by cephalotus » Mon 15 Dec 2008, 11:50:02
I store around 3-4 weeks of my "standard" food in advance, so I can eat whatever I like, milk, eggs, bread, chocolate, fresh vegetables and fruits, meat, fish, cheese, beer, wine, fruit juices, ice cream, etc, pp.
After that I could probably survive for 3 months on rice, pasta, oil, sugar, vitamin pills, 10kg of body fat and stuff like that.
If the stores will stop selling stuff within the next minute I wouldn't eat all the "nice stuff" within the first weeks of course.
I also have a 500m² garden within the city (and seed and biological fertilizer), but I doubt that it would be helpful in such a scenario, because I can not guard it.
So in the worst imaginable cases I will have enough food to survive 4 months (IF I can get enough water of course), after that I will have to live on a way to small garden, hunt(?), steal, rob or eat corpses.
On the other hand after those 4 months without -any- chance to get some food 90% of the people would be dead anyway...
4 months is also a very long time to decide what should be done next to survive.
I believe the most likely risk is not getting enough food (nice to have some at home when there is a natural disaster or a truckers strike, 2 weeks black out, etc...), but not to have enough money to pay your bills.
So I do "store" money (some cash, most at the bank and maybe a very small amount of gold in the future), I try to keep my job, I try too improve my skills that can be helpful to keep the job or get a new one.
I also believe that energy will get very costly soon again, so I try to reduce my dependence on energy and buy the most efficient electric home appliances, move to an apartment that can be heated with coal and wood (store 1-2 years of it in advance, that will last 3 years in emergency) and I don't have (and need) a car.
Maybe I will make/buy an electric bike in 2009.
That's my advice:
1. Buy food that you like for 1 month instead of food for 1 year that you would throw away in the best case (with millions of people starving that's not a solution, that's becoming part of the problem imho)
2. Try to consume much less energy. Try to store some energy, if possible. A huge inefficient refrigerator consuming 1000kWh/a full of meat could not be so intelligent: 1. you are wasting energy (-> peak oil + global warming), 2. if there is zero option to buy food how likely is it that you will have electricity every day?
I believe that the chance is much higher (in comparison!) that you have to live without electricity for 4 weeks than that you have to live without food in the store for 4 weeks.
3. Keep your job, store money, store some cash. If there is a food supply problem on the horizon, buy what you need...