- Recent Posts
- News Feeds
- PPO Notes & Groups
- Site Help
- PPO's Principles of Preparedness
- Speaker's Bureau
- Gardening notes and charts
- Groups
- Meeting Minutes
- Council meeting minutes
- 2005-06 PPO Business meeting minutes
- 2005-10 PPO Business meeting minutes
- 2005-11 PPO Business meeting minutes
- 2006-01 PPO Business meeting minutes
- 2006-02 PPO Council meeting
- 2006-06 PPO Council meeting minutes
- 2006-07 PPO Council meeting minutes
- 2006-10 PPO Council meeting minutes
- 2007-01 PPO Council meeting minutes
- Council meeting minutes
- Portland Neighborhood Associations Links
- PO Task Force Position Paper
- PPO group management, process and logistics
- Resources
Evaluate consumption AGAIN !
Submitted by Jeremy on February 26, 2006 - 4:21pm.
This section is meant to detail the things a person would do or consider doing under the very worst of conditions. Cut back again, to a more basic level.
Cut to basic energy needs
- Keep power switched off most of the time.
- No clothes or hair dryer use.
- No cell phones.
- Use furnace only occasionally.
- Stove only occasionally.
- No computer, TV, electronics, or stereo.
- Stop mowing the lawn.
- No electric yard tools.
Reduce living space.
- Live and work in one room.
- Cook in the one living space that you heat.
- Insulate and seal off the living and working space.
- If sleeping in another room, no heat.
Reuse everything
- Begin reusing SOME water - grey water
- Bath water, to dish water, to garden water, etc.
- All water should end up watering crops.
- Start a no garbage life style.
- Keep all containers.
- Food waste to compost or chickens.
- Or to feed worms.
- Packing material is insulation.
- Reuse any building materials.
- Kill the lawn with newspaper.
Consume even less
- One or two meals a day.
- Sew up clothes; keep all rags.
- Don’t break things.
- Buy as little as if possible.
- Share anything that others can use too.
- Stay home; garden with hand tools; watch your home.
Live in a family group
- Give up living at multiple houses.
- If gas is available, plan car use to accomplish many tasks in one trip.
- Pool labor at one central location.
- Garden, cook, tend animals, cut wood as a group.
- Fill a house with many family members living together.
Set up barter
- Store things to trade.
- Trade for your skilled labor.
- Search out barter currencies.
- Find swap meets.
- Gold and silver will most likely be the money.
- Learn what the neighbors around need most and have to trade.
- Online swaps: Craigslist, Yahoo, Freecycle, even Ebay.
Start a NO-EXTRAS routine
- Everything will revolve around food and water.
- Reduce the energy and work you put into nonessentials.
- Take stock of everything you have.
- Work on the necessities first, no matter how hard.
Turn your heat WAY down
- Evaluate whether you need heat at all.
- Living in the Willamette Valley, you can survive all winter with no heat, but you must stay dry.
Protect your family
- Consider weapons of all and any types.
- Keep your mouth shut; think ... “Loose lips sink ships.”
- Become invisible.
- Always know what is going around you and in your neighborhood.
- Set up neighborhood patrols that are not observed.
- Consider blocking off your street to vehicles.
Consider helping others
- You can’t help everyone, but you must help some.
- Be selective.
- The old and the young are the most vulnerable.
- Helping people is a form of barter.
- People you help will help you.
- People you feed will feed you.
- People you protect will protect you.
Scavenge
- It’s time to go to the dump, so to speak.
- Figure out where the abandoned resources are.
- Stores and businesses will close without notice.
- Some people will abandon their homes.
- Abandoned vehicles have many resources, more if you can cut metal.
- Get there first; don’t fight over things, it won’t pay.
- Have a way to move things: a cart or wagon or cycle or horse.
- You will need help, especially getting things home.
Don’t discuss preparations
- Keep your own counsel.
- Even in your closest circles be careful who you tell what you have.
Develop water sources *
- This is probably the toughest problem besides getting out of debt.
- You need at least 2 quarts of water to drink daily, minimum.
- Best solutions:
- Drill a well. ( 20-30 feet could get you water to use for everything, EXCEPT drinking.)
- Start rainwater collecting.
- Buy a water tank, or two.
- Build a cistern.
- Keep a supply of potable water on hand all the time.
- Other solutions:
- Never use water you can drink for anything else; save it.
- There is drinking water in the water heater and the toilet tank.
- Cooking water needs to be clean but not perfect; boil it and drink it after use.
- Buy a water filter and purification tablets.
- Reduce washing and cleaning to very little; put it on the garden.
- Bath water doesn’t need to be very clean.
- Don’t give pets or animals the best water you have.
- Learn how to hold various grades of water to reuse many times.
- You need some tanks, at least tubs and buckets.
- You need a good siphon or manual pump, or both
- Clean it, and filter it, and put tablets in it, and use it again.
- * MINIMUM - A family of two ( 2 qts/day X 2 people) can “get by” with one gallon of drinking water per day. Your hot water heater holds from 40 to 80 gallons.
- Printer-friendly version
- Login or register to post comments
