Get Ready NOW – PREPARE for a Power Grid Failure – Time is Short

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To Purchase our Family Cookbook:

To Purchase items discussed in this video:
LED Lantern

LED Flashlights High Lumens Rechargeable, 250000 Lumens

Crank and Solar Lights

Pack of 4 Squeeze Lights

Green Multiuse Crank Radio

Katadyne Water Filter

Augason Farms 55 Gallon Water Barrel Set

BLUETTI Solar Generator AC200MAX with 350W Solar Panel Included

Mr Heater Buddy Heater

Kerosene Heater

Battery Powered CO Detector

Fire Extinguisher

Experts agree… a power grid failure is likely, and will impact every person in the country. Estimates state that the grid will go down from 37 days to years. Are you prepared?

Being ready for such a catastrophe goes well beyond just stockpiling food and water.

Purchase downloadable and printable booklets and checklists from our store:
NEW Printable Medical Supply Checklist
Printable 72-Hour Preparation Checklist
Basics of Preparedness Booklet
AND our Family Favorites Cookbook
SPECIAL NOTE: If you download the Basics of Preparedness FULL PACK – it includes all
the other downloadable checklists. It includes everything except the cookbook.

Alpine Gold – Sign up for Free – Best way to purchase GoldBacks

Want to Shop Azure? It’s free to sign up! They have tons of fresh, good food and organic, non-gmo grains!

Goshen Prepping Facebook Group – come join us with prepping chats

Harvest Right Freeze Dryer

Our Equipment
Shure Microphone used at the desk

Rode Microphone used during live streams

Come to our Rumble Channel:

Pick up your own Jase Medical Emergency Antibiotic Kit

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PO Box 333
Clare, MI 48617

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#Prepping #Survival #Preparedness

Our channel focuses on Real World, expert advice in food shortages, food inflation, Supply Chain issues, Prepping for SHTF, SHTF Prepping, SHTF 2023, Emergency Preparedness, Disaster Preparedness, Natural Disaster, Medical, Home Defense, Protection, Preparedness, Essential, Security, and Power Grid Failures
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Our unit was just told to get ready to deploy so please pray for me and my fellow Marines and everybody else in our entire military I will continue watching your videos till I can't anymore

UsmcDevildog-rdyt
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I've lived off grid since 1989. I installed the first photovoltaic system in coos county Oregon. I've made my own water, and was on septic. My home was heated by wood. My refrigerator was a Vestfrost. I had a small backup generator but rarely needed it. Installed a pipe system on the wood stove to the water heater. Lived on 300 acre farm. For recreation, i read.

pinetree
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Don't over prepare! If you have all the heat/lights/TV etc on when all the town around is in the dark you'll find a lot of new friends wanting to be with you. Best you look about average, battery lighting etc.

seymourpro
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Eric, ive been 100% off the grid since 2012. Solar power, morningstar Pro Star, 30 amp charge controller, 2 golf cart batteries and a 2000 watt Power Drive inverter.

Back up is a Champion 2000 watt inverter generator. Super quiet.

Just picked up another cast iron griddle and another Dutch Oven with the 3 legs and a flat top to put coals on top. Its 5 quarts.

Water, Im using a 45 gallon RV fresh water tank, under the sink with an RV water pump. Also, a 250 gallon water tote for extra water to draw off of.

Im in good shape.

DMF
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Where all our rural neighbors have electric cook tops, ours is gas. So, when power goes out, we can still cook… we just have to use a lighter to start it.
I also keep extra gallons of frozen water in our stand up freezer for extra cooling. Things have never dethawed when we’ve lost power. Have lots and lots of candles, head band lamps and flashlights. Also, we just cleaned our landscaping solar lights. You can bring them in at night, put them in a bucket or planter… they make great evening lights when there’s no power. Then put them back out the next morning to let the sun re power them up 👍🏻😀

cjhoward
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Im living off grid now. Not under a situation or emergency, I just decided to pull the plug. I had prepared years prior, with downloaded mp4 movies, huge collection of mp3 full albums. My computers are powered by solar power. I have a android tablet, have download thousands of PDF ebooks., cook books, FM Manuals, survival books, prepping books, homesteading, gardening, raising chickens, etc...books on every subject, medicne, first aid, medicinal herbs. I have a full amish influenced system. My whole thing wasnt for survival, but to go off grid, to live homestead. A laptop, a smart tv. My small electronics are powered by solar energy and I have a back up generator to charge batteries if to many over cast days. Basically i have bugged out and built my self sustaining system. I have rain catching and reverse osmosis filtration. I have running water from my water in my house, its operated 12vDC because I designed my system similar to a RV camper. I have several propane heaters, have wood burning stove. Spent a lot of time and brainstorming how to do this.

liamalepta
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We have flashlights mounted on every inside door. No matter which room you are in, there is a light. It works wonderfully for visitors who are unfamiliar with the floor plan.

OvcharkaShepherd
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We've always kept a basket in the living room with a variety of lights of various types and everyone knows to go there for flashlights, lanterns etc. Handy.

EarthHeartUK
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I was also head of the Lapeer County CERT team for several years. Then everyone but 3 ended up in their mid 70's and wanted to retire so our CERT team disbanded. The county emergency manager told us to keep all of our gear because as she said, we are all trained so we may be needed some day.

Ironskull
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Empty white vinegar jugs are wonderful for water storage. They a sturdy, clean, and have handles! 😉

brownville
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During the winter, I try to cook entirely on our wood stove to concerve propane.

lesliekloer
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Make sure you have enough pet food/litter for long term emergencies.

serenitypeaceandcomfort
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I'm right there with your kids Eric. I kind of get excited when things go down lol. Now, the actual smart part of my brain knows that we don't want grid down... grid down bad. But being prepared, it's not scary...

jacspring
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I recently experienced a water line break and was consequently without running water for 2 months because the local plumbers were so booked up that they couldn't fix it sooner. It was quite the experience, LOL! I did learn that you will need more than a gallon per day. You have to factor in hand washing, brushing teeth, washing dishes and maintaining hygiene standards in general to prevent getting sick. It's amazing how much water we use without being aware of it. This experience really opened my eyes! Tip: a cheap plastic toilet seat that snaps onto a 5 gallon bucket is much more comfy and has a lid that closes to help control odor (I found them on Amazon for about $11). People talk about dumping water into the toilet tank for flushing, but when you find out how much work hauling water is, you will quickly realize that it is highly impractical! Take care everyone❤

ziggysmom
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Doc, thank you for your continued production of excellent videos. Over the past several years, your videos have encouraged me to continue prepping for a SHTF scenario.

dean
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I'm with you on the refrigeration! Hubby's type 1 diabetic and is on two types of insulin, that must say chilled! Those meds are expensive even with insurance along with everything else he needs.
We have a portable fridge just for those emergencies along with solar and panels 😅😅.
Thanks for the video 😊

araina
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Blackout bag is a good idea. I keep everything staged and ready to go. My whole house generator takes less than 20 minutes to get hooked up.

MrMech-ojiy
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LOVE the Black out DRILLS and the kids love it

bobjeffrey
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Just ordered the squeeze flashlights for the grandkids.

kathleenbaer
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Lessons my family learned while living a week without power: the food in freezer is not to be eaten after 48 hours, water for a shower is a luxury, headlamps make cooking after dark and searching for spices in the cabinet manageable, without refrigeration we'd have a lower standard of living, and hiking, campfires and spending time outside are fun and don't require electricity.

christinagardener