Firstly, apologies if this has been discussed before but there are just so many posts on this forum to read through …
Secondly, I realise that there probably isn’t a definitive answer to this question but I’m just trying to gauge if I’m heading in the right direction with this one …
So, here goes … water - how much should I store etc?
I have currently got 4 x 25l and 20 x 5l drinkable water stored - so 200 litres.
I have 500 litres in various water butts with rain harvested water. I’ve got water purification tablets or could boil water.
There is Mr mcprepper and I in the house and we have two young adult children who come but mostly go so it would be hard to know how many people might be here in any given emergency situation.
Any thoughts / advice / additions I could consider? I’ve been considering buying a portable water filter (sawyer mini type thing) as an additional layer of prep?
How much is ‘enough’?
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Re: How much is ‘enough’?
Think it goes as much as you can (safely water is heavy to store on a timber floor)
3 mins without air
3 hours without shelter
3 days without water
3 weeks without food.......
Look at the sawyer squeeze it's got more flow
Also think how you'll transport water the standard 25l ibc type drums are not exactly easy to move
For the 25 litres get a drum tap makes using it easier....
Eg
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Trade-Chemical ... d_source=1
Look at the facestalk classifieds for a aquaroll / water porter style caravanner wheelable drum type containers
I've a 40l one with a handle you can drag it's 40kg+ heft across a grass and stone tracked field one handed eg
https://www.jacksonsleisure.com/caravan ... r-carrier/
I got mine second hand for £20 ISH ...
We lost water last year for nearly 2 weeks and the water crews were regularly outside one door up testing the mains with a standpipe and happily filled my barrels in exchange for a tea and chocolate biscuit
3 mins without air
3 hours without shelter
3 days without water
3 weeks without food.......
Look at the sawyer squeeze it's got more flow
Also think how you'll transport water the standard 25l ibc type drums are not exactly easy to move
For the 25 litres get a drum tap makes using it easier....
Eg
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Trade-Chemical ... d_source=1
Look at the facestalk classifieds for a aquaroll / water porter style caravanner wheelable drum type containers
I've a 40l one with a handle you can drag it's 40kg+ heft across a grass and stone tracked field one handed eg
https://www.jacksonsleisure.com/caravan ... r-carrier/
I got mine second hand for £20 ISH ...
We lost water last year for nearly 2 weeks and the water crews were regularly outside one door up testing the mains with a standpipe and happily filled my barrels in exchange for a tea and chocolate biscuit
If your roughing it, Your doing it wrong
Lack of planning on your part doesn't make it an emergency on mine
Lack of planning on your part doesn't make it an emergency on mine
Re: How much is ‘enough’?
The problem with domestic water is that it's so darned reliable. Shops may close, Petrol stations may close, but for 99% of us the domestic tap has delivered undisrupted water for a lifetime so far.mcprepper wrote: ↑Wed Nov 20, 2024 8:39 pm So, here goes … water - how much should I store etc?
I have currently got 4 x 25l and 20 x 5l drinkable water stored - so 200 litres.
I have 500 litres in various water butts with rain harvested water. I’ve got water purification tablets or could boil water.
Even during the blitz, water was pretty much always available. During droughts and major outages, bowser or standpipes were made available. It would be a MAJOR event to take water off-line.
But as someone says, it's critical for survival. So I guess if we plan for an outage, how long do we want to survive, till we get resolution?
I guess, put it alongside our food resilience. If you store 6 months of survival food, store the means to get 6 months worth of water. But how? That's many tonnes.
I can only give my approach........
1) Hold enough bottled water for 7-14 days, JUST for drinking. Plus some paper plates.
2) Hold 1 sawyer straw filter per person
3) Hold enough purification tabs for thousands of litres. Cheap and small. Store some dioralyte and imodium, too.
4) Know how to distill.
5) Hold one of those camping water wheels for getting stream water the few hundred yards to home.
6) Hold a few tarps with which to implement water capture.
IF TSHTF, at the very first realisation, drag the three wheelie bins into the garage. Tip them out and fill with water. Only as time and water permit, give them a wash out. The jars and bottles in the grey bin get filled too.
This should see you survive long enough to dine on the carcasses of your starved neighbours and drain their central heating.
There are scenarios where that's not enough and we die, but (1) has covered 99% of events (2,3,4,5) have covered if you need to drink stream water or what's in those wheelie bins and (6) is your dogs chance.
The OP seems well set up.
Graceful Degradation! Prepping's objective summed up in two words. Turning Disaster into Mild Inconvenience by the power of fore-thought
Not Feeling Optimistic. Let me be wrong
Not Feeling Optimistic. Let me be wrong
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- Joined: Thu Oct 03, 2013 4:06 pm
Re: How much is ‘enough’?
Just remember Jenny most modernish central heating systems are filled with fernox or an equivalent corrosion inhibitors. which you dont want to be drinking not overly toxic but not good either
If your roughing it, Your doing it wrong
Lack of planning on your part doesn't make it an emergency on mine
Lack of planning on your part doesn't make it an emergency on mine
Re: How much is ‘enough’?
So, I can't just run it through my tights?Yorkshire Andy wrote: ↑Wed Nov 20, 2024 9:49 pm Just remember Jenny most modernish central heating systems are filled with fernox or an equivalent corrosion inhibitors. which you dont want to be drinking not overly toxic but not good either
I saw the horrid gunk that came from our leaking radiator. Wouldnt be my first choice.
Seriously, stream water is a mystery to me. the kind of streams and ditches near me are pretty stinky and could contain anything.
Graceful Degradation! Prepping's objective summed up in two words. Turning Disaster into Mild Inconvenience by the power of fore-thought
Not Feeling Optimistic. Let me be wrong
Not Feeling Optimistic. Let me be wrong
Re: How much is ‘enough’?
Thanks both, there is a lot to think about there. Sounds like I’ve made a good start but more to consider:
• I’ll look at the sawyer squeeze as an alternative.
•Paper plates - great idea - will definitely get some of those (I obviously don’t have enough parties ).
• I also hadn’t given a lot of thought to transporting water so that can be next on the list.
• I’ve got loads of water purification tablets but the first lot I bought (before Brexit) are now about to go out of date so probably best not used after that (that’s probably a whole other thread on here … ).
As for the central heating system and tights …
• I’ll look at the sawyer squeeze as an alternative.
•Paper plates - great idea - will definitely get some of those (I obviously don’t have enough parties ).
• I also hadn’t given a lot of thought to transporting water so that can be next on the list.
• I’ve got loads of water purification tablets but the first lot I bought (before Brexit) are now about to go out of date so probably best not used after that (that’s probably a whole other thread on here … ).
As for the central heating system and tights …
Re: How much is ‘enough’?
Camelback squadpak - 25 litres with attached sawyer filter:
Carry, store and filter all in one.
Carry, store and filter all in one.
Two is one and one is none, but three is even better.
Re: How much is ‘enough’?
Whoa! Just been onto the camelback website, eye-watering price. I'll assemble one myself but excellent idea, thanks for posting and so obvious now it's been pointed out.
Re: How much is ‘enough’?
One on ebay for £70 ish. I got mine for £30.
I used a piece from a Source Convertube kit:
https://www.snowleader.co.uk/en/convert ... JWEALw_wcB
Scaled down to 1.5 litres:
HTH
Two is one and one is none, but three is even better.