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#250963 - 09/15/12 01:20 AM No matter how much I prep...
greenghost Offline
Journeyman

Registered: 09/05/12
Posts: 72
Loc: NH coastline area
No matter how much I prep, the storage, BOBs, GHBs, emergency caches, buying a BOV; I cant wrap my head around the loved ones I cant include or protect!

I got Scott William's book BUG OUT and he suggest for my region to bug out to the NH White Mtns. OK Ive never been there but it sounds like a really remote area aprox 90min away from my house. I could eaisily get us "lost" and set up camp.

How bad does it have to be if I grab my immediate family but have to leave my elderly 80'S parents, sons and my brother behind? What are we (the responsible prepared folks) to do??! I dont have the constitution to bug out and leave so many behind

Just thinking out loud, have any of you had the same thoughts?
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Remember when America use to make sense?

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#250964 - 09/15/12 01:50 AM Re: No matter how much I prep... [Re: greenghost]
Jolt Offline
Journeyman

Registered: 11/15/10
Posts: 90
Loc: Maine
Good question...will be interesting to see what others say. You live in NH and haven't been to the Whites?! You don't know what you're missing--there's tons of great hiking up there. As far as bugging out, really there aren't that many situations in this part of the country that would require it, I don't think. More likely are bugging-in type scenarios like a bad winter storm...even with the rare hurricane, the only people who might likely have to evacuate are those right near the beach. The plausible situations I can think of that would require evacuating would be if something really bad happened at Seabrook, or if there was flooding and you happen to live in a flood zone. I'm not sure how realistic the idea of "bugging out into the woods" is for a lot of situations--it would be easier to go to family or friends outside the affected area, if possible. Although if the situation is localized and the conditions are good elsewhere, there's nothing wrong with heading out on a nice camping trip until things are cleared up at home cool.
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The rhythm is gonna get you...and if it's v-tach or v-fib, the results will be shocking!

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#250965 - 09/15/12 02:19 AM Re: No matter how much I prep... [Re: greenghost]
Russ Offline
Geezer

Registered: 06/02/06
Posts: 5357
Loc: SOCAL
Before locking yourself into a bug-out plan, make sure that the bug-in option isn't better. Bugging out is a last resort thing for folks with family -- extended family. My bet is that when the time comes, there will be a lot of hungry inexperienced peeps in the White Mtns.

Bugging in keeps the roof you have over your head. Food is in the pantry. For which scenarios do you intend to bug-out? How about dead of winter? Make that hungry and cold.
Bugging in may be a better option for all but the most dire scenarios.

my opinion, YMMV
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Better is the Enemy of Good Enough.
Okay, what’s your point??

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#250966 - 09/15/12 02:20 AM Re: No matter how much I prep... [Re: greenghost]
wildman800 Offline
Carpal Tunnel

Registered: 11/09/06
Posts: 2851
Loc: La-USA
I have few thoughts to share:

Your question is why my primary plan is to always "Bug In". Home is where my supplies are and where my plans are made for converting areas of my home to hold the other family members that either show up or that I am able to gather in.

I have faced the inevitable fact that some critical medical supplies may come up in short supply and that casualties will occur as more time passes without the infrastructure being restored.

I do have agreements with friends and relatives to shelter each other if I had to leave my home since habitability was no longer possible.

IMO, BoB's are primarily meant for cases such as a house fire, flooding, HazMat Incident upwind of my home, etc.

Just in case I had to relocate to the woods, I regularly go camping in those areas that have possibilities. I also usually take the back roads to get there, driving slow and looking the area over as I go.

There really isn't a perfect answer to your question as everybody's situation is different and every possible threat will be different in several ways from the planning that has been made.
_________________________
QMC, USCG (Ret)
The best luck is what you make yourself!

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#250967 - 09/15/12 02:34 AM Re: No matter how much I prep... [Re: Jolt]
greenghost Offline
Journeyman

Registered: 09/05/12
Posts: 72
Loc: NH coastline area
jolt, you raised a good point that I overlooked. The Yankee spirit! I imagine folks here still give a care about their neighbors and neighborhoods. We are an old society, us origional 13 colony Yankees, and seem to put aside th Bs and help each other out in hard times.

Its just ingrained in the New England mentality to take care of the others. perhaps a caryover from Colonial times. Us yankees are a bonded bunch. When I was in the military and stationed overseas, Americians bonded big time. Thats how it is here, Im sure its the same still. Just dont see the magority of NH folk looting and being lawless.
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Ret USAF Law Enforcement Specialist 81-01
Remember when America use to make sense?

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#250968 - 09/15/12 02:50 AM Re: No matter how much I prep... [Re: greenghost]
Dagny Offline
Pooh-Bah

Registered: 11/25/08
Posts: 1918
Loc: Washington, DC

I don't have any family for a thousand miles but have considered whether I could leave friends and neighbors. Can't really know unless it happens. The bugging-out logistics of the metro area I live in are so daunting that I've pretty much dismissed the possibility in any kind of urgent situation. The roads would be absolutely gridlocked, which they already are much of any normal weekday.

Perhaps a hurricane with days of notice....

I'd be working my 80-year old parents into my plans -- for the likelier shelter-in scenarios as well as the bugging out scenarios. With 80-year olds, one of the considerations likely will be medications and ensuring that they have enough of the meds they need to survive.

I've become less oriented toward bugging out from home and am focusing more on having some preps in my vehicle at all times just in case I'm already away from home when something happens. I'd be okay living out of my car for a weekend - including food and water. Then I'd have to hoof it with the backpack I keep in there.

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#250974 - 09/15/12 12:50 PM Re: No matter how much I prep... [Re: Dagny]
hikermor Offline
Geezer in Chief
Geezer

Registered: 08/26/06
Posts: 7705
Loc: southern Cal
Bugging In = Home Field Advantage.

What I will do depend upon the disaster. Wildfire threatening my home - Bug Out. Relatives are 120 miles away - a long day on a bicycle, and good friends are even closer. Extensive trips would not be necessary to evade the hazard.

Earthquake - Bug In, at least for a start. Depending upon the location of the epicenter, I might have no other option. Although all my gear will be shaken, if not stirred as well, it will all be in one place. I will pluck gear from the rubble and camp in my backyard as I plan my next action.

Anyone who advocates moving to a location about which he has no knowledge is a complete charlatan, in my opinion. Escaping to the wilderness, and slipping the bonds and restraints of civilization, is a romantic fantasy fostered by mall ninja survivalists and other fantasy types who are rare on this forum.
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#250977 - 09/15/12 01:44 PM Re: No matter how much I prep... [Re: greenghost]
bws48 Offline
Old Hand

Registered: 08/18/07
Posts: 831
Loc: Anne Arundel County, Maryland

I don't know how physically close your family is, but I think you have to think about the various "Bug Out" scenarios very closely.

To my mind, most of the scenarios are highly local, starting with the individual house (e.g. a fire, then the neighborhood (e.g. gas leak) and so on. These sort of events (there can be many variations), while they might affect you or some family members, are very unlikely to affect everyone, so not everyone would need to bug out. They may be safe, sound and secure where they are.

In a large scale event, e.g. a Katrina or earthquake, then maybe everyone would want to bug out, but realistically, the chance of doing that will be limited by time and the capacity of the local roads to handle the traffic. This is the problem that Dagney faces in DC. Bugging In then becomes the most logical and effective alternative.

So IMO, bugging out really only applies in a very limited set of local circumstances. I agree with the comments along the line that bugging out and living in the woods are unrealistic.

From some of your other posts, I think you are already trying to get the family members thinking of prepping for the unexpected; this is probably the most effective and useful thing you (and they) can do.

I wouldn't worry too much about a family wide "Bug Out" scenario.
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"Better is the enemy of good enough."

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#250979 - 09/15/12 02:06 PM Re: No matter how much I prep... [Re: greenghost]
wildman800 Offline
Carpal Tunnel

Registered: 11/09/06
Posts: 2851
Loc: La-USA
Like Dagny, I do carry an E&E Kit in case TSHTF while I'm on the boat, away from home. That would be some kind of EMP incident ONLY, in my mind.
_________________________
QMC, USCG (Ret)
The best luck is what you make yourself!

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#250980 - 09/15/12 02:56 PM Re: No matter how much I prep... [Re: greenghost]
greenghost Offline
Journeyman

Registered: 09/05/12
Posts: 72
Loc: NH coastline area
Man this forum is great! Although Ive been prepping for under a year, Im finding out the "horn is still green". I've been narrow minded by worst case scenario parinoia and to focused on the survivorman or dual survival way of living off of nothing in the wild.

I was trying to force prep myself (get-er done NOW) and should of been just taking a deep breath and overviewing my plans Ive achieved so far. Would it be correct to say that prepping is something comprised of layers? Home supplies, BOB, Bug in plans,security, etc that have to be all worked at a little at a time?

Maybe its because I keep up with world news and see this pot to about boil over. Not to mention the wrong and scary path this country is going down. Makes me a bit jittery and I sometimes feel like there's so little time left eek
_________________________
Ret USAF Law Enforcement Specialist 81-01
Remember when America use to make sense?

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