Hi, you did a good job with the basics. I wanted to suggest a heat source, eg, tea candles or emergency candles, both sold at the dollar store.... keep up the good work on informing the uninformed..... looking forward to your upcoming videos.... God's Speed....
Great kit! I’d add an ace bandage, and a few other things which of course would get into a bigger kit! This was straight and to the point! Thanks for sharing!
I think that's a good kit. DT also sells instant coffee. Some carry a Magnifying Sheet, which is a Fresnel Lens, good for reading maps and starting a fire in daylight. They aslo carry candles, and some have mosquito coils.
Good stuff!…..I finally got around to organizing my car with a vehicle bag and packing a home emergency bag. *Glad I saw your video about the flashlights because I have one w/batteries already in it and just said that I would take the other one out, but now I’ll keep both w/batteries in a baggie.
This $25 can save your hide. Love seeing the disposable poncho; the common 'prepper' and 'survival' channels miss the fact that most hypothermia cases come from getting wet first. Even these flimsy ponchos are better than the best rainsuit left at home when you're not there and unforecasted rain hits, plus at the cheap price you can keep several on hand for family/ friends/ barter. I've been 'preaching' them for years, especially to "day hikers" who are the most common victims where I live. Always protect against your local weather possibilities- forecasts can be wrong and you can get stuck longer than you planned for. Most foods have "best if used by" dates but are OK for some time longer. Don't chance meats; eat and rotate them out before they expire because they can make you really, really sick when they go bad. SPAM is the most storable meat but it too goes bad in hot storage and fish are the least storable meat. If you've got time to shop more carefully, look at the nutrition labels on stored foods and aim for high protein and high vitamin content, especially "C" which is needed for the other vitamins to work well. Also remember utensils if those are needed with the food you store. Most stores with take-out foods have plastic ones in bins; just grab one as you pass by and they won't say anything. Ditto for salt and pepper packets; not a handful just one now and then. You can also store bulk packed food in plastic take-out containers with lids you wash after use. Airtight so foods will store better and the container can serve as a bowl or plate. Focus on water; two days without food and you can still function but two days without some form of water and you can't even think straight, much less do anything.
Most people new to prepping can either get distracted or discouraged when they see all fancy gear and big ticket purchases. Start small, plan a little bit ahead and stay consistent. Before they realize it, they've built a foundation of skills and practical supplies to last them many moons down the road.
Hi Sir can you put an A to Z video for new prepper who lives in rented house or apartment, I am from India and would like to start the journey of prepper life.
band aides are un necessary ...gauze and tape are better because tape is multi use ...instead of tuna I'd go jerky or nuts ...I'd also splurge on a dollar bag of candy for morale Food as a rule is absolutely not needed in any short term crisis infact humans under stress tend to simply not eat because most of us are warehouses of stored fat ...to most a fast is tough but it's built into our DNA to simply not need to eat the way we are told to eat
👋😄Some good points indeed. I'm not going to waste 4sq inches of gauze and 3 inches of tape on a half inch cut, that I can use a bandaid for to prevent infection. Soup to nuts, tuna to candy it's all a matter of sustainment physiological or psychological. Everyone's kit will have what works for them or what they can get at that time, but you're correct some items aren't an absolute 😁👍
@@TheUrbanSentinelChannel yeah I get that but in a short term situation which that's all this kit covers I'm not worrying about boo boos keep them clean and you are fine that's what the sanitizer does
Hi, you did a good job with the basics. I wanted to suggest a heat source, eg, tea candles or emergency candles, both sold at the dollar store.... keep up the good work on informing the uninformed..... looking forward to your upcoming videos.... God's Speed....
Hey good suggestion and thanks 👍
Great kit! I’d add an ace bandage, and a few other things which of course would get into a bigger kit! This was straight and to the point! Thanks for sharing!
Hey thanks for watching 👍
Good Info, start for cheap and add to it.
Easy way to build up a decent kit and be able to expand for multiplies
✌️😜 Always common sense,& easy to follow/replicate on a budget 👍😁 Thanks Brother 💒⚔️ God Bless us All 🇺🇸🙏✝️
Thanks! 👍
Very informative. Thanks for being very practical.
I try to always leave room for improvement. 😁👍
Very helpful! Just realized I do need more than just the one I carry in my vehicle.
I think that's a good kit.
DT also sells instant coffee. Some carry a Magnifying Sheet, which is a Fresnel Lens, good for reading maps and starting a fire in daylight. They aslo carry candles, and some have mosquito coils.
So many little things, but then I'd be going easy over budget 😂
Well done sir
Thank you!
Well done
Thank you
Always a learning experience of knowledge when viewing your channel. Never fear 😨 tactics
The world is scary enough 😁👍
Good stuff!…..I finally got around to organizing my car with a vehicle bag and packing a home emergency bag.
*Glad I saw your video about the flashlights because I have one w/batteries already in it and just said that I would take the other one out, but now I’ll keep both w/batteries in a baggie.
I'm glad it was helpful 😎👍
This $25 can save your hide. Love seeing the disposable poncho; the common 'prepper' and 'survival' channels miss the fact that most hypothermia cases come from getting wet first. Even these flimsy ponchos are better than the best rainsuit left at home when you're not there and unforecasted rain hits, plus at the cheap price you can keep several on hand for family/ friends/ barter. I've been 'preaching' them for years, especially to "day hikers" who are the most common victims where I live. Always protect against your local weather possibilities- forecasts can be wrong and you can get stuck longer than you planned for.
Most foods have "best if used by" dates but are OK for some time longer. Don't chance meats; eat and rotate them out before they expire because they can make you really, really sick when they go bad. SPAM is the most storable meat but it too goes bad in hot storage and fish are the least storable meat. If you've got time to shop more carefully, look at the nutrition labels on stored foods and aim for high protein and high vitamin content, especially "C" which is needed for the other vitamins to work well. Also remember utensils if those are needed with the food you store. Most stores with take-out foods have plastic ones in bins; just grab one as you pass by and they won't say anything. Ditto for salt and pepper packets; not a handful just one now and then. You can also store bulk packed food in plastic take-out containers with lids you wash after use. Airtight so foods will store better and the container can serve as a bowl or plate. Focus on water; two days without food and you can still function but two days without some form of water and you can't even think straight, much less do anything.
Most people new to prepping can either get distracted or discouraged when they see all fancy gear and big ticket purchases. Start small, plan a little bit ahead and stay consistent. Before they realize it, they've built a foundation of skills and practical supplies to last them many moons down the road.
Hi Sir can you put an A to Z video for new prepper who lives in rented house or apartment, I am from India and would like to start the journey of prepper life.
👋😁 Hello there! Start with this 👉 ruclips.net/video/tDFO5KV9Fq0/видео.html
@@TheUrbanSentinelChannel Thank you sir.
@bbapplesam You're very welcome. Thank you for watching my content.
band aides are un necessary ...gauze and tape are better because tape is multi use ...instead of tuna I'd go jerky or nuts ...I'd also splurge on a dollar bag of candy for morale
Food as a rule is absolutely not needed in any short term crisis infact humans under stress tend to simply not eat
because most of us are warehouses of stored fat ...to most a fast is tough but it's built into our DNA to simply not need to eat the way we are told to eat
👋😄Some good points indeed. I'm not going to waste 4sq inches of gauze and 3 inches of tape on a half inch cut, that I can use a bandaid for to prevent infection. Soup to nuts, tuna to candy it's all a matter of sustainment physiological or psychological. Everyone's kit will have what works for them or what they can get at that time, but you're correct some items aren't an absolute 😁👍
@@TheUrbanSentinelChannel yeah I get that but in a short term situation which that's all this kit covers I'm not worrying about boo boos keep them clean and you are fine that's what the sanitizer does
All I've been thinking about is jerky 🤤