Best foodstuff to stockpile?

Britesea

Sustainability Master
Joined
Jul 22, 2011
Messages
5,676
Reaction score
5,735
Points
373
Location
Klamath County, OR
Yeah, our problem is we're too close to the river; the water table is too high I think, for a root cellar, unless we made one above ground and earth bermed it. I'd still like to come up with some sort of cache though.
 

chicken girl

Power Conserver
Joined
Jun 25, 2010
Messages
23
Reaction score
6
Points
45
Location
Texas
Yeah, our problem is we're too close to the river; the water table is too high I think, for a root cellar, unless we made one above ground and earth bermed it. I'd still like to come up with some sort of cache though.
Let me know what you come up with. :) I'm going to try out the PVC pipe this week under my garden. I have 2 acres, but some scary neighbors behind me. So any kind of cache is helpful.
 

goatgurl

Almost Self-Reliant
Joined
Aug 12, 2014
Messages
539
Reaction score
206
Points
137
Location
Arklahoma
SIL was talking this weekend about PVC pipe for caches. he wants to fill some, tie a rope to them and sink them in the pond. i understand they are sealed and suppose to be water proof but i would be concerned about moisture anyway. made me go hummm. i would be ok with burying them but sinking them???? i got a 55 gallon barrel with a latch tight lid that I'm going to fill with things i might need if there is a disaster here, can you say tornado... i am to high on a hill to worry about floods but sever storms are all to common.
 

Britesea

Sustainability Master
Joined
Jul 22, 2011
Messages
5,676
Reaction score
5,735
Points
373
Location
Klamath County, OR
I saw a video online where a guy showed how he sealed his gun (I don't remember everything, but there was grease, and mylar, and PVC involved); he sank it into a pond and then pulled it out a year later for the video, and the gun came through with flying colors.
 

chicken girl

Power Conserver
Joined
Jun 25, 2010
Messages
23
Reaction score
6
Points
45
Location
Texas
SIL was talking this weekend about PVC pipe for caches. he wants to fill some, tie a rope to them and sink them in the pond. i understand they are sealed and suppose to be water proof but i would be concerned about moisture anyway. made me go hummm. i would be ok with burying them but sinking them???? i got a 55 gallon barrel with a latch tight lid that I'm going to fill with things i might need if there is a disaster here, can you say tornado... i am to high on a hill to worry about floods but sever storms are all to common.
What would you put in the barrel?
 

ChickenMomma91

Almost Self-Reliant
Joined
Jun 20, 2014
Messages
173
Reaction score
113
Points
177
Location
northwestern Missouri
Eggs. Not all of us have the ability to have enough chickens to supply us with plenty of eggs. I'm only allowed three in town and have a dozen whole eggs in my freezer. Once I can get my hands on an honest to Goddess dehydrator (been using a new wave oven) I can scramble up some eggs and dehydrate them for long term. Plus keepin so e ground eggs shells on hand for making a good calcium supplement for the girls and my furbabies. Idk if I'd use it for people but I'm sure if I absolutely had to is find a way.
 

sumi

Rest in Peace 1980-2020
Joined
Sep 26, 2013
Messages
7,025
Reaction score
5,297
Points
337
Location
Ireland
All my good intentions flew out the window over the last few weeks and we managed to run out of a few essentials. Don't get sick :rolleyes: I'm working on restocking the pile at the moment. Especially things that can be stored a bit like coffee, sugar, tinned everything… Freezer space is very limited here, I find that frustrating. Time to learn to can a bigger variety of food stuff, I think.
 

hqueen13

<Insert Snazzy Title Here
Joined
Nov 23, 2011
Messages
3,664
Reaction score
382
Points
277
Location
Fallston, MD
The hilarious thing we discovered in the midst of storm prep before we got 30" of snow (a record for our area) was that we were actually almost out of TP! I wasn't worried because I knew we'd be able to get dug out in a day, we had extra rolls in the barn, and I knew that someone in a house nearby would have more if I needed it. But, yeah, we almost did. That made me laugh. We had everything else we needed... except that!
My next really big goal is to get a freeze dryer. Freeze dried food lasts up to 20 years with almost no nutritional degradation AND you can process almost any food. Eggs, cheese, any meat, pumpkin, potatoes, veggies, prepared foods (lasagna anyone?), cream soups, desserts, MILK, and all sorts of other things that have much bulkier preservation methods, or no way at all to preserve. The thought that I could preserve raw greens by dehydrating would mean I could have smoothies or salads fresh in the middle of winter. THAT is worth the cost! I don't really have the space to put one in my house currently, but if I can save up enough money I'll be finding a way!
 
Top