![]() ![]() Death road to canada prepared preppers how to#How to identify this threshold is not easy for me nowadays. What else could you ask for? It was all great until the apocalypse started. A sushi restaurant next to a pizza delivery at 5 minutes on foot, and so on. A good and well-paying job, medical care insurance, school at 10 minutes on foot for the kiddo. What I want, is that you imagine what your action course would be just in case your worst scenario, one so bad you could not even imagine, takes place.įor those who have not read my former articles, I used to have a regular life, pretty good according to our standards in Venezuela. I am not talking about prepping for every conceivable threat. ![]() But next, we have to try to imagine what could be on the horizon that we have never considered. This is stuff that any person concerned about self-reliance should have covered. (I lack a little bit in the field of manual arts, like pottery or painting, but maybe it is just me…I can change a tire in record time, which is an art by itself especially in a Venezuela where the roads are plagued with thugs.) Off-road vehicles perhaps, or at least a vehicle in good enough shape to take a beating up to the retreat, radios, some food production and particular, merchandisable skills. ![]() Looking back as a Venezuelan prepper, there are things I would have done differently if I had fully known what was coming our way.Įnduring what we have gone through, even after having a proper approach to prepping, sort of conventional in a sense: gensets, water tanks, storage capacity, dry supplies for a few months, and other stuff, all of these are into the field of the conventional and regular prepping. Having overcome a few personal incidents that rocked the boat these last few weeks, I want to write now about one of the most important experiences regarding the psychological aspect of prepping. ![]()
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