IF you live where there could be a natural disaster, what did you do to prepare for it?

Ruthanne's thread about being prepared got me thinking. If you live in a "disaster" prone area, what have you done to prepare for it? Right now, I'm watching a hurricane chew up the Southeast. And if a storm doesn't get you this time, there is going to be a next time. If you live in Florida, the next time you have to evacuate may be Wendsday, what have you done? What about the next big earthquake?
Here Eastern PA, all I have done is have a lot of can goods and lots of bottled water. I have a well, and without electricity the pump does not work.
 

Oh, wow. Lots. I was into prepping in a big way for several years because of how fragile our grid is nationwide. Lights Out by Ted Koppel lays out the dangers well without sensationalizing as a lot do ...including the fact that we have no means stateside to manufacture some of our huge transformers that take two years to build and we have no backups for them. I never worried about anything including pandemics, the nuclear threat before the fall of the USSR. But a prolonged grid failure scares me because we're so dependent on electricity for everything that people would start starving after just a few weeks. There's not enough assistance (National Guard, Red Cross, Samaritian's purse) to last more than a short time for a national grid failure, and they'd never get to rural Mississippi anyhow.

We've got food for six months for 10 people, two wells (one with an electric pump, one a free flowing artesian), two stocked fish ponds (one small, one four acres) on my parents property, abundant wildlife with the means and knowledge to preserve it without freezing, dad's 1/4 acre fenced in garden and heirloom seeds for it, bee hives, a couple of pecan trees, fruit trees, blackberry bushes all around, plenty of edibles to forage on the property, lots of medical supplies including a stockpile of prescriptions, generators (gas propane, and lithium solar) appx 300 gallons propane with three gas stoves, solar lights, battery fans charged by solar, sun oven, a couple of high efficiency gassifier wood stoves with so much deadfall on their 35 acres (some of it uncleared forest) that we'd never have to cut wood. Their house, my house, a two bedroom camper and a big insulated workshop are on the property, and everything is spread out enough that a tornado is unlikely to take out all the structures. A lot of this was already in place because my dad is a retired farmer who lived through the end of the depression and afterwards the WWII shortages, and he and pretty much all the men (and a few of the women) in my extended family have hunted and fished since childhood. There are also extended outages here every few years due to tornadoes, hurricane remnants and ice storms, and rural areas are the last to have power restored.

Two things got me out of the prepper mindset over the past few years. My health and my parent's age wouldn't hold up to the hard work involved living without electricity. And I read enough PAW fiction (post-apocalyptic world) to know that you can't buy enough AR-15s to protect against everyone else who has them that would be willing to use them if they were starving. (Post Katrina, a man killed his sister over bag of ice.:( ) I thought for several years about getting a couple to hide away and just couldn't take the plunge. It would be very hard to use them unless my nieces (two beautiful young ladies) and vulnerable nephew with autism were here and threatened; in that case I'd probably be capable of anything but certainly don't like to think about it.
 
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Years ago kind of got into the prepper mindset. Bought an 8 acre plot on top of a mountain in Idaho, it was 60 min from home. Then moving to OR in 2011 kind made it a commuting challenge. My son has assumed the role of 'prepper'. He has moved several items onto the lot. He is preparing for a siege, has a crate full of pistols, enough rifles to arm a small country & camping gear to house all our family members. He is planning to build cabins but so far has only put up a few canopies & tents. He would have to haul water, unless he gets his planned well dug. We (him & I) have learned about solar power, he's got 4+ solar panels, batteries, cables to set it up. I think it could power 3-4 trailers (my idea instead of building cabins). There is a sizable man made lake below that feeds a river, that's well stocked with trout.

I had a 3 acre plot back in the 80's that I learned how to raise all kinds of animals, settling on the idea of raising chickens & rabbits. Both of which could produce either eggs (chickens) or meat (both). Paul Harvey done a report in the 70's about the possibilities of rabbits for long term survival. Easy to raise, skin & very nutritious. One buck, 2 does can produce more meat than a beef cattle can in one year on less feed (about 1/10th). Age now is the only thing I'm concentrating on for survival. Might raise a few free range guinea hens to keep the snake population down. See how it plays out.
 

One of the more important things we did was to upgrade our windows and put hurricane glass in place of the regular contractor stuff. We do keep a fair amount of food and pet food around at all times, and we keep extra drinking water, toilet flush water, and batteries. We trim away all dead limbs and trees on a regular basis. Beyond that, we don't dwell on disasters that much.
 
We live in a concrete bunker type home and we also have steel window shutters and hurricane windows as we live in a very hurricane prone area. We also have months and months of food and water stored up as well as insurance and flood insurance that includes funds for staying in a rentals until our property is rebuilt. We have a propane stove and a generator as well. Probably some other things I’m forgetting LOL we prepare for the worst and hope for the best!
 

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