Saturday, May 18, 2024

Part Three Family Nuclear Survival---LIsts

FAMILY DISASTER NETWORK (FDN)

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FAMILY NUCLEAR SURVIVAL PART THREE-December 15, 2022

SURVIVAL LISTS for your Fallout Shelter

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Do your homework first, then you can e-mail me for questions or opinion.


OPERATION SAVE A FAMILY

PUBLIC SERVICE ANNOUNCEMENT

PUBLIC DOMAIN INFORMATION-PLEASE COPY AND SHARE

SCAN, PDF, EMAIL AND FORWARD


THE AUTHOR IS NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY DEATH, INJURY OR ANY OTHER MATTER BECAUSE OF WAR, NUCLEAR WAR OR THE EFFECTS THERE OF!


Please read the other Nuclear pages on this website.


Purchase and store what you can afford. Two weeks is the bare minimum to store for nuclear war survival. But warehouses, trucks, and stores may not be open or working right away. So try to get three to five weeks worth of food and supplies in total. If you can get more, that is even better.


DRINKS:

Potable water: One gallon per person per day. A few weeks worth.

Water filter and a gallon of bleach. 16 drops of bleach per gallon of water.

Non-potable water: Over 50 gallons. See other pages.

Sports drinks: Two cases-your choice.

Soda pop: Your quanity, your choice.

Concentrated milk: A few cans. Use opened up can immediately

Pedialyte: Have a few if you have children or keep around for dehydratration.

Protien/energy drinks: a couple of cases.

Baby formula: if needed.


FOOD:

Canned meats, canned vegtables, canned fruits, canned soups, stews and chilis: Over two weeks, hopefully three to four weeks of supplies.

Potatoes, noodles, crackers, apples, salt and pepper, spices.

Other foods as needed.


MEDICINES:

If you follow the news or get various alerts on your phone, you should be able to keep up with global affairs and the potential for nuclear attack. The rhetoric should build to a daily use a week before the actual attack. This should give you plenty of time to finish your planning and preparations.


If you take prescription medications, then you should always be ready to refill during a time of crisis to have your prescriptions filled to the top. If you can get a 90 day prescription on something then do so. During or after the nuclear war, you might run low on pills, so you might have to ration your pills or wean your self of various pills if needed. That is, until another pharmacy can open up and you can get refill.


Make sure to have plenty of over-the-counter pain, allergy and cold medications, vitamins, and supplements. You will find out that some prescription medicines have a generic over-the-counter brand. Plus certian vitamins and suppliments are good for pain, such as D3 and Tumeric; suppliments such as cinnamon and garlic are good for the heart. So do some research on what is good for what.


Have a couple months worth of these pills to make it until civilization can restart properly.


CLOTHES:

As far as clothes go, there are different scenarios on the amount of clothes that you need. 1. Are you bugging in? That is you are making a hard shelter or an expedient fallout shelter in your home and you are far enough away from a ground zero nuclear explosion. 2. Are you bugging out lite? That is you live in or close to ground zero and you have to evacuate to somewhere else and stay with them. You are probably walking or catching a ride and relying on just a big or medium backpack. 3. Are you bugging out heavy? That is you are evacuating with a vehicle or two and you live close to ground zero and you are packing as many items as possible.


For Scenario One, the amount of clothes that you would need for yourself for two weeks inside your fallout shelter would be two sets of jeans extra, four undershirts, three outer shirts, four pairs of socks, five pair of underwear. You would want to air out these clothes as the two weeks goes on and re-wear them as needed. Babies, small children, the disabled and the elderly might need more sets of clothes to have in the shelter. After the two weeks you would be able to use the rest of your clothes inside of your home. If clothes get really dity put them in a 13 gallon white plastic bag and set them outside of the shelter.


For Scenario Two, the amount of clothes is what you can fit inside your medium or big backpack. But suggested items are, four pairs of socks, three pairs of underwear, three undershits, two outer shirts, and an extra pair of jeans. This scenario is if you would be staying with someone else or you can create your own shelter elsewhere.


For Scenario Three, the amount of clothes would be the same as number one, but take the supplies out of your vehicles and store them inside somewhere, maybe being used to build the shelter.


Laundry-post fallout shelter: Items that you will need: Five gallon bucket purchased from hardware store (buy a few), clean black plunger (new or sterilized)–this is to agitate the clothes in the bucket, liquid laundry soap, and if you can find a laundry screen to rub the clothes against. Further instructions will be on page four. Make sure that tap water is safe, if you have any, or use river or lake water, but filter and bleach first. 16 drops per gallon of water.


OTHER ITEMS TO HAVE:

Remember stores may not be open for a couple of weeks. Transportation may be an issue.


Flashlights: You should have one for each person inside the shelter over 10 years of age. Use them sparingly. Have at least three sets of extra batteries for whichever size the flashlights are.

Battery powered AM/FM(/SW) radio: Make sure to have at least two extra sets of batteries for it. Use only to get updates and news at first, various stations.

Box of 13 gallon trash bags

Baby diapers (if needed). Probably change the baby quickly outside the shelter. Have a 13 gallon bag for trash outside the shelter.

Baby wipes, they come in handy, use sparingly.

A few rolls of paper towels, preferably thicker types, to do body washes.

Pet food and supplies.

Well over a dozen rolls of toilet paper. This will be a hot commodity.

Salt, pepper and a couple other spices.

Silverware and plastic ware. Sharp knife.

Paper plates and bowls.

Can opener. Have a spare.

Five-five gallon buckets to haul water.

A few one gallon pails to do different things. One to soak silverware.

Air spray (one shot), perfume and cologne (use sparingly).

Dish soap.

What else can you think of?


More items will be covered on page four, “Thriving after Fallout.”


Your family should definitely think and prepare about surviving weeks three thru six, and then learning to thrive past that point. Life and stores will not be as before. It all depends on transportation and power. Plus if a full nuclear attack happens, expect 100-130 million deaths from the initial explosion, fallout-radiation sickness, medical sustainment-lack of power, lack of clean water and food.


Go onto YouTube and search Prepper, survival and nuclear channels, and learn all that you can before its too late. 

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