$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pstarr', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('BLove', 'F')irst of all, when I get depressed about the disease, death, and catastrophe that await so many ignorant suburban Americans, I can get out of it by fantasizing about the hundreds of years supply of plywood that will be available from McMansions across America.
Plywood (and OSB, for that matter) are both incredibly useful products, regardless of how they are produced - if they already exist, lets recycle them. PEX pipe (flexible plumbing), electrical wire, outlet boxes, metal roofing, tar paper, sheets of plastic (used as vapor barriers), drywall screws (so valuable I can barely see straight), even nails etc. are what I consider to be valuable commodities of the future.
My business partner and I have a U-Haul box truck that we've turned into a mobile job site for our off-grid sustainble construction business. It has a huge battery charged by solar panels mounted on the roof and by a high-output alternator under the hood - we can get 1.5KW at an idle and over 2 KW driving down the road, and get up to 6KW from the inverter. Our plan it to basically drive up to abandoned houses, break out the crowbars, sledges, chainsaw, and sawzall, and go to work, loading salvaged windows, doors, plywood, lumber, and hardware into our truck as we go.
I think that as long as their are humans alive, someone who has the tools and skills to demolish buildings and salvage materials should be able to support themselves in the world of the future. Harvesting and selling the waste of civilization will be essential to any transitional survival strategy. My advice - get set up with some way to produce electricity (ethanol-powered generator, photovoltaics, etc.). Get a chainsaw, stock up on chains, and learn how to sharpen them. Buy as many sawzall blades as you can, and lots of #2 Philips drill tips (keep your broken drills for parts, obviously). Sledge hammers in every size, breaker pars, aluminum oxide cut-off wheels (metal cutting blades for circular saws), and diamond blades (for cutting concrete or block) will all be useful. Figure out how to make ethanol or biodiesel, find some abandoned one-ton pickup truck on the side of the road (an apallingly common status symbol and terribly underused resources these days), fix it up, run it on biofuel, and use it to transport materials. Learn how to recycle metal from highway guard rails, bridges, sign posts, and soda cans. Good luck.

