Tuesday, February 13, 2018

SHTF charity is for fools

SHTF charity is for fools

Do you have friends and loved ones who are still living a “sheeple” life and don’t see the writing on the wall, no matter how much you try to educate them about the need to prep? Me too. You have probably thought about what is going to happen to them after the SHTF, but have you thought about how that will effect you… and prepared for it?
My husband, Bobby, convinced me to go all in on this prepping thing after we lived through a nearly two-week-long power outage that hit the tri-state area after a summer storm about six years ago. We were in the midst of a heat wave, near drought and were townies then. It was a small town in a rural county, so the entire community banded together and got through it, we had no safety concerns like folks in urban areas would have had.
But no store in a 30-mile radius had water, ice or gas for close to a week. When some stores in the next county over did get power, their supplies were very limited and ration limits were strictly imposed This resulted in very long lines (we are talking two hour waits here, folks) and the majority of the hot and thirsty people in line going away extremely disappointed.
By the time power and normalcy were restored — although the storm cost us the only grocery store in the county and a smaller one only opened, finally, a few months ago — I was ready to become a full-fledged prepper.
Before I signed on the figurative dotted line to become my husband’ prepping partner, we had a short but emotionally poignant discussion about not only our relocation plans, but how people showing up at the gates of our homesteading survival retreat — no matter who they were, would be received.
Until I got a commitment from Bobby that I, not he, would be dealing with all comers post-doomsday disaster, I was not going to even bother engaging in any type or preparedness activity or agree to major purchases. There would simply be no point, because it would all be for nothing.
He agreed, and now we are perfecting our 56-acre homesteading survival retreat in Appalachia.
I adamantly believed, and still do, that all couples and mutual assistance groups must sit down and specifically detail how not just members of a marauding horde will be dealt with when they show up your gate, but folks you know, extended family, kind and desperate strangers both with and without anything of value to add to your survival efforts. Without such a written in stone plan, chaos and turmoil will result within your family or group — and fester.
I knew, without a doubt, that Bobby would not be able to turn away a crying mother holding a hungry child in her arms, an elderly couple desperate for food or members or our community he had known all of his life and exchanged pleasantries with just prior to the arrival of the apocalypse.
My husband is the strongest man I have ever had the pleasure to know, but he has a servant’s heart that would prompt him to give what he could to those in dire need — and then go without himself so our children and grandchildren would have enough food and water to survive. We need his strength and guidance too much for me to let that happen. When the strongest, most stable and skilled member of your family or tribe is not functioning at full strength, the entire group will suffer for it and the chances of survival be reduced.
I would find it gut-wrenching to turn them away with nothing, but I don’t think my sweet husband would be able to pull it off, not at all.
Does that make me sound heartless, unChristian witch? Probably, but I am willing to live with that label in order for our children and grandchildren to survive. Giving away a few cans of food, water or homemade natural medicine to the people at the gate would not help them survive for more than a day or so.
What it would do, however, is deplete our stockpile of supplies to an extent that our children and grandchildren would go hungry, not have the medicine they could come to need or enough water to drink when the dry season came during the summer.
It all boils down to priorities, not just for my decision-making thought process, but for the unprepared that will show up at our gate. They all had the same chance to prepare as we did, and they chose to go spend their money and time on less essential things.
What if they prepared too, but their home burnt down, along with all of their preps, or some similar scenario beyond their control? Well, I will have both more respect and sympathy for them, but the same end result would occur. The care packages given away, to even unfortunate preppers, will still deplete our stockpiles.
My children and grandchildren will come first. My loved ones inside the survival homesteading retreat “tribe” members, will come first.
Even though this is a cut and dry decision for me, there will be an emotional toll taken when I have to exercise my power to make decisions at our gate. Of that, I have no doubt.
To help keep my conscience clear, I spent a lot of time and money trying to educate the masses about preparedness. I do the same with people I care about and the community at large. I give away resource materials, seeds, etc. to encourage them to become more self-reliant. I have done my bit, it is up to them to do theirs.
Being charitable now is easy, the supply of goods in flowing and not finite.
Some preppers, like James Wesley Rawles, advocate putting together a Christian relief or charity package of sorts to hand out in such situations and not count those supplies among your preps. If you can afford to do this, it is a superb idea and a loving gesture to be sure.
But will a day come when you wish you had used your ample funds to stockpile more survival kits for your own family? It just might.
There are three issues with such a plan that must be discussed in a prepping family or survival group meeting before bagging up the supplies.

Unexpected shortages

Will an end come to handing out the relief packages if your own supplies begin to run low because of a failed crop or other situation?
  • Who will determine when your prepping stockpiles have reached a concerning level and no more relief packages can be handed out?
  • How low will your stockpiles have to dip before you call a halt to the charity packages?

Determining amounts

  • Will you hand out packages based upon the number of people begging, i.e. will a mother with three children tagging along behind her get more than a single man, an elderly woman or parents with only a single child?
  • Will a person who is obviously too sick or injured to continue on much longer receive as much aid as a healthy person?
  • Will age be a factor in how supplies are given out or how much goes in each bag?
  • If you know the person is reliant upon prescription medication that is no longer available, will you “waste” a charity bag on them or give more to the starving children crying and shivering in the arms of their panicked mother?
  • Will the aid be a one time deal or will people who come back a second, third or even fourth time receive another package?
  • How will you know if the person is a repeat begger? It is unrealistic to think the same member of your tribe will be on the gate at all times when the charity packages are being handed out.

OPSEC

Even without cellphones, word will spread that you have ample supplies and are giving them away at the gate of your survival compound. In just a couple of days, maybe less, you could have hordes of desperate people at your gate first asking, then demanding and finally pushing their way inside to get their share of your stuff.
Will you shoot the people climbing over your gates — people you may know and perhaps with children in the crossfire — if they refuse to stay off your land after being told they cannot get any more food and water?
Where will you give out the food, water and first aid supplies? Having even a few people piled up at your gate will be a distraction that could leave members of your tribe unaware of a looming threat. Pulling members of your surveillance team to stand guard during aid distribution will leave you more vulnerable elsewhere on the retreat or compound. It will also show your hand and give too much information about your numbers and the weapons you have.
Giving out the charity aid packages away from the gate and off of your property will expose the tribe members to even more potential harm and set them up to become a hostage a begger could use to demand more food, or worse yet — access to the inside of the compound.
If the person outside the gate has value due to their professional or amateur skills, will you let them in to enhance the overall skill set of your tribe? Who would make this decision and how many extra people could your stockpiles support before they become strained? Types of people of value you might want to consider include: medical professionals, veterinarians, veterans, butchers, hunter, gunsmiths, blacksmiths, mechanics, carpenters and other types of skilled tradesmen and women who can ply their skills in an off-grid world.
Giving away free food and survival kits is a whole lot more complicated and dangerous than engaging in a kind gesture should be. But so goes life during the apocalypse.
The safe solution? I am not sure if there really is one, not for either your heart or your body. Whatever you decide, you will be risking emotional heartache and bodily injury — there just might not be a way to give that doesn’t hurt.
One thing I am sure of though is that not hashing all of this out with your prepping partners beforehand will cause major problems in the long, hard days to come.

Hide your food

The desperate good, yet unprepared people and the marauding hordes fleeing from the cities do not have to see your handing out charity packages to know that you have plenty of food around. Before we moved onto our secluded retreat, I knew the very moment any of our small town neighbors put a big juicy steak, some BBQ ribs or even a hot dog on their outdoor grills.
Smell travels just as easily as sound. You should try to do all of your cooking indoors during a SHTF scenario. Your BBQ grill should not be your primary off-the-grid cooking option, nor should an open flame in your fire ring be where most of your meals are prepared.
If you have to cook meat outdoors, check the wind direction and put extra guards on duty to make sure no one hiking in the woods or walking along the road hugging their aching empty bellies has caught a whiff of your dinner.
When the presence of strangers, marauding hordes or beggars grows near your home, skip preparing meat altogether for a few days and keep your livestock closed up in the barn — back water to them by hand in buckets if necessary.
Hide signs of livestock on your property as much as possible. Muffling the sounds of animal noises or the smell of fresh manure is likely going to prove impossible. So, keep them close and protected and never reveal their numbers visually.
When you have extra dollars to invest in your preps, put them towards strong sheets of metal, wood boards or cinder blocks that can be quickly placed on top of your existing fence to further shield the inner workings of your survival homesteading retreat from view.
You do not even want people who knew you had livestock before the SHTF to be sure you have any left now or know the number of animals in your barn. Invest in the quietest breeds of chickens. Consider keeping your number of cows low. They are noisy and require a lot of pasture to eat year around.
Dexter cattle, a miniature breed of bovine, require less space to live and feed and could be a better beef and milk source during a SHTF scenario.
Rabbits will provide meat, are a lot quieter, require very little space to keep and reproduce rapidly. Build as many ponds as your land will allow and stock them with fish and turtles to eat — you can’t get much quieter and space-confined of a meat source than fish and turtles.

Reduce the need for charity packages

Getting involved in your neighborhood and community now, before SHTF, may vastly reduce the need for charity when things go pear shaped. There will be no way to avoid it, but mitigating the need will make you feel good because you are doing something for your fellow Americans that just might inspire them to become more self-reliant.
  • Start or help expand a community or neighborhood garden.
  • Start a garden along the edge of your property so it can become your charity package when a disaster strikes. This will still alert others that you have so much food that your are willing to share, but will at least not inform them you have any stockpiles of canned goods, long-term storage meals, etc. inside your retreat. As far as the desperate people will know, you planted the garden during good times because the soil was good and you had ample seeds and are willing to share it now because you are busy working your main garden and do not want to venture outside of your gates. But, going outside to tend the garden will put you and members of your tribe in danger. Use containers or thick landscaping cloth to keep down weeds as much as possible to avoid going out the perimeter to tend it.
  • You could also plant fruit trees and berry bushes along the road near your home and allow the desperate to pick from them to put a little food into their bellies. Hopefully, they will think they are stealing food from you and not think you have planted extra food as part of an aid package because you have all that you need inside the survival retreat.
  • Connect with local scout and civic groups and give each member some seeds and talk to them about growing their own groceries and the value of being self-reliant — without giving away that you are a prepper.
  • Host free gardening, butchering and livestock-raising workshops for the people in your neighborhood or community. If you live in a right-to-farm state, keeping backyard chickens, ducks and meat rabbits should be allowed in your small town, suburb or city.
  • Show up at your neighbor’s house uninvited with fresh produce from your garden and supplies to make a rainwater collection system if they do not have a pond, creek or swimming pool to get water from during a long-term disaster. Basically, put yourself out there as a volunteer homesteader, going as far as you can without infringing upon your OPSEC plan.
  • Network with volunteers at your local food bank, church pantry and similar facilities to donate seeds and dehydrated food from your garden put together in emergency packs to hand out now, anonymously, along with some literature about self-reliance and how to grow your own food, even in small spaces, to save money. You can drop these kits off at night in front of the facilities, due to OPSEC reasons, but you best call first, while concealing your phone number or send an email from an account that does not bare your name, to ask about donations procedures, or the valuable goods will likely get pitched out of food safety concerns.
  • Get involved with your local farmer’s market, this is also a place to educate others about self-reliance and hand out seeds and dehydrated produce emergency packets.
  • Every Christmas season communities host coat, hat, glove and scarf drives. Donate warm weather clothes, for both adult and children, now, when supplies are unlimited, to be charitable… not after SHTF when your own family could end up needing warm outerwear during a long-term disaster.
  • Make cloth baby diapers and donate them to groups who accept such items on a quarterly basis.
  • Donate non-perishables to food pantries now — and not to beggars after the SHTF — to do your part for your fellow man. Those types of places will get hit first by desperate people. This will allow you to help feed the hungry without taking away food and survival supplies for your loved ones or mutual assistance group when you know no more are going to be arriving on store shelves for a long, long time — perhaps forever.
As the old saying goes, “charity begins at home.” How far are you willing to go to protect your family? You may have worked to mentally and emotionally prepare yourself to kill for them, without a second’s hesitation, from the charging horde armed with a rocks, sticks, baseball bats, bows or guns.
But, are you truly prepared to kill for them, without hesitation, when a group of unarmed neighbors, some of them children, are rushing onto your land and headed right for your garden, your stockpile of preps or the dwindling water in your creek or pond?
If you did not immediately answer yes, even if it made you wince and feel ashamed, then you are not truly, 100 percent prepared for SHTF or to protect your loved ones. That may sound rude, cruel or socially unacceptable, but it is true nonetheless.
Seeing others suffer, good people you may have known for a long time, especially when there are children involved, is almost too awful of a scenario to contemplate, but your must. You must think about it, get a vivid visual image of it, role play the heck out of such potential encounters during survival training exercises and be prepared to deal with it from a survival standpoint, not how your heart is urging you to.
Disasters have always brought out the best and worst in people. There is absolutely no reason to expect anything different during a nationwide or worldwide SHTF scenario. You probably want to be one of the good guys, I want to be one of the good gals.
That is why I do whatever I can to help others now, not when the survival of my children, grandchildren, husband, parents, nieces, nephews, sibling, great nieces and nephews and prepping friends, who pull work details at our retreat until they are sweaty, filthy and sometimes a little bit bloody, depends on it.
— Tara Dodrill
Tara Dodrill is a homesteading and survival journalist and author. She lives on a small ranch with her family in Appalachia. She has been both a host and frequent guest on preparedness radio shows. In addition to the publication of her first book, ‘Power Grid Down: How to Prepare, Survive, and Thrive after the Lights go Out’, Dodrill also travels to offer prepping tips and hands-on training and survival camps and expos.

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