Skunk,<br>I don't know where you live so what is available is not clear. I have chosen to go the volunteer route. By volunteering on the local EMS, SAR and
HAM ARES teams I have become involved with the individuals that have the skills to be most useful in an emergency. On the flip side of this is the fact that I have had to accept some responsibilities beyond my family for the eventuality that something happens. Then again that is the nature of community. I live in NH which may be the only state in the US left that doesn't have a
CERT program. I would consider participation in
CERT,
Neighborhood Watch,
ARC,
Salvation Army,
Civil Air Patrol,
NRA or any similar organized volunteer effort would be a good way to become introduced to the individuals that you would want in a community if something went bad. <br><br>There are of-course other communities and organizations that might be worth joining for the purposes of preparation and skills development. After basic camp craft which can be learned by volunteering in the
BSA or
CAP. the first that I would checkout would be the
SCA Though the historical aspects of the SCA are fascinating I would think more pertinent to survival preparations would be the primitive industry that can be picked upt there such as smithing, forging, construction and agriculture. In the 72 hr. survival situation these skills will be less useful but in anything approximating 4 weeks or longer then these skills become more and more useful.<br><br>Apologies to the international community for the American focus of this post. I live here and am aware of the organizations here. I would be interested in knowing what similar orgainizations exist elsewhere. I know that the Red Cross and the Salvation Army are international and I presume that any nation with an active HAM community will have something similar to ARES.<br><br>Unless you are preparing for TEOTWAWKI I wouldn't join with any of the hardcore survivalists. I don't have any problem with that level of preparedness and once I have finished preparations for 72 hr. interruptions of normalcy I will strive for 1yr as the Amish and most other prudent thoughtfull individuals suggest. The issue that prevents me from becomming involved with the survivalists is that most of them subscribe to some apocalyptic vision (usually one based in a religious world view) which must be accepted as fact (gospel) in order to participate as a member. This is too much bagage for me.