silverhawks
Member
- Joined
- Oct 7, 2008
- Messages
- 1,299
This is a very enlightening read - an account of someone who lived through the Russian Debt default in '98.
The Five Stages of Collapse
And by the same writer:
Closing the 'Collapse Gap': the USSR was better prepared for collapse than the US
Both are amazing reads, and well recommended.
Basically, the 'TLDR' version of the first article would be what most here are doing already:
1) Get to know your neighbours. Prepare together, build a self-sufficient community that trusts each other.
2) Start planting a garden.
I myself am in the process of planting our vegetable garden, and setting up a gardening co-op with all of my neighbours.
My immediate next door neighbour is a hunter, so will be teaching me to shoot. In return, I'll be building planters for a co-op garden we're building between our two houses.
3) Start stocking up on essentials.
We already have a room with shelving put aside that we're gradually filling up.
I'm also going to build a rain harvesting system along one of my fences, and get a watermaker and a proper water filtration system.
4) Get some gold and silver.
5) Get all the "how-to" books you can lay your hands on.
I've already done this by getting a ton of PDF's online to print out, ranging from survival to first aid to woodworking to renewable energy projects.
I'm also setting up a workshop in our sun porch, so that I can do carpentry and metalwork there if need be.
My wife is going to run a series of tutorials for neighbours (men and women alike) in canning and pickling, and my neighbour has expressed some interest at starting a shooting club.
I'm also looking up solar and other renewable energy projects that I could put together in a garage, to share with the neighbours; particularly handy in this regard is the fact that the neighbour that lives across from us is a mechanic, with a full workshop in his garage. In a relatively small area, we're finding that we have a lot of skilled manual labourers.
We're going to start this small - just a neighbourhood meet up and a grill for Memorial Day in our cul-de-sac, and build from there.
The Five Stages of Collapse
And by the same writer:
Closing the 'Collapse Gap': the USSR was better prepared for collapse than the US
Both are amazing reads, and well recommended.
Basically, the 'TLDR' version of the first article would be what most here are doing already:
1) Get to know your neighbours. Prepare together, build a self-sufficient community that trusts each other.
To make it intact through times of great need, the only reasonable approach, it seems to me, is to form communities that are strong and cohesive enough to provide for the well-being of all of their members, that are large enough to be resourceful, yet small enough so that people can relate to each other directly, and to take direct responsibility for each other's well-being.
2) Start planting a garden.
I myself am in the process of planting our vegetable garden, and setting up a gardening co-op with all of my neighbours.
My immediate next door neighbour is a hunter, so will be teaching me to shoot. In return, I'll be building planters for a co-op garden we're building between our two houses.
3) Start stocking up on essentials.
We already have a room with shelving put aside that we're gradually filling up.
I'm also going to build a rain harvesting system along one of my fences, and get a watermaker and a proper water filtration system.
4) Get some gold and silver.
5) Get all the "how-to" books you can lay your hands on.
I've already done this by getting a ton of PDF's online to print out, ranging from survival to first aid to woodworking to renewable energy projects.
I'm also setting up a workshop in our sun porch, so that I can do carpentry and metalwork there if need be.
My wife is going to run a series of tutorials for neighbours (men and women alike) in canning and pickling, and my neighbour has expressed some interest at starting a shooting club.
I'm also looking up solar and other renewable energy projects that I could put together in a garage, to share with the neighbours; particularly handy in this regard is the fact that the neighbour that lives across from us is a mechanic, with a full workshop in his garage. In a relatively small area, we're finding that we have a lot of skilled manual labourers.

We're going to start this small - just a neighbourhood meet up and a grill for Memorial Day in our cul-de-sac, and build from there.
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