10 Supplies Preppers Will Have Wished They Remembered to Pack Post-Collapse. #10 is Essential.

man running on trail in nature

Assume you have just endured what to you seems like an epic survival event – a hurricane or tornado, earthquake or even a manmade disaster.

Are you prepared? Really?

Does your stock of survival supplies really meet all your needs? Or is it lacking in key things you overlooked?

A Civil War General once stated that the best battle plan was “perfect,” up until the first shot was fired and the same holds true for disaster or survival preparation!

There is always something you overlooked or forgot, ignored or decided you did not need – up until the moment you do!

While you will never be able to think of, prepare for or stock away everything you need, the more you look at lists of survival supplies, the more you reduce the chance you neglect something you need!

To see such a critical list, check out the next page!

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10 Comments

  1. Mark Mcclure said:

    s**t paper,because dragging your$#%&!@*on the ground like a dog is gonna bring a raging climb in uti,s

  2. Glen Bradley said:

    Wtfbdie hard survior this is a very basic starting out idea. There list never have any thing new or not common sence come on guys get out of the box

  3. Jesse Shubin said:

    Got em all. I dobt drink tea or coffee but i stock all of it. I dont like beans but i live in a heavy Hispanic populated state so i stock up on beans for trade. Same for energy shooters, lots of matches/lighters, and tons of toilet paper

  4. Lisa Hammock said:

    Instead of filling my house with TP…I started saving magazines that have actual paper pages…not the glossy pages.
    This is what the old timers used when they had an outhouse!
    I can remember the old Sears and Robucks catalog being used for TP!

  5. Jesse Shubin said:

    Ya im not qyite that old, but i do keep phonebooks around because the paper is thin and easy to light plus it stays neat and organized in a book so i suppose that would work as well like you say to use it

  6. Lisa Hammock said:

    Yeah…thinking it’s better than nothing…especially if the situation lasts a long time and you run out of TP!
    I have also saved phone books and like you mentioned…they will be good for lighting a fire.
    I also save the tubing from paper towel rolls. When I clean my dryer vents…I stuff the lint into the tube. The lint makes a great fire starter.

  7. Jesse Shubin said:

    I keep a baggie of Vaseline soaked cotton balls in everyones bag and a big jar at the house and in the camper. They light easily in all weather and last from 7-11 minutes so you can build a fire around them

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