Not sure if this has been discussed in this way but my preparations have always been geared this way.
Bugging out for most of us would, or should, be the last resort. No matter how good you are at wilderness survival, bugging out would be much more difficult and uncomfortable than staying put and digging in.
I have my preparations and supplies put together, and arranged in layers. That is to say, I have everything I need to stay entrenched in my home for a very long time. However, almost all of those supplies and gear are loaded into backpacks, each one weighed, labeled, and containing specific supplies. It works like this. I have 12 backpacks.
1. Master Backpack with everything needed for survival in the mountains. Everything.
2. Secondary Backpack with smaller amounts of everything in the Master Backpack.
3. Summer clothing and shoes, regular and Camo
4. Winter clothing, Insulite boots, regular and Mixed Camo
5. Extreme cold clothing and snow pack boots, winter and White Camo
6. Long term survival food
7. Short term survival food.
8. Tent, sleeping bag, ground cloth, camping gear
9. Additional firearms, ammo, knives, and other “weapons”
10. Pioneer tools: machete, axe head, adz head, shovel head, larger bow saw, HD shears
11. Trapping, fishing, snaring, and capturing gear, and special tools to process what I catch.
12. Technical Climbing gear and extra rope, cable, and paracord.
13. Undisclosed contents.
These packs can remain at home and be used for long term, sustained survival. In the event of a catastrophe requiring Bugging Out, I can grab the bags, in order of relevance to the event, and throw them into my truck or Gator, preferably all of them. Out in the wilderness, the fact that everything I will need is in backpacks, makes it easy to take what I need further off road, and to hide what I cannot carry, to come back and pick up later.
I devised this plan for maximum efficiency, speed, and versatility regardless of what happens.
Bug In AND Bug Out Preparations
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