Sunday, December 18, 2016

Survival Buckets and The Great Three Year Experiment, part 2



     The day of our road trip the weather was just short of awful. Hot, mid-eighties at dawn with humidity so thick it was like walking into a water fall; our shirts and pants dripped water. I mention this because our weather today is rather pleasant, a welcome change indeed. With this hurricane side-slipping its way up our coast, for reasons I do not understand, our humidity levels have dropped well within the comfort range. Back to the regularly schedule program.

      As I said yesterday, after the dig we drove to a crossroads town and had breakfast at a small cafe where they served us bad muddy coffee but excellent grits, eggs, and bacon. From there we took another long drive to our retreat and placed the buckets on our tailgates and popped the tops.
Each man designed and stocked his bucket to his needs, so you will find each a bit different and perhaps you'll find ideas and items to consider for yours if this task is undertaken. Please see part one before reading this post, it is listed on my sidebar. Thanks.

Below is the next item taken from my bucket, seems to be tobacco and matches.

Emergency food bar, has a lemon flavor and used by our Coast Guard.



Here we have a hand powered flash light, which worked quite well, and a pipe and its accessories.

In the picture above also note the red item to the right of the pipe, a first aid kit.


Above, paracord and knife. The knife I smuggled across the Mexican border circa 1971.

Let's move on to Duke's bucket....here's his bucket firearm, a .39 revolver. Again, it came out of the bucket in fine shape.

Duke with his ammunition. Please note he has twelve rounds. Remember how many I placed in my bucket? Two hundred, very good. Give him credit, .38 packs a punch, but I'd rather have those 200 rounds in an emergency. Zombies require head shots.


An MRE package from Duke's bucket, beneath, clothing articles.
Here is a shot I forgot to add from my bucket...from left to right, bug repellent, a small fishing kit, and a bag of medical supplies. The yellow item is three emergency candles.

This is ShooterSteve's bucket just before he removed its contents...again with candles, water (notice its crystal clear) toilet paper (you reckon its placement was well thought out).

Above, I believe this is ShooterSteve's son Austin's bucket. Austin, since his father is a counsel member has full membership status (other than a vote) and has become a valued member of our group. I've adopted him as my grandson and am extremely proud of the young man. He can place shot groups on targets the size of a quarter at 200 yards...picture me with a big grin on my face.

Above, this is ShooterSteve's items presented on his tailgate...notice the packages of dried beans and rice.

ShooterSteve asked me to show you his can foam thing....he has size issues. Just saying....



Standby for part 3.

Stephen

6 comments:

  1. Senior,

    It sure looks as if all the buckets survived with no major issues. Great post! Looking forward to part 3!

    Sending hugs and love to you, JUGM, and your Boys.
    Sandy

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. There was some damage, but it was light. Will have to wait on part III, have a power issue with laptop that has part III on it.

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  2. You folks didn't mess around back then. That's some serious cache work.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. We thought the location out and it was the perfect spot to bury them. We learned some valuable lessons from it.

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  3. Nicely done, and everything so far appears to have worked!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Yes, except for my bucket. Part II will explain once I can get that computer up, having power issues with it.

    ReplyDelete