracord: Cordage is vital in a SHTF scenario. 550 paracord is strong enough to hold a grown man, but also has several strong interior strands. You can remove these strands and use each one separately.
Emergency Blanket: Not only can these reflective blankets be used to wrap up and stay warm, but they can also be used for a quick shelter. The reflective surface sends 90% of your body heat back to you, and the thicker tarp-style blankets will not rip and have grommets at the corners for cordage.
Filter Bottle: If you have a bottle with a water filter built into the lid, then you can purify water on the go. Just dip it in a stream and keep going.
Straw Style Filter: This filter takes up little space and allows you to dip down and take a drink whenever you need.
Iodine Tablets: These take up almost no space and allow you to chemically purify water. The only downside is that they take around 30 minutes to work.
Fire Lens: If you have a sunny day, a fire lens works well to get a fire started. It is waterproof, windproof, and requires no fuel. All you need is direct sunlight.
Char Cloth: This substance will catch a spark or the heat from a lens and hold an ember for several minutes. You can buy char cloth or you can make your own by poking a small hole in an Altoids tin. Just add some small strips of cotton cloth and throw the tin in the fire for 20 minutes.
Flashlights and headlamps: Having light at night is vital in a SHTF scenario. Having a good LED tactical flashlight and a headlamp to keep your hands free should be a top priority.
Butane Stove: The stoves can be large enough for several pans or small enough to fit in your pocket. They allow you to quickly cook food or boil water without building a fire.
Lantern: To light a room or campsite you will need a device that emits light in every direction. You can buy a gas lantern or an electric lamp. Another good idea is the strikelight, which can be also used as an anti-theft device.
Batteries: Having a supply of batteries for your electrical devices is very important. I suggest a variety of sizes.
Water Storage: Having ways to purify water is important, but having large amounts of water on hand is important as well. Be careful about the containers you use as some can affect the taste or quality of the water.
Wool Blankets: Wool is the only substance that can keep you warm even when wet.
Fishing Tackle: Having a rod and reel can be a great way to provide more food for your family.
Gill Net: Another way to catch fish, but you can set it up and forget about it until you collect your catch.
Various Animal Traps: Trapping is another way to collect food without having to actively hunt. Having snares and other traps gives you a huge advantage versus building primitive traps.
Shotguns: These weapons are great for hunting birds, small game, and large game at close range. They can also be used for close quarters combat.
Rifles: These are primarily for longer shots on big or small game. They are also ideal for long range shots to defend your home.
Handguns: Pistols are easy to conceal and may be the best option for defending yourself or your home.
Compound Bow and Crossbow: These weapons are silent ad good for hunting or self-defense. You can also make more arrows if you run out.
Copper Wire: This material is great for several projects and is ideal for homemade snare traps.
Zip Ties: These can replace cordage if you want a quick and simple solution. They are also good to secure the hands of captives if needed.
Duct Tape: There are dozens of different uses for this strong and sticky substance.
Candles: These are great for both light and heat if you want to conserve electricity.
Fire Extinguishers: Controlling a fire without access to a fire department can be difficult. Having supplies on hand is vital.
Smoke Detectors: This will alert you if your home catches fire.
Carbon Monoxide Detectors: If you plan to have open flames in your house for cooking or heat, you will need to ensure that this toxic gas does not build up.
Solar Battery Packs: These can be recharged with the power of the sun to charge various devices.
PVC Pipe: Having various sizes of this plastic piping will help with plumbing and other projects.
Seed Bank: You will want to have seeds for gardening stored up in advance so you can plant when the time is right.
Ammunition Bank: Firearms are great, but they are worthless without ammo. Stock up on your most needed rounds.
Lumber: Two by fours, four by fours, and plywood are all good to have around for various projects including boarding up windows and doors.
Hand Crank Radio: This will allow you to hear what is going on in other areas.
Hardtack: These dry biscuits are easy to make in advance and can be stored for years.
Jerky and Pemmican: Both of these foods can be made from almost any kind of meat and will last a long time when kept dry.
Canned and Dry Goods: This type of food will give you some variety in your diet.
First Aid Kit: You will likely have to perform your own medical care, so having a thorough kit with some first aid knowledge is a good idea.
Sewing Kit: There will be plenty of ripped clothing to mend when you cannot buy more.
Toiletries: Hygiene will greatly affect health in SHTF scenarios. Having soap, toothpaste, and toilet paper will go a long way.
Generator: Having electricity for specific needs is important, and a cheap gas generator is a smart buy.
Map and Compass: Having a way to navigate is important, especially if you need to bug out.
Signal Mirror and Whistle: These come in handy if you need to get somebody’s attention for rescue.
When you are ready to prepare for any SHTF situation, there are particular items that are absolutely vital. These items often fall into a few categories. The four pillars of survival are food, water, fire, and shelter. These are four priorities that must be secured to survive in any situation. In addition, other priorities might be first aid, self-defense, land navigation, and signaling for help. If you can cover these categories, you can survive just about any scenario.
During a SHTF situation, pain could become an annoyance for some, but unbearable for others.
If doctors are scarce and medicine becomes even scarcer, this one little weed, found all over North America and similar to morphine, could be a saving grace.
In addition to covering these categories, you want to be as efficient as possible. This means that items covering more than one need are especially valuable. It also means you want your survival items to be small, lightweight, and inexpensive. One of the other priorities in prepping is redundancy. You never want to have to rely one just one item for fire, or just one item for purifying water. You want several layers of protection to ensure that your needs are covered. Here are the items I suggest for your prepping kit:
Full Tang Knife: One of the most valuable items you can have is a quality knife. It is one of the items that is most difficult to recreate with only natural materials. A full tang knife means that the blade extends all the way to the end of the handle. This ensures that is will not break when put to the test. I prefer a heavy, long blade if it is the only blade I bring. (21 wild edibles you can find in urban areas)
Folding Saw: When processing wood, there are several products you can use. A large knife will work, but a good saw is better. A small, flexible folding saw is ideal for cutting logs and branches up to about six inches thick. It is lightweight, safe, and effective.
Hatchet: Having a second way to process wood is a good idea, and a hatchet gives you another option. Hatchets are ideal for splitting firewood once you have it cut down.
Ferro Rod: This small fire starter is waterproof, windproof, and never needs additional fuel. It is the most reliable fire starting tool you can have.
Zippo lighter: The Zippo is windproof and can stay lit without having to hold down a button. It can also be refilled with several different flammable liquids. This makes it ideal for long term use.
Bic lighters: These disposable lighters are reliable and very inexpensive. You can easily afford to have several lying around.
Wetfire cubes: These waxy cubes are great for quickly starting a fire in adverse conditions. You shave some of the wax off of the corner and light the pile with just a few sparks. Then you can put the rest of the cube on top and it will stay lit for several minutes.
Firesticks: These fire assistance products are very helpful in windy and wet conditions. They can be doused in water and still will stay lit in strong winds for around 20 minutes. This product can allow you to skip over tinder and move straight to your kindling and larger wood.
550 Paracord: Cordage is vital in a SHTF scenario. 550 paracord is strong enough to hold a grown man, but also has several strong interior strands. You can remove these strands and use each one separately.
Emergency Blanket: Not only can these reflective blankets be used to wrap up and stay warm, but they can also be used for a quick shelter. The reflective surface sends 90% of your body heat back to you, and the thicker tarp-style blankets will not rip and have grommets at the corners for cordage.
Filter Bottle: If you have a bottle with a water filter built into the lid, then you can purify water on the go. Just dip it in a stream and keep going.
Straw Style Filter: This filter takes up little space and allows you to dip down and take a drink whenever you need.
Iodine Tablets: These take up almost no space and allow you to chemically purify water. The only downside is that they take around 30 minutes to work.
Fire Lens: If you have a sunny day, a fire lens works well to get a fire started. It is waterproof, windproof, and requires no fuel. All you need is direct sunlight.
Char Cloth: This substance will catch a spark or the heat from a lens and hold an ember for several minutes. You can buy char cloth or you can make your own by poking a small hole in an Altoids tin. Just add some small strips of cotton cloth and throw the tin in the fire for 20 minutes.
Flashlights and headlamps: Having light at night is vital in a SHTF scenario. Having a good LED tactical flashlight and a headlamp to keep your hands free should be a top priority.
Butane Stove: The stoves can be large enough for several pans or small enough to fit in your pocket. They allow you to quickly cook food or boil water without building a fire.
Lantern: To light a room or campsite you will need a device that emits light in every direction. You can buy a gas lantern or an electric lamp. Another good idea is the strikelight, which can be also used as an anti-theft device.
Batteries: Having a supply of batteries for your electrical devices is very important. I suggest a variety of sizes.
Water Storage: Having ways to purify water is important, but having large amounts of water on hand is important as well. Be careful about the containers you use as some can affect the taste or quality of the water.
Fishing Tackle: Having a rod and reel can be a great way to provide more food for your family.
Gill Net: Another way to catch fish, but you can set it up and forget about it until you collect your catch.
Various Animal Traps: Trapping is another way to collect food without having to actively hunt. Having snares and other traps gives you a huge advantage versus building primitive traps.
Shotguns: These weapons are great for hunting birds, small game, and large game at close range. They can also be used for close quarters combat.
Rifles: These are primarily for longer shots on big or small game. They are also ideal for long range shots to defend your home.
Handguns: Pistols are easy to conceal and may be the best option for defending yourself or your home.
Compound Bow and Crossbow: These weapons are silent ad good for hunting or self-defense. You can also make more arrows if you run out.
Copper Wire: This material is great for several projects and is ideal for homemade snare traps.
Zip Ties: These can replace cordage if you want a quick and simple solution. They are also good to secure the hands of captives if needed.
Duct Tape: There are dozens of different uses for this strong and sticky substance.
Candles: These are great for both light and heat if you want to conserve electricity.
Fire Extinguishers: Controlling a fire without access to a fire department can be difficult. Having supplies on hand is vital.
Smoke Detectors: This will alert you if your home catches fire.
Carbon Monoxide Detectors: If you plan to have open flames in your house for cooking or heat, you will need to ensure that this toxic gas does not build up.
Solar Battery Packs: These can be recharged with the power of the sun to charge various devices.
PVC Pipe: Having various sizes of this plastic piping will help with plumbing and other projects.
Seed Bank: You will want to have seeds for gardening stored up in advance so you can plant when the time is right.
Ammunition Bank: Firearms are great, but they are worthless without ammo. Stock up on your most needed rounds.
Lumber: Two by fours, four by fours, and plywood are all good to have around for various projects including boarding up windows and doors.
Hand Crank Radio: This will allow you to hear what is going on in other areas.
Hardtack: These dry biscuits are easy to make in advance and can be stored for years.
Jerky and Pemmican: Both of these foods can be made from almost any kind of meat and will last a long time when kept dry.
Canned and Dry Goods: This type of food will give you some variety in your diet.
First Aid Kit: You will likely have to perform your own medical care, so having a thorough kit with some first aid knowledge is a good idea.
Sewing Kit: There will be plenty of ripped clothing to mend when you cannot buy more.
Toiletries: Hygiene will greatly affect health in SHTF scenarios. Having soap, toothpaste, and toilet paper will go a long way.
Generator: Having electricity for specific needs is important, and a cheap gas generator is a smart buy.
Map and Compass: Having a way to navigate is important, especially if you need to bug out.
Signal Mirror and Whistle: These come in handy if you need to get somebody’s attention for rescue.
Preparedness Hacks: Once a nuke is heading your way, you might think that there isn’t much left to do, but you would be wrong!
Native American survival skills included crafting their own survival tools and building their own shelters. They foraged for their food and hunted their prey, all by hand. It is astounding to think how well they survived and thrived based on necessity alone. Would someone like you or me be able to do the same if we were put into such a hostile environment? Probably not, and that it is why it is good to be aware of old-school Native American survival techniques. How did the Native Americans survive? How were they so deftly able to sustain themselves in the unforgiving North American wilderness?
It is very easy to forget, in our modern times of the Internet and instant heat, cooling, food, and shelter, that people use to live a much simpler and much harder life before the advents of these modern comforts. The Native Americans are the prime example of how people use to live off the land and survived the threats of nature with basic and cultivated survival tactics.
During a SHTF situation, pain could become an annoyance for some, but unbearable for others.
If doctors are scarce and medicine becomes even scarcer, this one little weed, found all over North America and similar to morphine, could be a saving grace.
Native American Survival Skills We Can All Learn From
This list will highlight 25 of some of the more interesting Native American survival skills commonly used by the tribes of North America. Let this list be an insight into the lives of these fascinating people, an educational tool for our modern culture, a means of appreciating a society that is so rare and thin today and a reminder that the human spirit and will are much stronger than what we give them credit for.
25. Community
The tribal mindset and lifestyle of the Native Americans of yesteryear play a huge role in their survival tactics. As you probably are already aware, Native Americans distinguished themselves by tribes. You have probably already heard of the more common and prominent tribes like the Apache, Navajo, and Mohican. The sense of community, sharing of resources and wisdom and collective protection between tribesmen cannot be understated when considering how Native Americans were able to survive.
24. Footwear
If you have ever worked a day in your life wearing the improper pair of shoes then you know how important footwear is to comfort and bodily health. Footwear was integral to Native American survival and moccasins made of tanned leather and sewn together were common in North American tribes. Although designs and cuts differed from tribe to tribe, features like rabbit pelt for added warmth and hardened rawhide for increased durability were common attributes of moccasins.(21 wild edibles you can find in urban areas)
23. The Fox Walk
The fox walk was a method of tracking, traversing and hunting stealthily for Native Americans. This specific style consisting of wearing thin moccasins to feel the ground better, landing on the heel first and rolling your foot down, and traveling in lines to conceal your numbers was used in battle and in hunting.
22. Preserving Meat
Meat got many Native American tribes through harsh winters, but there were no chemical preservatives or refrigerators back then. Instead, Native Americans would preserve meat by cutting it into lean strips, eliminating fat, and drying it in the sun. This is essentially what we know today as beef jerky. This thin, dried meat can keep for a very long time and was an essential food supply for Native Americans. We put together a guide to preserving meat in the wilderness.
21. Animal Hides
Animal hides were essential to Native American life and key to their survival. By honing a process of tanning and smoking, Native Americans were able to turn raw animal hides into moccasins, clothing, and even shelter.
20. Natural Observation
Being able to tell what kind of weather was on the horizon was a huge asset for Native Americans. They used the natural signs of the environment to predict weather and to prepare accordingly. They would study the behaviors of animals who have much keener senses for weather than we do and read the clouds. Here are 23 survival uses for honey that you didn’t know about.
19. Using Plants
How Native Americans were able to discern the healing powers of certain plants is an unknown but we do know that these practices were handed down from generation to generation so it was probably a case of trial and error. They would use plants, herbs, and other life found in nature to heal wounds and treat illnesses.
18. Artful Crafting
Native American skills and crafts work with materials from their environment. By turning the crafting of basic survival tools and shelters into works of art, Native Americans were able to make the essentials of life that would stand up to the rigors of their environment. Native Americans took their time to craft tools and shelters thus ensuring their durability and overall quality and helping them survive in harsh conditions.
17. Body Paint
Before hunts, Native American tribes would paint their bodies so that they could blend into the natural scenery, as stealth was a very important aspect of survival in those times.
16. Clothing
Proper clothing is essential for anyone to survive in any situation, and the Native Americans had their clothing crafting skills down to a science. They used animal hides and smoked leather to create warm clothing for the cold winters. They also used certain colored clothing for stealth when hunting prey.
15. Camps
The Native Americans often built temporary camps for hunting excursions but they still needed to maintain a certain level of stealth. They would build these camps with earth-toned materials and animal skins and tuck them into the base of foothills or other strategic natural sites so that they would be hard to spot from a distance.
Preparedness Hacks: Once a nuke is heading your way, you might think that there isn’t much left to do, but you would be wrong!
These have become something of a novelty in today’s day and age but blow guns were actually used for hunting and in warfare by Native American tribes such as the Cherokee. They would fashion these weapons out of cane or reed. The reed would be hollowed out to a tube wherein a dart would be inserted and propelled by a strong breath towards a target. Blowguns were used primarily to kill small game like birds, rabbits, and squirrels and were sometimes tipped with poison extracted from venomous snakes and even Gila Monsters.
13. Deadfalls
Deadfalls are a kind of trap that was used by Native Americans to kill their prey. A heavy rock or log would be elevated by rope or a lever made of wood over a piece of meat or food to entice an animal. The deadfalls usually had a trigger that when the animal touched it, would activate the primitive trap and send the heavy object crashing down on them.
12. Snares
Trapping was one of the main ways that Native Americans caught their food and snares were among the most common types of traps utilized. A snare uses a vine that is tied in a loop and attached to a young sapling that is bent over and is fastened by tying it to a stick driven into the ground. The loop goes around a piece of meat to entice an animal and when the animal puts its head through the loop and tries to make off with the bait, the stick is dislodges and the loop turns into a noose around the prey’s neck and is suspended in the air as the sapling, free of its fastener, springs back into an upright position.
11. Trapping Pits
This is one of the more straightforward survival tactics utilized by the Native Americans. As the name suggests, this trap is simply a dug pit sometimes fitted with spikes at the bottom to kill or bleed the trapped animal. The dug pit would be covered up by branches and earth so that unsuspecting animals would walk over it and fall in.
10. Fishing Weirs
Fish is an indispensable food for Native Americans and among the ways that they would catch fish were fishing weirs. Fishing weirs are essential traps built by rock or wood that would lead fish migrating up or downstream to a corridor built to be narrow, ultimately trapping the fish.
9. Spearfishing
Another way the Native Americans caught fish was by spearfishing. There were different methods of spearfishing employed depending on the time of year. In the winter when the lakes would freeze over, a hole was cut into the ice and a lure made of bone was used to entice the fish toward the hole. Then, a spear made of wood for the shaft and copper or bone for the tip punctured the fish.
8. Hunting Tactics
It may seem simple now that we look back but many hunting tactics devised by Native Americans were learned over the generations and used to help them survive. Simple tactics like reading the wind and standing downwind from a target increased the chances for success of a hunt dramatically.
7. Nomadic Practices
Not all Native American tribes stayed in one place. After the Spanish visitors brought horses to the great plains, many tribes such as the Blackfeet, Crow, and Comanche adopted a nomadic lifestyle in order to hunt buffalo across the plains all year round. This supplied for them a stable food source and ensured, to a certain degree, survival.
6. Teepees
Of course, there can be no survival without some form of shelter. The Great Plains Native Americans knew this very well and built teepees which are essentially tents. They were commonly made from buffalo hides and long wooden poles.
5. Dedicated Tribe Roles
A lost every aspect of Native American life was spurred by survival. This is even true of the gender roles of the Native Americans. The men were the hunters and to prevent any waste which could mean the difference between life and death in the North American frontier, the women were the cooks. They would prepare the meat that the men brought back immediately so as not to waste a single morsel and ensure that they had plenty of food.
4. Bows
An indelible image that most people have of Native Americans is the bow and arrow which was vital for the survival of all tribes in North and South America. Most bows were fashioned out of wood and strengthened with animal tendons. Bowstrings were made from animal tendon or yucca and similar natural fibers.
3. Axes
There are certain tools that are as essential now as they were in the days of the Native Americans for survival. Among them is an ax. While Native Americans used axes for warfare, they were also used to chop wood that would be used for many different causes and to hunt prey.
2. Water
This may seem a simple and almost thoughtless aspect of survival but the fact of the matter is that if the Native Americans did not have sources of fresh water to draw from, they would have never survived. The plentiful rivers and lakes of the Americas helped sustain the Natives and they regarded water sources with great reverence.
1. Fire
There is no life without food and warmth and fire is number one on the list of 25 essential survival skills that kept Native Americans alive because it provided both. There were many methods of building fires among Native Americans but among the most common were striking stones like pyrites together to create a spark that would be caught be a pile of tinder. The friction caused by rubbing two sticks together also generated enough heat to combust tinder. Bow drills and fire pump drills were also common methods of starting fires. These contraptions used string wrapped around a stick and controlled by a bow to generate the heat needed to start a flame.
Check out this cool video from Tim Jones for some Native American fish trap idea:
Though the methods and practices of Native Americans varied from tribe to tribe, the innovation for the sake of survival was universal. They borrowed methods from each other and created ones unique to their tribe. They even borrowed from foreign settlers and visitors. The Native Americans were a group of humans that had to learn how to adapt and we are all the richer and wiser for their survival efforts. It is hard to separate the survival tactics we employ today from those introduced to us by the Native Americans. Thus, we owe a debt of gratitude to these people who learned how to tame the wild Americas and make them a place hospitable for human life.
Solar energy is a renewable source of energy with has many benefits.
The best thing is that you’ll save money on you electric bill.
Once upon a time, heading on down to the grocery store to fill the pantry whenever you needed to was not an option. Pioneers who traveled west in pursuit of religious freedom and a better life in the early days of U.S. settlement aimed to settle in areas where chances to buy supplies were few and far between.
This meant that they had to be self-sufficient, which required bringing along and preparing food that would last a long time, tending animals and hunting as needed, and eating what the land provided them.
While this self-imposed self-sufficiency is truly a measure of how passionate and hardworking the pioneers were, it’s also a glimpse into a future without the modern-day amenities we all enjoy in 21st-century America. If ever a situation arises that leads to the collapse of society as we know it, those pioneer foods may be more like our bread and butter (pun totally intended). Here are some foods that we’ll all have to become familiar with if doomsday happens.
Preparedness Hacks: Once a nuke is heading your way, you might think that there isn’t much left to do, but you would be wrong!
A favorite of Native Americans, cornmeal was often used in place of today’s more traditional wheat flour because it could be easily ground from whole corn while on the move. Bread, cakes, and pancake-like products were often made from cornmeal. It’s got the added bonus of a little sweetness that could be hard to come by in a SHTF situation. If you’d like to see how to make Corn Pones just like the Native Americans, follow this link: https://www.facebook.com/askaprepper/videos/2068662080037588/.
Dried or Cured Meats
Without refrigeration, meat from large animals like cattle, pigs, deer, and so on will have to be handled differently than it is today. Smoking, salting, and drying were all techniques employed in the pioneer days to keep meat from spoiling, and they’d be a handy way to keep our families fed for the long haul if we lose access to refrigeration. While cured and dried meats are more a novelty today, you can bet they’d quickly become a staple in more trying times. Here’s a long-forgotten recipe on how to make delicious lard with 2 years shelf-life (+ 5 tasty recipes)
Wild Game, Especially Small Game
You don’t find a lot of people eating squirrel and wild rabbit these days. However, a squirrel or rabbit that was happened upon and harvested in pioneer times surely wouldn’t go to waste. Fresh meat was few and far between, with the bulk of protein coming from dried or cured meats, and taking large game wasn’t very practical if you were on the move as you’d likely wind up wasting much of the meat. Small game was perfect for feeding you for a day, though. That’ll be very important, especially as people are likely to take on more nomadic lifestyles post-doomsday.
This also includes fish and native shellfish. In many places, fish may be even easier to get your hands than rabbits and squirrels. Learning about the local varieties could make it much easier to add some protein to your dinner. And here’s how to make delicious Biltong with 1 year-shelf life.
Animal Fats
Lard and other fats rendered from animals are definitely not the go-to these days, but they were far more readily available in pioneer society – and they were also a lot easier to process than the vegetable-based oils you’ll find in the average cabinet today. Because fat is a crucial part of our diets, animal fats are likely to make a comeback after doomsday.
Dried Fruits and Veggies
We know that drying produce is a great way to preserve it. People enjoy dried fruits and veggies even in modern times. However, if our society breaks down and leaves us with zero access to out-of-season produce and more modern preservation methods like canning and freezing, dehydrating fruits and veggies is likely to become common practice. You can even preserve produce this way using only the power of the sun.
Dried Beans
Beans tend to be fairly easy to grow, and dried beans can last a very long time. Pioneers packed dried beans to provide protein and fiber along the trail, and they’ll likely be popular for their high protein count and filling nature if ever the SHTF. You also don’t need much to prepare dried beans; a pan, water, heat, and a little patience is all it takes. Bonus: When you settle in somewhere, you can plant those babies and get a whole new crop ready for the next year.
Squash, Tubers, Onions, Garlic, and Apples
What do all of the above have in common? Aside from being fairly commonplace now, all of these produce items can be stored for fairly long periods in cool, dark places. As long as a little care is taken in storage, these will last through most of a winter. You commonly see references to these items in all sorts of literature written in earlier days, and root cellars were commonplace up until a few decades ago. If fresh produce was out of the question, wouldn’t some delicious fried squash or potatoes be an absolute treat?
Maple Syrup and Honey
While we as a society are pretty dependent on modern sugar, it was much harder to find in the days of the pioneers. In fact processed sugar was an expensive luxury for most people. Instead, they used other sweeteners like honey and maple syrup to help sweeten their dishes. Those items will likely become much more common in a SHTF situation because they’re easier to process than white sugar. With a little knowledge, and very minimal equipment that could be improvised easily, the common man can get syrup from tapping trees. A little bravery would certainly be necessary to collect honey, but it’s not impossible. Here are 23 survival uses for honey that you didn’t know about.
Foraged Foods
Obviously the foods you’d be able to forage vary from region to region, and the same was true for the pioneers, too. They’d forage local berries, greenery, wild fruits, mushrooms, and herbs to supplement their diets and add variety. If the SHTF it’ll pay dividends to be aware of the edible plants found in your region and have an idea of where to find them. These wild foods may also be propagated for home gardens if seeds and plants are unavailable for planting the more common gardens we see today. Here are 21 wild edibles you can find in urban areas.
If society collapses, you can bet that the foods the pioneers ate will become dietary staples. Those foods were wholesome, nutritious and, most importantly, available. Do yourself a favor and learn a little about how to find, prepare, and store these foods now, so that you’ll be prepared to feed yourself and your family in a SHTF situation
During a SHTF situation, pain could become an annoyance for some, but unbearable for others.
If doctors are scarce and medicine becomes even scarcer, this one little weed, found all over North America and similar to morphine, could be a saving grace.
Sometimes you can end up in a situation that needs you to apply any survival skills that you have. Having the right tools and weapons could mean a lot when it comes to your survival. With many options available as survival weapons, for most, it would either be a bow or a gun. So, which one would be the best to use?
The debate about bow vs. gun has been around survivalist forums for years. They always want to know which weapon would help them protect themselves and their family in a critical situation. Some might prefer guns over bows and vice versa, today we get to go into detail to understand which weapon would be the best.
Bows
The bow weapons would come in different shapes and sizes just as it would be the same for the guns. You have to look at the experience you have when it comes to handling the bows. For the sake of survival, you do not want to be an amateur at using the weapon. The same goes for the choice of the bow. Multiple bow types exist today each requiring a different way of handling. No matter whether it is the best compound bow or the best recurve bow, if you are not careful, you might end up with the victim of an accident when shooting the bow as opposed to protecting yourself and family.
The Pros of Using Bow Weapons
One good thing about bows is that making the weapons and components, such as arrows, should be easy for many people. Even if the last deer ran off with your last arrow, you can always make new arrows from materials around you. The same could not be said for the guns whereby if you are out of ammo, there is nothing you can do.
With a gun, you will make noticeable noise that will make your enemy know your exact position. Having a bow is considered better in some situations due to their quiet nature. Your enemy might end up being defeated by the bow silence and being unable to track your position.
The slow speed of the arrow can be a blessing in disguise. If the enemy is smart enough, he can track your position by looking at where the arrow is flying in from. The slow speed should allow you to move from your current position before the arrow hits the target.
Cons of Bow Weapons
The first disadvantage can easily be directed towards the rate of fire for a bow. Take the crossbow as an example, it would take long to add the arrow to the bow before firing. This takes time as compared to using a gun. Newer guns will have an increased fire rate and reduced rates of misfires.
The amount of training needed to be able to use a bow takes time. The time might not always be on your side in a survivalist situation. Ask anyone who has trained as an archer, the answer is always that the process takes long to master it.
Taking bow shots needs the archer to be closer to danger as compared to when using a rifle. You can see that your stealth skills have to be at the top or else you will be noticed before you can take the shot.
Guns
There is no doubt that when compared to bows, guns will easily be seen as a more powerful weapon for survival. New rifles today can deliver impressive ranges, some up to 600 yards easily and still maintain accuracy. The ammo used in guns has the ability to drop the target easily if you know how to handle the gun.
Pros of Guns
The ability to deliver the ammo over a longer distance than a bow makes a gun preferred by many people. You can aim easily, in the comfort of your stand, and send the bullet towards your target. A number of factors can affect the type of gun and ammo to use, but on overall a gun would be better at shooting over long distances.
The stopping power of a bullet has been always enough to take down the target with ease. It is a minimal effort as compared to using the arrows. You might have to shoot your target with several arrows to get it down.
How about learning how to use a gun? As compared to using bows, the guns are always easier to master. You will be a pro in using a gun within a short time as when compared to shooting arrows over a long time.
Cons
The shortage of ammo always makes the gun useless. It is not the same as for the bows where, again, you can make arrows in the wild.
By now you have an idea which weapon you would choose. Each weapon has its best applications, so make sure that you keep that in mind before picking a gun or bow.
Robert Gate is the founder of Archerytopic.com. He was enthusiastic about hunting from the first shot, from then he decided to become a pro hunter. If you find something helpful on his blog, he would be proud to hear from you.
The Ultimate Guide To Building, Finding, and Deploying Survival Shelters
There’s more than one way to skin a cat.
And there even more ways to find, build and deploy survival shelters.
But only if you know what you’re doing.
In this guide, we show you our 10 favorite simple-to-build survival shelters.
And we don’t just show you, we teach you with how-to videos.
So in this article, we’ll cover the following survival shelter topics:
Why Learn How To Build A Survival Shelter
3 LifeSaving Shelter Tools
10 Best Survival Shelters
Simple Tarp Shelter
Variations Of The Tarp Shelter
Debris Shelter
Spider Shelter
Ultimate Wickiup
Survival Hut
Snow Cave
Igloo
Juniper Tree Shelter
Dug Out Shelter
Survival Shelter Action Plan
Why Learn How To Build A Survival Shelter
I love the great outdoors but I hate feeling exposed.
Wait, don’t those two statements contradict each other?
Yes, they do if you don’t know how to build a survival shelter.
But if you can build one…then the answer is: No.
Let me explain.
Riding out Mother Nature’s worst without shelter is not only a crappy time; it’s also deadly.
When unprepared humans go up against extreme weather, weather wins. You lose.
And even if the weather decides to “play nice,” it’s comforting to know how to build a safety barrier between you and the rest of the world.
Cold, wet, heat and dangerous animals all reduce your chances of survival.
And at the extremes (blizzards, torrential downpours, heat waves, and attacks), you’re survival window slams shut.
So if you can’t build, find or deploy a survival shelter fast in the harshest conditions, you’re done for in mere minutes.
That’s why sheltering is essential to your survival.
Whether you’re planning a wilderness bug out or just want to be ready for an unexpectant emergency.
Everyone should learn the skill of building, finding and deploying survival shelters.
Now before we continue:
Not all survival shelter designs work in all environments.
For example:
A good forest survival shelter will not work in deep snow or the hot desert.
So I’ll also break this article into the following categories as well:
Forest Survival Shelters
Snow Survival Shelters
Jungle Survival Shelters
Desert Survival Shelters
So let’s start things off with the simple lifesaving emergency shelter tools.
Because you should never make survival harder than it needs to be.
3 Lifesaving Shelter Tools
Emergencies are, by definition, unplanned events:
“A serious situation or occurrence that happens unexpectedly and demands immediate action.”
The most important word here is UNEXPECTEDLY.
You were caught off guard. You didn’t expect the event but never-the-less; stuff happens.
We cannot prevent all emergencies situations from our lives, however, we can prepare for the unexpected.
Or as they say “expect the unexpected.”
So how do you do this in regards to survival shelters?
1 – A Quality Survival Tarp
By purchasing several good survival tarps and stashing them in your vehicle, your bug out bag, your day pack, etc.
I’m often asked which survival tarp I consider the best.
Aqua Quest Defender Tarp
It’s 100% waterproof, extremely durable, lightweight, compact, and includes over 20 reinforced loops for versatile setup in any situation.
Remember, when it comes to survival tarps, you get what you pay for.
2 – Paracord
And as we’ll cover in more detail shortly, you’ll also benefit from having a bit of paracord with you at all times.
TITAN WarriorCord
Paracord has many survival uses, but with shelter building, it’s essential for securing tarps and lashing wood together.
And while some paracord is better than others, most will work for building survival shelters.
I recommend getting some Titan Warrior Cord. It’s proven, tough and is ideal for survival.
3 – Tact Bivvy
The third item I recommend you invest in for survival is the Tact Bivvy
Tact Bivvy Survival Sack
It’s the ultimate solution to keeping you warm under your survival tarp.
Sleeping bags are too bulky to stash in small spaces and take with you for random emergencies.
However, the Tact Bivvy fits in your hand and is designed with NASA Mylar heat reflective technology.
It’s worth investing in one for each of your vehicles.
So with just these three simple items (a survival tarp, some quality paracord, and a Tact Bivvy), and a bit of shelter knowledge, you can protect yourself from even the most severe weather emergencies.
10 Best Survival Shelters
Forest Survival Shelters
We’ll start off with wilderness survival shelters in a forest setting with little to no snow. This is the sort of environment many people find themselves stranded in every year.
Whether it’s getting lost of a hike or getting injured on a hunting expedition – the following forest survival shelters will keep you protected and alive.
1 – The Simple Tarp Shelter
Here’s a video sharing an easy way to build a tarp shelter if you have a high-quality survival tarp with you.
Now, there are more elaborate survival shelters you can make (which we’ll get to shortly), but they require more of a time and calorie commitment.
They’re not something you will build for a single night in a rare emergency. But a night or two is exactly where the tarp survival shelter excels.
A couple of key takeaways before we continue.
If you have some extra time, and you’re not minutes from hypothermia or dehydration, you should look for a good base location.
You want the natural surroundings to help reinforce your shelter.
There are good shelter locations and bad locations. Take a few minutes to find a good location.
Also, you need to figure out the prevailing wind direction.
For most of us in the United States, that’s going to be from West to East. So you’ll want to have the back of the tarp facing to the west.
That way, driving rains and howling winds will be deflected by the tarp.
If you build your shelter’s entrance facing the prevailing winds, the winds will enter and push rain with it into your shelter. Not fun.
Pro tip: Understanding prevailing winds is key for all survival shelter setups and not just for tarp shelters.
Ok, so what about some other tarp survival shelter variations?
2 – Several Variations Of The Tarp Shelter
Here’s a video that focuses primarily on camping undetected, but it also shows several simple tarp setups you can use in an emergency.
So as you just saw, each of these designs is simple to set up and serve the purpose of keeping you warm and dry.
They will help keep the rain and wind off of you, and that’s about it.
Nothing luxurious about them but emergencies rarely are.
You can combine any of these setups with fire if hypothermia is a concern.
Before we move on; a quick note about tarps:
Not all tarps are created equal. Cheap tarps rip.
Cheap tarps have don’t have any grommets.
You need lots of grommets to make all the tarp shelter variations.
And the grommets cheap tarps do have, will rip the tarp under very little tension.
Cheap tarps will quickly deteriorate under UV light exposure.
Cheap tarps are not good for survival. Don’t buy cheap tarps.
The Aqua Defender Tarp
So, again, get a tarp like The Aqua Quest Defender.
It’s completely waterproof, is highly durable and includes 20 reinforced loops.
It’s a survival tarp perfect for creating any of the tarp configurations we’ve shown you in this guide.
Now if you don’t have a tarp, building a one-night survival shelter becomes a more labor-intensive task!
However, it’s worth learning these skills for a worst-case scenario.
Forests offer an abundance of resources you need to build a strong survival shelter.
Trees provide ample amounts of logs and sticks. They also provide pine straw and leaves.
These are your basic building blocks to many survival shelters.
Note: If these resources are not readily available, then these survival shelter won’t work very well. You’ll need to check out some of the other survival shelter options later in this article.
3 – The Debris Survival Shelter
The simple debris shelter is your next best bet if you are without a tarp.
Here’s a quick video showing how to build a debris hut shelter.
Now before we move on to more sophisticated survival shelters, I want to talk about the often overlooked but absolute simplest survival shelters; Natural Shelters.
Take advantage of what nature can provide. I’m talking about outcrops, caves, large burrows, or natural depressions.
If you can find a natural area that’s protected from wind and rain, then by all means, use it. Take what nature gives.
Don’t spend hours or days building a complex shelter when there’s an empty cave nearby.
To make the most of a forests resources and to build a stable structure, you’ll want to have a few essential survival tools with you.
At a minimum, you need a high-quality survival knife.
And for the more heavy duty survival shelter builds, you’ll need a Survival Hatchet, a Pocket Chain Saw, and a Portable Tactical Shovel.
Assuming you have these items you’ll be able to construct the following survival shelters with some knowledge and practice.
4 – The Spider Shelter
This first series of videos goes over a spider debris shelter.
It’s a modified debris hut with an extra dome at the front to provide enough space to sit up in it.
Followed up with a couple of videos on how to make some upgrades to this type of shelter.
This kind of survival shelter is ideal for solo survival for both the medium or long term.
Now if you are staying for the long haul, then you might as well make your house a home with a few upgrades.
Every day, add a few small upgrades to your shelter and in a few weeks, you’ll have yourself a longer-termer term shelter.
Upgrades such as a sleeping mat, a fire hole, and more layers of debris for more insulation.
The spyder debris shelter is a relatively simple design and it’s proven.
5 – The Ultimate Wickiup
An Ultimate Wickiup shelter is more elaborate and will take extra time and energy to build.
However, you can scale this survival shelter design to include larger survival groups for long-term stays.
Now, if you’re planning an extended stay in a Wickiup, it makes sense to invest some effort making life a bit more comfortable.
You’ll also have time to add upgrades to your shelter over the weeks or months that you’re living there.
So here’s a 4 part video series with ideas on how to upgrade your wickiup from surviving to thriving.
Jungle Survival Shelters
For emergencies in a jungle, your best bet is a tarp shelter.
If you don’t have one, then you can build a debris survival shelter similar to the ones we previously covered.
The trees species and debris will be different in a jungle, but the concept is the same.
So let’s move on to my favorite long-term jungle survival shelter: The Survival Hut.
6 – The Survival Hut
Jungles provide unique materials you can use to build with. They have thick vines, hollow shoots, large leaves, and the ground is often made of clay.
Plus, you’ll likely have an abundance of water available to work with.
A survival hut starts by using the wattle technique to interlace shoots and sticks.
Wattling creates a simple fencing structure. Then you use the duab technique to smear a clay-like substance onto the wattle and allowing it dry.
These two methods create a substantial survival hut.
Now, feel free to use tools to make your hut. But to show you what’s possible, in the next video the entire hut is built with no brought tools.
He makes tools with just the resources around him.
Worth watching the entire video!
Snow Survival Shelters
So far we haven’t discussed shelters for winter and snow. They don’t work in deep snow.
Forest shelters can still work if they’re trace amounts of snow, but if you’re dealing with multiple feet of snow, you won’t find the wood or debris necessary to build them.
So instead, you’ll need to take advantage of the snow.
7 – A Snow Cave
Snow caves work well as emergency survival shelters. You dig a snow hole and get in. It’s fast, quick, down n’ dirty.
The reason this works is that snow has insulating properties. So while snow itself is cold, it also does a fantastic job of trapping heat.
So if you dig a hole in the snow and then bundle up inside, the air temperature inside the snow cave will rise over time due to your trapped body heat.
When built correctly, the air temperature inside the snow cave will rise several degrees higher than the outside air temperature.
Plus, it will protect you from the wind, which is the biggest concern in a severe blizzard.
However, you still need to be careful when building a snow cave. There’ are some dangers you need to be aware of.
First, you need to remain dry at all times. Avoid extreme sweating while building because wet and cold can lead to a hypothermic situation.
Second, cooking in a snow cave has been attributed to several mountain climber deaths over the years from carbon monoxide poisoning.
This video shows you the basics of building a snow cave.
Now in an emergency situation where time is of the essence, you wouldn’t make it as large. Just big enough to get in it fast.
While snow caves are relatively straightforward to build, they’re not suitable for longer-term situations.
Snow caves will eventually collapse in on themselves.
A full out collapse typically takes several days of warm weather or rain, but they are not meant for months of sheltering.
And that’s where the iconic igloo comes in.
7 – An Igloo
By design, igloos are made to last. Obviously, snow melts in warm weather, but the integrity of an igloo (if properly built) is impressive.
To show you just how strong and durable igloos are, check out this short video.
So how do you correctly build an igloo by yourself?
Here’s a step by step video showing you how to build your own survival igloo.
Note: Cold weather survival skills include more than just building snow caves and igloos. Make sure you understand all aspects of cold weather survival.
Next up, the opposite of cold and snow; heat and desert.
Desert Survival Shelters
Desert survival takes a unique set of skills. Many people make the mistake of thinking a shelter isn’t necessary for a desert.
They think “it doesn’t get cold in a desert”; which is false.
Deserts at night can get brutally cold. For example, America’s most infamous desert “Death Valley” often drops into the 30’s over the winter months.
And many people also forget about the need for shade in the heat of the day.
In one study, they found an average difference of 27.5 degrees in shade vs. direct sunlight.
27.5 degrees a big deal in the brutally hot desert.
So while it’s blistering hot during the day, you need a shelter to help shade you from the sun. But as evening sets in you’ll need shelter to keep you warm.
The bottom line is, you need shelter in a desert survival scenario.
So it’s best to learn how to make one.
Now, if you’re stranded in the desert due to a broken down vehicle, then you already have a decent shelter; the vehicle itself.
So in most cases, it makes the most sense to stay with your vehicle instead of abandoning it.
There are expectations, but if you’re stranded, lost, and hoping for rescue then use the inside of your vehicle as your desert survival shelter.
If you’re stranded on foot, a good tarp will work wonders in a short-term desert survival situation, but if you don’t have a tarp with you, then you’re going to have to improvise.
You’ll have to use what the environment gives you. Which in the desert often means miles and miles of juniper trees and sagebrush.
9 – A Juniper Tree Shelter
Here’s a video showing how to use a Juniper Tree to improvise a survival shelter in the desert.
10 – Dug Out Survival Shelter
And for a long-term survival stay you could build a dugout survival shelter in a sandy area of the desert like this one:
Of course, this one takes quite a lot of work, so if you plan on building this sort of shelter in a desert, you’ll want a shovel and plenty of water available. Otherwise, you’ll quickly suffer from dehydration.
You also need to think carefully about the location of a dugout shelter.
Flash floods in the desert are extremely dangerous.
The last thing you want to do is build a dugout shelter in a washout basin.
Survival Shelter Action Plan
It’s time to get outside!
No matter what environment you live in or what season it is right now, you can build yourself one of these survival shelters.
Practice making them today in a safe location, when you’re not under extreme stress.
Make them close to home, where the consequences of a screw-up are not life-threatening.
Practice makes perfect, and mistakes help you learn.
Just make sure you’re making safe mistakes before you put your skills to the ultimate test.
Also, as we discuss at the beginning of this article, get some tarps and paracord to help make your survival shelter builds easier. Also, invest in lifesaving Tact Bivvy.
Then add these survival shelter tools to your car emergency kits, day packs, get home bags and bug out bags.
It’s 100% waterproof, extremely durable, lightweight, compact, and includes over 20 reinforced loops for versatile setup in any situation.
Remember, when it comes to survival tarps, you get what you pay for.
2 – Paracord
And as we’ll cover in more detail shortly, you’ll also benefit from having a bit of paracord with you at all times.
TITAN WarriorCord
Paracord has many survival uses, but with shelter building, it’s essential for securing tarps and lashing wood together.
And while some paracord is better than others, most will work for building survival shelters.
I recommend getting some Titan Warrior Cord. It’s proven, tough and is ideal for survival.
Have you ever thought about living without electricity, internet or mobiles? We can guarantee that the majority of our readers can never imagine this kind of scenarios.
However, there are chances that this type of conditions arises in your life due to flooding, tornadoes, draught or even war.
The third item I recommend you invest in for survival is the Tact Bivvy
Tact Bivvy Survival Sack
It’s the ultimate solution to keeping you warm under your survival tarp.
Sleeping bags are too bulky to stash in small spaces and take with you for random emergencies.
However, the Tact Bivvy fits in your hand and is designed with NASA Mylar heat reflective technology.
It’s worth investing in one for each of your vehicles.
So with just these three simple items (a survival tarp, some quality paracord, and a Tact Bivvy), and a bit of shelter knowledge, you can protect yourself from even the most severe weather emergencies.
10 Best Survival Shelters
Forest Survival Shelters
We’ll start off with wilderness survival shelters in a forest setting with little to no snow. This is the sort of environment many people find themselves stranded in every year.
Whether it’s getting lost of a hike or getting injured on a hunting expedition – the following forest survival shelters will keep you protected and alive.
1 – The Simple Tarp Shelter
Here’s a video sharing an easy way to build a tarp shelter if you have a high-quality survival tarp with you.
Now, there are more elaborate survival shelters you can make (which we’ll get to shortly), but they require more of a time and calorie commitment.
They’re not something you will build for a single night in a rare emergency. But a night or two is exactly where the tarp survival shelter excels.
A couple of key takeaways before we continue.
If you have some extra time, and you’re not minutes from hypothermia or dehydration, you should look for a good base location.
You want the natural surroundings to help reinforce your shelter.
There are good shelter locations and bad locations. Take a few minutes to find a good location.
Also, you need to figure out the prevailing wind direction.
For most of us in the United States, that’s going to be from West to East. So you’ll want to have the back of the tarp facing to the west.
That way, driving rains and howling winds will be deflected by the tarp.
If you build your shelter’s entrance facing the prevailing winds, the winds will enter and push rain with it into your shelter. Not fun.
Pro tip: Understanding prevailing winds is key for all survival shelter setups and not just for tarp shelters.
Ok, so what about some other tarp survival shelter variations?
2 – Several Variations Of The Tarp Shelter
Here’s a video that focuses primarily on camping undetected, but it also shows several simple tarp setups you can use in an emergency.
So as you just saw, each of these designs is simple to set up and serve the purpose of keeping you warm and dry.
They will help keep the rain and wind off of you, and that’s about it.
Nothing luxurious about them but emergencies rarely are.
You can combine any of these setups with fire if hypothermia is a concern.
Before we move on; a quick note about tarps:
Not all tarps are created equal. Cheap tarps rip.
Cheap tarps have don’t have any grommets.
You need lots of grommets to make all the tarp shelter variations.
And the grommets cheap tarps do have, will rip the tarp under very little tension.
Cheap tarps will quickly deteriorate under UV light exposure.
Cheap tarps are not good for survival. Don’t buy cheap tarps.
The Aqua Defender Tarp
So, again, get a tarp like The Aqua Quest Defender.
It’s completely waterproof, is highly durable and includes 20 reinforced loops.
It’s a survival tarp perfect for creating any of the tarp configurations we’ve shown you in this guide.
Now if you don’t have a tarp, building a one-night survival shelter becomes a more labor-intensive task!
However, it’s worth learning these skills for a worst-case scenario.
Forests offer an abundance of resources you need to build a strong survival shelter.
Trees provide ample amounts of logs and sticks. They also provide pine straw and leaves.
These are your basic building blocks to many survival shelters.
Note: If these resources are not readily available, then these survival shelter won’t work very well. You’ll need to check out some of the other survival shelter options later in this article.
3 – The Debris Survival Shelter
The simple debris shelter is your next best bet if you are without a tarp.
Here’s a quick video showing how to build a debris hut shelter.
Now before we move on to more sophisticated survival shelters, I want to talk about the often overlooked but absolute simplest survival shelters; Natural Shelters.
Take advantage of what nature can provide. I’m talking about outcrops, caves, large burrows, or natural depressions.
If you can find a natural area that’s protected from wind and rain, then by all means, use it. Take what nature gives.
Don’t spend hours or days building a complex shelter when there’s an empty cave nearby.
To make the most of a forests resources and to build a stable structure, you’ll want to have a few essential survival tools with you.
At a minimum, you need a high-quality survival knife.
And for the more heavy duty survival shelter builds, you’ll need a Survival Hatchet, a Pocket Chain Saw, and a Portable Tactical Shovel.
Assuming you have these items you’ll be able to construct the following survival shelters with some knowledge and practice.
Solar energy is a renewable source of energy with has many benefits.
The best thing is that you’ll save money on you electric bill.
This first series of videos goes over a spider debris shelter.
It’s a modified debris hut with an extra dome at the front to provide enough space to sit up in it.
Followed up with a couple of videos on how to make some upgrades to this type of shelter.
This kind of survival shelter is ideal for solo survival for both the medium or long term.
Now if you are staying for the long haul, then you might as well make your house a home with a few upgrades.
Every day, add a few small upgrades to your shelter and in a few weeks, you’ll have yourself a longer-termer term shelter.
Upgrades such as a sleeping mat, a fire hole, and more layers of debris for more insulation.
The spyder debris shelter is a relatively simple design and it’s proven.
5 – The Ultimate Wickiup
An Ultimate Wickiup shelter is more elaborate and will take extra time and energy to build.
However, you can scale this survival shelter design to include larger survival groups for long-term stays.
Now, if you’re planning an extended stay in a Wickiup, it makes sense to invest some effort making life a bit more comfortable.
You’ll also have time to add upgrades to your shelter over the weeks or months that you’re living there.
So here’s a 4 part video series with ideas on how to upgrade your wickiup from surviving to thriving.
Jungle Survival Shelters
For emergencies in a jungle, your best bet is a tarp shelter.
If you don’t have one, then you can build a debris survival shelter similar to the ones we previously covered.
The trees species and debris will be different in a jungle, but the concept is the same.
So let’s move on to my favorite long-term jungle survival shelter: The Survival Hut.
6 – The Survival Hut
Jungles provide unique materials you can use to build with. They have thick vines, hollow shoots, large leaves, and the ground is often made of clay.
Plus, you’ll likely have an abundance of water available to work with.
A survival hut starts by using the wattle technique to interlace shoots and sticks.
Wattling creates a simple fencing structure. Then you use the duab technique to smear a clay-like substance onto the wattle and allowing it dry.
These two methods create a substantial survival hut.
Now, feel free to use tools to make your hut. But to show you what’s possible, in the next video the entire hut is built with no brought tools.
He makes tools with just the resources around him.
Worth watching the entire video!
Snow Survival Shelters
So far we haven’t discussed shelters for winter and snow. They don’t work in deep snow.
Forest shelters can still work if they’re trace amounts of snow, but if you’re dealing with multiple feet of snow, you won’t find the wood or debris necessary to build them.
So instead, you’ll need to take advantage of the snow.
7 – A Snow Cave
Snow caves work well as emergency survival shelters. You dig a snow hole and get in. It’s fast, quick, down n’ dirty.
The reason this works is that snow has insulating properties. So while snow itself is cold, it also does a fantastic job of trapping heat.
So if you dig a hole in the snow and then bundle up inside, the air temperature inside the snow cave will rise over time due to your trapped body heat.
When built correctly, the air temperature inside the snow cave will rise several degrees higher than the outside air temperature.
Plus, it will protect you from the wind, which is the biggest concern in a severe blizzard.
However, you still need to be careful when building a snow cave. There’ are some dangers you need to be aware of.
First, you need to remain dry at all times. Avoid extreme sweating while building because wet and cold can lead to a hypothermic situation.
Second, cooking in a snow cave has been attributed to several mountain climber deaths over the years from carbon monoxide poisoning.
This video shows you the basics of building a snow cave.
Now in an emergency situation where time is of the essence, you wouldn’t make it as large. Just big enough to get in it fast.
While snow caves are relatively straightforward to build, they’re not suitable for longer-term situations.
Snow caves will eventually collapse in on themselves.
A full out collapse typically takes several days of warm weather or rain, but they are not meant for months of sheltering.
And that’s where the iconic igloo comes in.
7 – An Igloo
By design, igloos are made to last. Obviously, snow melts in warm weather, but the integrity of an igloo (if properly built) is impressive.
To show you just how strong and durable igloos are, check out this short video.
So how do you correctly build an igloo by yourself?
Here’s a step by step video showing you how to build your own survival igloo.
Note: Cold weather survival skills include more than just building snow caves and igloos. Make sure you understand all aspects of cold weather survival.
Next up, the opposite of cold and snow; heat and desert.
Desert Survival Shelters
Desert survival takes a unique set of skills. Many people make the mistake of thinking a shelter isn’t necessary for a desert.
They think “it doesn’t get cold in a desert”; which is false.
Deserts at night can get brutally cold. For example, America’s most infamous desert “Death Valley” often drops into the 30’s over the winter months.
And many people also forget about the need for shade in the heat of the day.
In one study, they found an average difference of 27.5 degrees in shade vs. direct sunlight.
27.5 degrees a big deal in the brutally hot desert.
So while it’s blistering hot during the day, you need a shelter to help shade you from the sun. But as evening sets in you’ll need shelter to keep you warm.
The bottom line is, you need shelter in a desert survival scenario.
So it’s best to learn how to make one.
Now, if you’re stranded in the desert due to a broken down vehicle, then you already have a decent shelter; the vehicle itself.
So in most cases, it makes the most sense to stay with your vehicle instead of abandoning it.
There are expectations, but if you’re stranded, lost, and hoping for rescue then use the inside of your vehicle as your desert survival shelter.
If you’re stranded on foot, a good tarp will work wonders in a short-term desert survival situation, but if you don’t have a tarp with you, then you’re going to have to improvise.
You’ll have to use what the environment gives you. Which in the desert often means miles and miles of juniper trees and sagebrush.
9 – A Juniper Tree Shelter
Here’s a video showing how to use a Juniper Tree to improvise a survival shelter in the desert.
10 – Dug Out Survival Shelter
And for a long-term survival stay you could build a dugout survival shelter in a sandy area of the desert like this one:
Of course, this one takes quite a lot of work, so if you plan on building this sort of shelter in a desert, you’ll want a shovel and plenty of water available. Otherwise, you’ll quickly suffer from dehydration.
You also need to think carefully about the location of a dugout shelter.
Flash floods in the desert are extremely dangerous.
The last thing you want to do is build a dugout shelter in a washout basin.
Survival Shelter Action Plan
It’s time to get outside!
No matter what environment you live in or what season it is right now, you can build yourself one of these survival shelters.
Practice making them today in a safe location, when you’re not under extreme stress.
Make them close to home, where the consequences of a screw-up are not life-threatening.
Practice makes perfect, and mistakes help you learn.
Just make sure you’re making safe mistakes before you put your skills to the ultimate test.
Also, as we discuss at the beginning of this article, get some tarps and paracord to help make your survival shelter builds easier. Also, invest in lifesaving Tact Bivvy.
Then add these survival shelter tools to your car emergency kits, day packs, get home bags and bug out bags.
When the SHTF, who will be the first targets of the looters, the rioters, and the panicked idiots who didn’t prepare? The people who did. When the SHTF, you will most likely be prepared.
If you are reading this article it is likely that you will not be short of the necessities of life when it all goes wrong. So those who haven’t got what they need will be looking for you. So you need to hide.
The Gray Man and his Friends
So in a bad situation you need to hide. Obviously this can be accomplished by bugging out, or by simply staying at home, but unless you are entirely self sufficient, you will eventually need to move through a populated area. While doing this you need to be unnoticeable.
According to Kevin Reeve of onPoint Tactical, there are three types of unnoticeable people:
Untouchables: Homeless people, beggars, people who are part of the fabric of the street. Obviously characterized by their clothes (raggedy, cheap, probably as warm as possible) and possessions (sleeping bags etc.) but also by the way they perform actions. Next time you see a homeless person (or rather the next time you notice one) watch how they walk: head down, slow and steady pace, like serious, tired hikers. They know they have a long way to go and they can’t catch the bus. This, Reeve says is a great disguise – people often make an active effort to avoid noticing homeless people – but it stops you from going indoors.
Invisible Men: People who just belong on the streets, delivery men, builders and scaffolders, people who look like they are just meant to be there. As countless youtube experimenters have proved, just a hi vis jacket can make you invisible to a lot of simple security measures; people just don’t notice them. On the other hand, a high vis jacket is designed to be noticeable, and this disguise isn’t failsafe. That brings us to to…
Gray Man: Most people have never seen a gray man (or woman!). They are people who display no noticeable stimuli at all, who don’t draw your eye in any way. They walk right past you, and you just don’t remember. In almost any situation, this is the perfect disguise, to slip through a crowded area, even a riot, unnoticed.
How to become the Gray Man
Recognise the context
The attributes of a gray man depend on context. A 5’6” white man in a plain suit and tie, staring at a smartphone is perfectly unnoticeable in an office or boardroom meeting, but will stick out like a sore thumb at a pool party. Think about where you will be and what might be the norm.
Determine a ‘Baseline’
In gray man theory, the ‘baseline’ is the standard for the people in the area. Look around, or better yet plan ahead for where you are going to be, and imagine what the people there will look and act like.
Don’t picture a person you know of who works or lives there, because they are an individual, and you want not to be an individual of any kind. Think up average characteristics which fulfill each of the senses:
Sight: how do people there dress, do they wear makeup, how do they present (smiling or not, shaking hands or not etc.))?
Hearing: (how do these people speak? Ideally, you won’t speak because you won’t interact with anybody, but if you have to, how should you? How do they respond to each other? Unusually friendly? Unusually sharp and hostile?
Smell: Yes, smell.Are these people generally very clean or dirty?Do they wear perfume? Or will their environment give them a specific scent (mechanics will smell of oil and diesel, backpackers smell of sweat and woodsmoke etc.) which you should try to imitate?
Finally, how will these people act? This is of equal importance (but less use, as will be made clear below) to how they will look, sound and smell. You might need to use props to help you look around or move without being noticeable, and it’s good to be prepared with something appropriate.
For example, is this place more of a paper newspaper or a news-on-a-smartphone place? How do these people move? With great purpose, striding along, or slowly, head down and tired? Build as through a picture as possible.
Recognize Your Own Stimuli (and Minimize Them)
Your brain registers huge amounts of sensory data every moment. To be useful though, this has to be filtered, and the white noise removed. You have probably experienced the classic example of this: at a party of social gathering, someone mentions your name on the other side of the room.
You weren’t listening to their conversation, but you register the name because it is significant to you. To be a gray man you need to be entirely average, just ‘white noise’, and output nothing significant to
Nobody is actually just an average, and you will inevitably have unusual, noticeable features. Start with your body. Height is the biggest one here, and can actually be minimised, if not directly changed.
If you are taller than average, slouch a bit while walking, have your head down and shoulders slumped (a hood can help with this effect). Do not wear long garments (evening coats, dresses etc.) or the same color on your top and bottom half, as these make you body continuous and accentuate your height.
Horizontal stripes can accentuate your breadth and blur your height. Shorter, looser trousers (even just boot cut rather than skinny jean) make you legs seem shorter and break up your line.
Obviously flatter shoes, ideally which reach a longer way up your leg, will minimize your height, so thin-soled boots are a good idea. You don’t only have to use your own presentation though, positioning yourself near people taller than you will draw attention away from your height.
Shorter people should do the opposite. Stand up as straight as possible. Wear continuous or similar colors to keep your body-line intact, and tighter trousers to highlight the length of your legs.
Vertical stripes will draw the eyes to you height. Heels or thicker soled shoes will give you more actual height, but be careful not to be too noticeable about it.
Men with facial hair, consider carefully whether it will blend in or stick out in the environment you will be in. Large beards tend to be very noticeable (except among older men) but will hide you face, so consider carefully. Women should not (unless very appropriate for the place) appear sexy or attractive if possible.
Men will notice you a lot more, and you don’t want that. Minimize your bust and don’t display too much skin. Both genders should remove piercings and try to cover up tattoos (with clothing or a skin mask cream).
Finally, minimize the stimuli of your actions: don’t talk to people or engage in any contact unless absolutely necessary. Don’t make sudden movements or loud noises.
Conform to the Baseline
Having dealt with your own stimulate, you should resemble, as far as possible, a ‘tabula rasa’ (blank slate) human. Now to this you should add or change whatever possible to conform to the baseline you have established. Be careful. You should not be a perfectexample of the sort of person you might meet, but an average.
Take the example of a gym. If you appeared to be the perfect example of a gym goer, you would be noticeable in the gym because of it. You would be hugely muscular, tall and good looking, with perfect skin and flashing eyes.
Hardly under the radar. But while they were looking at the godlike figure of the perfect gym goer, nobody would notice the Average Joe in the corner: average height, average build, lifting average weight as if he’s been coming here a few months.
So dress to the baseline of where you will be. In most urban environments, that means bland, neutral colors without logos or complex patterns. Jeans are almost always a good idea and hoodies and simple jackets are great when appropriate.
Move within the Herd
The baseline should not only include outward appearance, but what everyone else is doing. If all the other people are moving in one direction, follow them, and make your entry and exit as discreet as possible.
Try not to take individual actions which might draw attention, even if you see other people doing so. The reason you have seen them is that they have drawn attention to themselves! Don’t do it!
This is why the way people act is of equal importance, but less use when determining a baseline: it can tell you a lot about the people you want to blend in with, but you often actually need to mimic it.
If you have to leave the herd, try to do so by following a small group who are all splitting off, and in general stay away from the edges of the group if possible. If you must strike out alone, first look around to see if anyone else is doing the same, and imitate the way they do so.
Mask any individual actions you find you must make. This can be done with loud noises around you, or by using a prop like a phone or newspaper to cover looking around.
But Don’t Become the Gray Man!
Of course, when necessary, to appear as a gray man is great, and should be done with care. However, of course you don’t truly want to be an average, unprepared person, just moving with the herd forever.
Making yourself difficult to notice does not mean that you have to jettison all of your preparedness mentality. As a member of the survivalist boards put it:
“A small practical kit for daily carry broken down into categories like comms, medical, light, knife, defense, signaling, etc is still small enough to not attract attention if the user is smart & thinks ahead in terms of what do I REALLY need vs what MIGHT come in handy.”
First Off: EDC. Let’s say you have affected to look like the urban archetypal gray man. If you really think about it, in today’s world this guy is probably a depot worker for somewhere like amazon, or works in a Walmart somewhere, so he’s coming home from work with a backpack.
It’ll be a small, nondescript, unbranded backpack in a neutral color (not an enormous tactical hiking pack or BOB), but it will certainly be big enough to hold a day’s simple food, a spare flashlight, first aid kit, radio and maybe a spare cheap cell phone. Something like this fits the description pretty well.
Conversely, the look of what goes into the pack doesn’t really matter much. You probably want to move through the crowded area as quickly as possible, not needing to use any of the gear in you pack, so it’s only there for emergencies/unforeseen circumstances or for what you intend to do when you reach your destination.
Either way, if something comes up which necessitates your using your first aid kit, or a weapon, or whatever else is in your bag, that situation must be serious enough to take priority over your gray man cover, so it ceases to matter if you first aid kit is in a tactical pouch, people will probably have noticed you anyway!
For the EDC items themselves, again you want to match the baseline as far as possible. Most people who carry a flashlight carry a $2 thing they picked up at a truckstop once and don’t carry spare batteries.
If you want to really blend in, then just go to a truck-stop and buy a $2 light, but you could also buy a decent quality light which look unobtrusive and remove any branding from it, maybe scratch it up a little to fit in better.
For stuff which you keep in your pockets, choose items which will not bulge and will be the least noticeable when used (presuming you keep it in your pockets because you need the most often).
Obviously, don’t open carry a weapon. If you must carry a weapon (ideally you shouldn’t need to as using it will draw a lot of attention to you), then try to find a good way to reallyconceal it: an excellent concealed holster, a CCW pocket in your pack, or just a very easily pocketed weapon (like the Taurus Curve).
When This Matters
Now
The gray man is not an abstract idea to be kept in reserve until needed, he/she can be useful now. If you are training or preparing for any situation out of the norm then your neighbors and friends should either be helping, or not know about it.
When the SHTF, anybody unprepared might turn on you, so the gray man can mask any preparation you make.
SHTF
In a true survival situation, you want to be noticed as little as possible. Tacticool pants and guns are certainly useful, but they aren’t very low profile, and might get you hurt at the hands of desperate people. Staying at home or hiding away is great, but one day you will have to venture out, so go gray and stay safe.
Starting in the year 1929, the United States fell and fell hard. This event in history was infamously coined “The Great Depression”.
It became known as the worst US economic disaster of modern times. With the full burden of it landing squarely on the shoulders of the American working class who struggled to survive the great depression.
In fact, some didn’t survive. Many died.
But everyone suffered. And every American life touched by this tragedy was never quite the same.
The Great Depression brought the prosperous American empire to its knees. Money and industry dried up almost overnight, along with the nation’s food resources.
It was the worst of times to be an American.
In reality, the probability of a similar economic disaster shaking this nation again is not as low as you might imagine.
Sure, there are new checks and balances – “safety valves” to ensure that the US stock market can’t crash as fast. But even as recently as 2008, America’s economy was badly shaken and sank once again via The Great Recession.
But the truth of the matter is Wall Street and big banks never actually learn the lessons of the past. And with Fed holding interest rates at or near zero (at the time this article was published), the government’s bag of tricks is running on empty.
The next economic fall could match or exceed that of The Great Depression.
History often repeats itself, and the best way to avoid past suffering is to learn from the mistakes of our forbearers – and try to prepare ourselves for harder times yet to come.
As Edmund Burke once famously quoted,” Those who don’t know history are doomed to repeat it.”
The 12 Most Important Lessons Learned Surviving The Great Depression
Lesson 1 – “Job Security” Is A Dangerous Myth
The stock market is just a numerical representation of reality. When it crashes, it’s the underlying businesses that make up the stock exchange that struggle to perform.
And once a crash starts, it’s difficult to stop. When fear turns into all-out panic people, stop spending, which leads to lower business profits, which pushes stock prices even lower, which then leads to even less spending.
Economic depression is a vicious cycle, where businesses are not selling their inventories because people are not buying.
All businesses will immediately start downsizing their staff of employees to help offset their future drop in revenues.
The weaker businesses will find that massive layoffs are not enough. They can’t keep the doors open, and everyone who worked for them is out of a job.
This downward cycle ushered in the era of The Great Depression.
Unemployment rates skyrocketed. The unemployed masses spent their remaining savings on only the bare essentials (i.e. food, rent) until even those dollars ran out.
After that, many were left with shanty towns and food lines as their only remaining options.
So even if you think your job is secure, are you 100% certain?
Lets image that your company does survive but to do so must layoff a few employees from each department. How can you be certain you won’t be among those few?
If you’re a relatively young employee, you might be let go because hey “you’ll land on your feet”. If you’re a more seasoned employee, cutting your salary will make a bigger difference to a struggling business’s bottom line.
You can’t assume how these things will shake out…
In stable times, people like to talk about their “job security”. They fool themselves into believing that their job or their industry can weather any storm. It’s a suckers bet.
Instead, you should assume that you could lose your job in an instant and live, plan and prepare accordingly.
Lesson 2 – Self-Defense Matters In Tough Times
As times got tougher, people got more desperate. People who could not afford to feed themselves or their families forced to more extreme means of providing or risk starvation.
Organized crime took off like a rocket ship. The mobs in New York and California became some of the wealthiest organizations in the country because of their control of the liquor smuggling operations.
Desperate times call for desperate measures surviving The Great Depression. A father or mother with starving children will abandon their morals and steal from others.
You should assume your resources will come under attack. Especially if you’ve stockpiled food, vital supplies, and resources others want. Get prepared to protect what’s yours.
Lesson 3 – Diversify Your Skill Set
Many of the previous well-off families were forced into lives of extreme poverty. As the cushy jobs vanished and monetary assets tanked, people who had no real useful skills suffered the most.
Previously wealthy parents, watched in horror as their children died of starvation or illnesses they could not afford to fight off.
Mothers and fathers died by sacrificing their own needs for their children. Leaving their children alone, to fend for themselves.
When times get tough, you’ll need to figure out how to scratch out a living. Learn how to provide an essential service to others and trade or barter for it.
Figure out how to secure critical resources and turn those into necessary goods or services. It’s best if you acquire those self-reliant survival skills today. If you wait, it may be too late.
Lesson 4 – You Must Stay Mentally Prepared
Brothers and sisters, lovers and friends were subject to extreme suffering and (as the name of the era implies) depression.
Many folks were simply not equipped to handle the cultural shift from prosperity to poverty – or chose not to – and opted to take their own lives.
If you want to be a rock in a sea of misery, you need to sharpen your mind. The best way to do this is through the philosophy of Stoicism.
One aspect of Stoicism promotes the practice self-deprivation during good times to mentally prepare you for bad times.
One such example is fasting for a week. To experience the sensation of extreme hunger and understand that while uncomfortable in the short term, it’s survivable.
A second example would be to sleep for a week on a cold hard floor and not in a soft, comfortable bed. This practice will help strengthen your resolve and spirit should that ever become your actual reality.
Not only will this practice give you more appreciation for the good things you have in your life today, but also provide mental preparations when life’s circumstances take a turn for the worst.
Lesson 5 – You Need Strong Family Bonds
Marriage rates early on in the Great Depression plummeted mostly because single men could not afford to support themselves, let alone a family. So proposals dried up and became something of a rarity from 1929 to 1934.
Surprisingly, divorce rates throughout the era decreased!
However, this has been attributed to spousal abandonment. Men did not have the means to legally leave their wives. So while formal divorce rates were low, abandonment rates during the Great Depression were at an all-time high.
The Great Depression brought about a lot of “poor man’s divorces”, and a surplus of single ladies.
If you want to stay with your spouse through such trying times, then focus on strengthening your bonds of love, trust, and communication today.
Lesson 6 – Honest Work Can Be Hard To Find
Single or abandoned women experience especially hard times.
Being a woman in that era made it harder to get work. And if work could be found they rarely got paid a decent wage. Making women exponentially more vulnerable to moral compromises. Which lead to rising rates of prostitution across the US.
Many women who could not find honest work turned to “the oldest profession in history.” It was a desperate means for surviving The Great Depression.
Again, having some active and useful skills can help to avoid the toughest of compromises. Sewing, gardening, seed saving, farming, butchering, etc.
Lesson 7 – Vices Were In High Demand
Rates of alcoholism escalated despite the prohibition laws that were enforced in the US at this time. Most of the available booze was either expensive imports, diluted imports, or homebrewed hooch. All of which have their shortcomings and most of which were controlled by the mob, or independent bootleggers.
Neither of whom were good folks to owe money. And amazingly, regardless of all that, the number of alcoholic Americans rose steadily throughout the Depression.
When times are tough a lot of people peer down the bottom of a bottle looking for answers.
So if you happen to have a stockpile of these highly desirable vices you can sell or trade them at a nice profit to help keep your loved ones safe.
Lesson 8 – Stretching Your Dollars
Many Americans switched from more expensive cigars to smoking cigarettes, which were significantly cheaper. Not that one or the other is better for you, but its proves an interesting trend.
In trying times, people make certain compromises. They can no longer afford luxury for luxuries sake. They downgrade to cheaper options while surviving The Great Depression, in an attempt to stretch what little was left.
Learning how to effectively stretch your dollars today can help prepare for you tough times ahead. Eliminating unnecessary food and energy waste. Limiting the number of miles you drive your car. Bottom line: Living an efficient life.
All these ideas will help you keep more of your hard-earned dollars today and make them last longer tomorrow.
Lesson 9 – Diets and Health Suffered
Obviously, preventative health care was not high on anyone’s priority list, so the general health of the American population, from 1930 to 1933 suffered greatly. No one bothered going to the doctor unless it was a serious emergency.
Doctors cost money, as does medicine and dental work. Instead, money was allocated to short-term essentials such as food, rent, and clothes – the important stuff.
While I never advocate skipping doctor or dentist visits, you can help keep visit costs low with good personal hygiene.
Keep a well supplied and updated medical kit in your home at all times. Continue regular dental hygiene and eat a balanced diet. These actions will help keep your immune system in good working order.
Plan on stockpiling essential health-related supplies (like survival antibiotics) and then smartly rationing them during hard times.
Lesson 10 – Mass Migration Was Common
Mass migration physically rearranged and shuffled the demographics of America like a professional blackjack dealer.
The Great Depression an era of movement and vagrancy, a time where jobs were sought out by adventurers who train hopped from one town to the next, or walked the roads and hitchhiked when they could.
Caravan loads of migrants moved westward, from the east towards a new life in California. John Steinbeck described the migrations impeccably well in his 1939 novel Grapes of Wrath:
“And then the dispossessed were drawn west–from Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, New Mexico; from Nevada and Arkansas, families, tribes, dusted out, tractored out. Car-loads, caravans, homeless and hungry; twenty thousand and fifty thousand and a hundred thousand and two hundred thousand.
They streamed over the mountains, hungry and restless–restless as ants, scurrying to find work to do–to lift, to push, to pick, to cut–anything, any burden to bear, for food. The kids are hungry. We got no place to live. Like ants scurrying for work, for food, and most of all for land.”
When local prospects are nil, you must move to survive. If you would prefer to avoid such a fate, then focus on your family’s self-reliance. If you can thrive where you are, then you’ll have no reason to join the masses.
Lesson 11 – Creative Art Is A Silver Lining
People went to more movies during the Great Depression. Americans went to at least one movie a week on average (often, more). It was a way to escape from the sad realities of life during the Great Depression for an hour or two.
It was a chance to laugh with other people, get excited, frightened, angry or sad with a crowd of strangers and friends – cinema during the Depression was a flickering, dancing light in a very dark corner of time.
There were a lot of classic films that came out of the Depression. Movies like Frankenstein, It Happened One Night, Gone With The Wind, King Kong, The Wizard of Oz, and Dracula.
There were also a lot of great works of literary art as a result of the Depression.
Some of the most impactful photography came from this era as well, like Dorothea Lange, Walker Evans, Arthur Rothstein, Ben Shahn, John Vachon, Russel Lee, and Gordon Parks are among some of the most recognizable Great Depression photographers.
However, symphonic music, which was in high fashion throughout the 20’s, suffered severely from the depression. Paying for symphony tickets was largely out of the question, getting dressed up was a superfluous endeavor, and besides all of that, advancements in Radio Tech meant that most music lovers could get different stations right in their living room.
The one positive product of tragic events, intense situations, and weird history like that of surviving The Great Depression is the art that it invariably bears.
War, natural disaster, economic meltdown, famine, genocide and anything else so gruesomely depraved will always inspire the creative soul.
Lesson 12 – Self-Reliance Is Key
The biggest hurdle of the Great Depression was a simple one: lives changed drastically – and they changed fast. Americans went from the lavish roaring twenties, where elegance and jazzy splendor perfused the nation, to scrubbing out a meager existence.
Those who survived it were never the same. They reused more. They shopped for bargains, not luxuries. They fully understood that a trip to the grocery store may be the last for a very long time.
That’s the biggest lesson learned from surviving the Great Depression: Self-Reliance skills are essential to getting you through the harsh times. The survival skills that our modern world has since lost. It’s time we discover them again.