In case of an election night Doomsday, preppers are running up sales of emergency survival food.
While sales for “long term food” typically see an increase around natural disasters and elections, “this is more intense than what we saw in 2012,” said Keith Bansemer, VP of marketing for My Patriot Supply, a manufacturer and seller of survival food. During the previous election his company saw sales double. This time it’s triple.
“We have everyone we can on the phones,” he said. “We are overwhelmed.”
Purchases at other long term food supply companies are up as well. Emergency preparedness online store TheEpicenter reports a 6 percent uptick in year over year sales.
Another company, Legacy Foods, predicts they’ll see a 1-2 week spike in sales after the election — if Hillary Clinton wins, said owner Phil Cox.
The meals, sold by the plastic bucket or tote bin, are typically dehydrated or freeze-dried food in sealed military-grade Mylar packs. Menu items include pasta primavera, Hawaiian Style Sweet n’ Sour, cheesy broccoli and rice soup, orange energy drink mix and chocolate pudding. They’re sold in bundles based on how long they’ll feed you.
For $2,000 spent at Legacy Foods, you could eat three square meals a day for an entire year. That’s 1,080 servings. TheEpicenter has a 14-day supply kit for $235 that’s recently been “selling really well,” said owner Bryan Nelson. The most popular entry-level seller at My Patriot Supply is a 3-month supply for $497. It comes a in nondescript gray slim line totes bin designed to be easy to stack in the back of a closet or slip under your bed.
Big name retailers are in on the game. Costco sells a 1-month supply of 390 servings in plastic gallon buckets for $114.99. Wal-Mart has a bucket deal, too.
What’s feeding this new urgency? Survivalist consumers says they’re preparing for post-election unrest that could involve everything from massive riots, to power grid outages, to the total collapse of the financial system where a can of food becomes currency.
And it’s not just guys digging a hole on their farm and filling it with MRE’s who are driving sales, companies say, but schoolteachers, moms, and successful financial planners. Nor is it limited to just rural areas.
“Frederick Reddie,” a 41-year-old “urban prepper” from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania is stocking up on staples like rice and peanut butter and working on expanding his 6-month supply of emergency food to two years. He has to use a pseudonym to protect his supply from any future hungry neighbors, he told NBC News.
Reddie predicts a Trump win that has the urban poor revolting across the nation and the imposition of martial law to quell riots and the burning of businesses.
But he’s also getting ready for the possibility of a Clinton victory that he says could lead to conflict with Russia and “World War 3 in 2017.”
Either way, Freddy’s ready – with both supplies and a word of advice.
“At minimum stock up your cabinets as if you knew a hurricane was coming,” he said. “It’ll be like a hurricane that could touch every city in America.”
The companies take pains to point out that they sell food not just for the collapse of civilization but also for camping, outdoor recreation, and natural disaster preparedness, like Ebola or volcanoes.
Their customers are careful, self-sufficient and pragmatic types, they say, students of history who know things like stock market bubbles and crashes go in cycles and are taking small, meaningful steps, to reassert control over a toxic election. They’re always thinking ahead.
Cans of food that last 25 years are “better than money in the bank,” said Nelson. “If you think the value of money is going to go down, then you could convert dollars into something tangible that you can use later” for either eating or barter.
Bansemer said that his customers don’t necessarily fear a specific election outcome, but change itself.
“You hear them saying, no matter who wins, I know I could take a positive step myself and secure what’s important,” he said. “They’re securing their food supply.”

ohanian on Sun, 6th Nov 2016 7:28 am
Do they have dehydrated tofu? What about canned bread? Or Maruchan instant ramen? I heard they last for decades..
Ibon on Sun, 6th Nov 2016 7:48 am
desperate to find anything to justify their rodent in a hole paranoia
Davy on Sun, 6th Nov 2016 8:12 am
I have had long shelf life food now since 05. I have a variety of different kinds over a variety of dates. I plan to buy some more soon. I am also wondering how this stuff will hold up. In a few years I plan to open the oldest stuff to see if it is edible. I am thinking it will be edible depending on how hungry I get. In Hatti they have mudcakes, http://polosbastards.com/recipe-haitian-mudcakes/ so I am pretty sure I can hang on to the really old stuff and it will still be edible and tradeable. I can always trade or give away the oldest stuff. I don’t drink but I also have a big collection of bourbons. The shelf life on bourbon is pretty impressive…that is unless you drink…lol. I plan on a big party if the mushroom clouds start rising all around me. The hangover will suck though.
I highly recommend at least having a few weeks of long shelf life food. It comes in so many forms. You can get the freeze dried stuff or buckets of grain. I have several buckets of hard wheat and a grinder. My wife makes excellent bread. I have many different varieties of long shelf life food. Many have canned food and freezers with food. All this is great just remember a freezer needs power and frozen food has a short shelf life in relation to 20-30 year long shelf life food. I have canned food and freezer food too. These will go first. I also have books on local edibles. Here on the farm we have a variety of foods in the fields and forest. I have many old Native American recipes. One is for crushed acorns. It is labor intensive but when you are hungry you will have time.
What I have done in the past 5 years is start my cattle and goat operation. This is a management intensive grazing system of moving animals weekly between paddocks for optimum grass management. I added goats to the equation. This farm has weed, brush, and invasive species issues and the goats are highly adapted to this. Instead of trying to rid the farm of this problem with chemicals and expensive tillage efforts I am using an animal species to utilize it as a resource. I am also planning for an uncertain future with climate change. Cool season grasses that are the staple of cattle operations around here will be hard hit with warmer and variable temperatures. It will take a variety of weeds, brush, grasses, and trees to make it in the future is my thinking. Goats and cattle in combination is a good bet. Another reason I got goats is the meat is wonderful if cooked right. A goat is a good size for a small family to utilize for a short period. I also have cattle that will be more important to me as cash money. It is hard for one family to utilize a whole cow so it is better to sell a cow to a butcher to be processed for many families. I also have chickens in and around the goats because the manure attacks bugs and chickens like bugs. I have a garden, orchard and grape vines. I have bees too. I know many of you can’t do these things but you can go out on the internet and buy a few weeks of long shelf life food.
I know many of you say when SHTF my effort will not matter. The zombies will come and take it right? I have big dogs and big guns so at least I have a plan for that. I have neighbors who live a similar lifestyle and we stick together. I don’t count on this to save me but it will buy me time. If this is a gentle slopping collapse process maybe it will work out nice for us maybe not. In any case, is some effort better than no effort? Right! I enjoy what I am doing so this doom and prep I do has a rewarding side. It is hard work with no recognition. If I were to tell people why I am really doing this they would think I am crazy. Yea, I am crazy but in a crazy world so it is a double negative equals a positive attitude. It is a way of life and it encompasses everything you do. Get really good at a few things but know a little bit about a lot of things. Have some hope instead of a profound anxiety of doom. Keep your hope realistic and realize there is no place to hide from destiny. If you think I am not scared then you are wrong. I live my fear and that makes me stronger.
Ghung on Sun, 6th Nov 2016 8:22 am
Ibon said; “…desperate to find anything to justify their rodent in a hole paranoia…”
Tell it to the folks in Venezuela.
Sissyfuss on Sun, 6th Nov 2016 8:31 am
I’d like a 6 month order of Soylent Green, please. With a touch of Basil, perhaps.
peakyeast on Sun, 6th Nov 2016 8:45 am
@Davy: There was a test recently in Danish television.. Anyway they tested Danish military field rations from 1960s containing ham in some sauce. Not freeze dried – ready to eat.
There was absolutely nothing wrong with them. Even taste was fine.
Dredd on Sun, 6th Nov 2016 8:45 am
Meanwhile the real dangers are unrealized (The Bathtub Model Doesn’t Hold Water – 3).
Ghung on Sun, 6th Nov 2016 8:51 am
Mormons – Food Storage:
“Food Storage-
“Our Heavenly Father created this beautiful earth, with all its abundance, for our benefit and use. His purpose is to provide for our needs as we walk in faith and obedience. He has lovingly commanded us to ‘prepare every needful thing’ (see D&C 109:8) so that, should adversity come, we may care for ourselves and our neighbors, and support bishops as they care for others.”
“We encourage members worldwide to prepare for adversity in life by having a basic supply of food and water and some money in savings. We ask that you be wise, and do not go to extremes. With careful planning, you can, over time, establish a home storage supply and a financial reserve.”
What am I supposed to have in my food storage?
woman food storage
There are three main components of food storage:
Food supply (three-month and long-term)
Water supply
Financial reserve
Store foods that are a part of your normal diet in your three-month supply. As you develop a longer-term storage, focus on food staples such as wheat, rice, pasta, oats, beans, and potatoes that can last 30 years or more……”
We’ve recently eaten foods such as rice, dried beans, white flour, grits, farina, pasta, and canned tomatoes from our storage, all of which were more than 5 years old. Dry goods were vacuum-packed. All of these items were perfectly fine.
Walmart sells the basic Foodsaver vacuum system for about $80, and we use it a lot, especially for packing meats for the freezer. We’ve eaten vacuum-packed/frozen chicken and venison after over a year in the deep freeze, and it was great. Butter and cheeses can also last for years if frozen; good sources of fat. Our deep freeze is, of course, solar powered.
paulo1 on Sun, 6th Nov 2016 8:55 am
In earthquake country, (BC west coast), and well past the historical timeline for the ‘big one’, I have always maintained a decent stock of supplies. The ‘kits’ mentioned in this article strike me as yuppie fair, a quick fix for people unable to plan their lives responsibly.
Freeze dried Hawaiian sweet and sour? I suppose if the doom doesn’t strike they can serve it with their ready-to-eat Buffalo wings for super bowl.
Anyway, responsible planners usually maintain a stock of dried legumes for soups, rice and pasta, flour…yeast…spices, a water source, (wood?) heat options, batteries and spares, plus a plan for electrical power. I would also like to add to the list a radio, playing cards, pens and paper, tools and stores, and adequate clothing, First Aid supplies + self-defense. Free online how-to books are also available and can be printed out and stored in binders.
This mindset does not come in a box or bought online in a sealed tote for weird election cycles or possible urban unrest. (Mormons have been doing it for decades). No, I am not a Mormon:-) It is called being an adult. If you buy just a little bit every time you grocery shop, the next thing you know you have a decent emergency kit.
Of course, I’m the type who carries a first aid kit in every vehicle including trail bikes and boats, plus a tarp and blankets. The road I drive to town makes this a good idea.
We lost power last week in a big storm and I think I gained weight. We now have a two day extreme rainfall warning with 45 kt winds starting tonight. You know what? All I have to do is make sure a small flashlight is by the bed; everything else is taken care of.
I am not a smoker, but if you are…..have a can of tobacco and some papers included. When I was working up north I flew into a hunting camp that was destroying itself from within due to running out of smokes. When they rushed the plane begging for smokes, and finding out I was a non-smoker, I thought they would lynch me. Especially when I said, “I’ll be by this way next week and will drop some off then”.
peakyeast on Sun, 6th Nov 2016 9:03 am
@paulo1: If not planning to be a place inhospitable enough to avoid beggars then I think tobacco is a good idea for storage as a bargaining item.
penury on Sun, 6th Nov 2016 11:37 am
I am certain that food storage for short term emergencies is imperative. Anything over six months, food storage will not be your problem. There are ten thousand items that you will not think about but which one will be the most important? Probably something stupid like strike anywhere matches.
Ghung on Sun, 6th Nov 2016 12:06 pm
Funny that, penury. Anyone too stupid to secure a way to make fire probably isn’t going to last long anyway. I haven’t been able to find real strike-anywhere matches for years, but a supply of disposable lighters is a good idea. I found ‘bricks’ of 100 lighters at the $5 store; bought 200 and they work quite well. I like Bic lighters the best and keep about 20 in the store room, then there’s my collection of Zippos. I figure the cheapo disposables will be good for trade.
Water, food and shelter are, of course, the basics, along with self-defense. Plenty of lists out there for just about everything people should have; some are quite extensive.
Davy on Sun, 6th Nov 2016 12:13 pm
Peaky/Paulo, I didn’t think about tobacco as a good storage item for barter. I may have to look into that!
Bob Inget on Sun, 6th Nov 2016 1:02 pm
Only the calendar will change Tuesday. Never mind January 20th 2017.
Ms Clinton will (narrowly) carry up to forty states.
(my prediction)
If you are over 25, recall Y2K and it’s terrible aftermath… Suddenly, over night, supermarket shelves emptied. Not.
If you are over 20 you may recall ammunition
shortages 2008 pre Obama first term.
Over 14 ? another rush to gun shows to pick up
another AR or Glock when Obama was reelected.
Today, we read how guns are selling at ten times normal just in anticipation of a Clinton Victory.
(maybe Libs have fallen for the same fears that
Blue Collar folks faced in 08 and 12.
Gun manufactures, the NRA, D. Trump suckered us again.
Trump TV will get good ratings for one or two years then fade as someone smarter, better read, younger, sweeps in to ‘make us great again’.
America may reject the so called ‘Alt Right’
but before we do, folks will be storing food and ammo.
Stored food can someday be eaten or fed to pets.
What on earth are we to do with all those weapons? Doubtless even more deadly ones come along by 2020 when we will have forgotten how nervous we were just four years ago. Watch how the NRA demonizes Ms Clinton getting us ready for 2020 and beyond.
Bob inget lives in Oregon where he worries more about subduction earthquakes then Americans befooled by Charlatans, Cult of the Personality, know nothing types.
Outcast_Searcher on Sun, 6th Nov 2016 2:08 pm
Doomers need a hobby. Businesses that like high profit margins are happy to supply them.
Meanwhile in the real world, both candidates are a big disappointment re quality and integrity and fitness for office, but the “threat of disaster” is about as real as the Y2K “disaster” turned out to be.
(Real computer folks like myself knew it was no big deal re many months of intensive testing, but why listen to actual experts if it might spoil the short term doom fantasy?)
Nearly 17 years later, and same as it ever was.
Ghung on Sun, 6th Nov 2016 2:23 pm
Nearly 17 years later, and we’re 17 years further along the path of resource depletion and environmental destruction, hundreds-of-billions of more tons of CO2 and other greenhouse gasses added to the atmosphere and oceans, another 1.5 billion human mouths to feed while uncountable species have gone extinct. Meanwhile, more failed states and even more impotent political systems along with increased terrorism, and the poles continue to melt, while evermore deluded fools claim things are the “same as it ever was”.
Right, O_S, same as it ever was. Frogs,, in pots.
peakyeast on Sun, 6th Nov 2016 2:35 pm
Yeah OS.. Its just that a doomers life is his hobby. Thats why doomers are so happy. We are a cheery bunch. You need look no further than PO.
onlooker on Sun, 6th Nov 2016 4:20 pm
Elections worthless distractions on the path down the collapse road. Quote of the year by Ghung- Frogs in a slow warming pot do not even realize they are being cooked alive. Dumbest post of the year OS “Nearly 17 years later, and same as it ever was.”
makati1 on Sun, 6th Nov 2016 4:38 pm
If you need food stored for more than two growing seasons, you are in big trouble. I say two, because even the best farmer/gardener can lose a crop or two due to weather or pests. If you lose more than that, you are in the wrong location or are a bad farmer/gardener. Either one could cost you your life.
Food for thought: A 10 year food supply weighs how much? How much can you carry on your back if/when you have to move? Can your family carry that much plus the other necessities? The likelihood that you will be able to stay in one place for years is going to depend on the events in your region and your portable resources. Not your current situation. Survival is a challenge. Ask any 3rd world country farmer.
Anonymous on Mon, 7th Nov 2016 12:48 am
LoL, amerikan ‘elections’, the greatest show on earth, or at least on cable tv. Well, considering how mentally and morally deficient Killary is, and how bloodthirsty, fears she could trigger a wider set of wars than the ones amerika is currently spearheading now, are not entirely w/o some justification.
Still, amerika has had just as incompetent figureheads in the past as she is, Bush the Dumber, Ronny Raygun, and more recently, barrack, hope ‘n’ change obomber. And we are all still here despite their best efforts.
makati1 on Mon, 7th Nov 2016 1:23 am
Anon, just more examples of the crumbling of the empire. 320,000,000 plus Americans to chose from and we get Killary and The Donald. Speaks volumes for the future of the U$ doesn’t it? Glad I am watching from 8,000 miles away.
Kenz300 on Mon, 7th Nov 2016 5:23 am
Hate speech, divisive comments and abusive statements show a man that is vindictive and not qualified to lead.
A CON man with no moral values.
This is what the RepubliCON party has become.
The 281 People, Places and Things Donald Trump Has Insulted on Twitter: A Complete List
http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2016/01/28/upshot/donald-trump-twitter-insults.html?_r=0
makati1 on Mon, 7th Nov 2016 7:04 am
Kenz, I guess Killary is a saint? Gonna do time soon, if there is still any justice in America, which I doubt. 73 years is the last total I read.
The Clinton are a Mafia family and should be in jail, not running for President. I hope they throw the book at her even if she does get to sleep in the White House for a few nights again.
makati1 on Mon, 7th Nov 2016 7:06 am
Kenz, as for Trump, he personifies most Americans. They see a lot of themselves in him, if they are honest with themselves. He should win, just to take down the corrupt U$ government, if for no other reason.
Davy on Mon, 7th Nov 2016 7:09 am
The referenced article below is making a great point and one I am going to present with a different angle. My angle is in a world in population and consumption overshoot facing limits and diminishing returns then we can say status quo “political systems don’t scale”. It is not only political system as this article focuses on it is also social and economic systems when seen in relation to the human element and the Ecos.
Liberal democracy and market based capitalism locked in the competitive cooperation of globalism have delocalized our locals to such a point we are alienated and dangerously exposed to a failure of survival strategies. It is further seen in my eyes there is no alternative. Overshoot is more than the physical it is also the systematic side of control. Populations like ours cannot stand for long because they are unstable and ungovernable. The other reason is there is no alternative on the practical side of the equation. We opened a door of no return. We are not going to know if there is an alternative to capitalism and democracy because we are all in on this system. There will be no other system to embrace except in the aftermath of collapse. A collapse is likely ahead and it is necessary because of natural law of the “Ecos”. The scale of collapse of when and the degree and duration cannot be known but what is known is it is ahead and we appear to be relatively close and likely in the process.
The take away on this is that tomorrow we have an election that is really insignificant in this bigger picture. This election is significant in the turning point of the American civilization in my eyes. One candidate is for the sustaining of the now fully exposed corrupt “status quo” establishment and the other is the destructive fight against that establishment with likely irrational and dangerous policy. Both are a negative and both will fail. I am siding with Trump for the reason of avoiding war with Russia and condemning blatant corruption and maleficence of the Clintons. Trump will destroy this country no different than Clinton but I see his way as better only because of a possible detente with Russian and the bringing to justice of the disgusting corruption and criminality of the Clintons. Clinton will likely win because the fix is on but this election cycle will have severely damaged the establishment and the status quo. In that respect Trump was good for this country.
“Here’s What Happened When A Hillary-Supporting MIT Professor Decided To Analyze Her Emails…”
http://tinyurl.com/gtxwe5r
“So what I got from reading some of Clinton’s email is another piece of evidence confirming my intuition that political systems scale poorly. The most influential actors on them are spending a substantial fraction of their mental capacity thinking about how to communicate, and do not have the bandwidth needed to deal with many incoming messages”
“Also, the large number of people who were unable to interpret our tool as anything but an effort to support or oppose a political candidate?—?and that was true for both liberals and conservatives?—?speaks to me about an ineffective public sphere. And that’s something I think we should all be concerned about. This polarization is not just a cliché. It is a crippling societal condition that is expressed in the inability of people to see any merit, or any point, in opposing views. That’s a dangerous, and chronic, institutional disease that is expressed also in the inability of people to criticize their own candidates”
“Bottom line: We need to decentralize everything, especially government.”
“If we want to stick with representative democracy, I think for it to work best, it needs to be very local.”
“I think we should look back toward the original concept of government as understood by our founders. A loose-knit collection of largely self-governing states that are bonded together in certain important ways, yet independent and sovereign in all other ways.”