To loop this thread again...
Can there be any better investment in survival than travel?
Not airport hopping, but open ended, open hearted exploration of this blue planet?
So often on this site (which is about 85% US contributors) posters speak of being hemmed in by unsustainable population density. Then of the ease of access for 'Zombies' to doomstead suited areas.
Especially if you are from the northern hemisphere, the world looks damn crowded. The more civilized your home country, the more likely you feel this population pressure.
As 'westerners' we are programmed to believe the world is a dangerous place; far more dangerous than wherever we are from. We easily overlook our local crime, social breakdown, collective paranoia; by seeing a far worse 'reality' in other places (through the MSM). People starving and being kidnapped and insurrection/ rebellion, natural disasters, etc etc.
Then there is Reality.
The world is actually far safer to get around in/on than most people ever realise.
Every day people pack up their bags and go to far off exotic places and somehow almost always make it home. Thousands of people at any one time are cruising yachts of all shapes and sizes around the seas and oceans, bays, cays, rivers and canals.
These Argentinian friends of mine are now 7 years (and 4 children) into a journey around the world in a 1928 'Graham Paige' British classic car. Their children were all born in different countries. They live by selling books about their travels and doing media interviews. They have never paid any money to have their vintage car and themselves shipped from country to country. They have never had any problems in over 100 border crossings, many in 3rd world countries. Candelaria and Herman Zapp are very special, yet very ordinary people. We can all learn from them.
http://www.google.com.au/search?sourcei ... your+dreamhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kYvfXg8X_CwWhen you get in the mode of travel at the grass roots level, things start to happen which you would never have imagined, to help you along your way. When I met Candelaria and Herman, they were on their way towards the Zamboanga Peninsula and were seeking advice as they went. I was able to introduce them to a military training team leader with 7 years experience fighting Moro in southern Mindanao. His advice matched doubts planted by the Argentine embassy, so they went via Palawan to Malaysia. That's how things happen when you travel. Human networking is as natural as breathing. Bad news about an area travels fast.
The cruising community is no myth. Everywhere you go people love to share their wisdom. The vast majority of the world is safe to travel with reasonable precautions. The best advice is from people who have lived or at least spent time in an area, not just a country.
The investment in self made by people like Annie, Trevor, Herman and Candelaria, is completely beyond anything material a person can buy. These people have truly found Home all over the world, not everywhere they go but in many many places.
Is there any use in having a bunker full of stuff in a place which don't feel like home?