I could go into specifics, but there’s lots of that out there. Maybe the most useful thing I can say is that preppers massively underestimate skills and connections, and overestimate just having whatever stockpile or tool. Don’t get me wrong, it’s better than not having that, but between the two having skills and connections will actually keep you going longer and under more circumstances.
At the beginning of Covid searches for “how to cook rice” spiked, IIRC.
If you’re starting fresh, maybe figure out what you’ll be doing and who you’ll be doing it with, get ready and organised for that, and then buy stuff to make it easier. If the collapse is global or local doesn’t matter much for this, BTW, only how it will look where you live.
Edit: If that sounds like work, it basically just is. The apocalypse was never going to be easy. Preppers who just buy stuff is a thing because disposable income is much more common than disposable time and interest in an unpleasant scenario.
I could go into specifics, but there’s lots of that out there. Maybe the most useful thing I can say is that preppers massively underestimate skills and connections, and overestimate just having whatever stockpile or tool. Don’t get me wrong, it’s better than not having that, but between the two having skills and connections will actually keep you going longer and under more circumstances.
At the beginning of Covid searches for “how to cook rice” spiked, IIRC.
If you’re starting fresh, maybe figure out what you’ll be doing and who you’ll be doing it with, get ready and organised for that, and then buy stuff to make it easier. If the collapse is global or local doesn’t matter much for this, BTW, only how it will look where you live.
Edit: If that sounds like work, it basically just is. The apocalypse was never going to be easy. Preppers who just buy stuff is a thing because disposable income is much more common than disposable time and interest in an unpleasant scenario.