What prepping mistakes have you made?

Doomsday Prepper Forums

Help Support Doomsday Prepper Forums:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

Proud Prepper

A True Doomsday Prepper
Administrator
Global Moderator
Moderator
VIP Supporter
Joined
Mar 13, 2017
Messages
7,966
Reaction score
31,412
Location
Top secret
Im guilty of a few of these. 1, 3, 4, 5, 6. I have always bought good quality, thanks to my fathers lecturing.

1) I read too much Survival Blog when I should have watched more how-to videos on YouTube.

Survival Blog gave me a big kick in the pants for getting started in preparedness, but it also sucked my wife and I into near-panic attacks and bouts of despair. One day I came home from work to find her at my desk, still in pajamas, hypnotically reading article after article on Survival Blog. Doom and gloom articles had her frozen with fear, and although that blog and others like it motivated us, they also didn’t encourage us to learn more skills. It was all about stocking up and being afraid.

YouTube is filled with massive amounts of great information but in smaller doses and often accompanied by a friendly face and voice. I would have learned more about waxing cheese, bushcraft skills, primitive water filters, and stocking up on veterinary antibiotics, all of which would have been more practical than reading tips for buying property safe from rifle fire.

James Rawles is one of my prepper heroes, but for a beginner, YouTube videos would have been more helpful and encouraging. Just one of many prepper mistakes I made early on.

2) I should have bought less crap and more high-quality products.
Preparedness is best done in this order: awareness, education, and then action. In our initial panic, we steered clear of education and jumped right into the action phase. That’s my style, I guess. Early on I bought a lot of cheap “survival” products that were recently sent to a thrift store as a donation. My wife was quite the couponer and because she had a stack of “awesome” coupons, she bought bottles and bottles of salad dressing we never used. After a year or two, they turned all sorts of weird colors and she threw them out. I didn’t argue with her.

I’ve since figured out that buying the best quality we can afford is smart, even if we have to wait until we have the money. A high-quality pair of walking shoes could make the difference between life and death someday. We want tools, supplies, and even food that is meant to last for the long haul, not bargain basement specials that are cheaply produced and quickly fall apart.

3) I wish I had spent less money early on
I imagine that most preppers start off in a panic mode and begin amassing enormous quantities of stuff, just for the sake of having stuff. However, I have learned that doing a fair amount of research first is the smartest way to go.

We didn’t know much about food storage conditions, for example, when we first began buying extra food and soon found ourselves with packets and boxes of potato flakes infested with tiny black bugs.

4) We should have networked with others sooner
It’s always hard feeling as though you’re the, “only one”. The, “only one,” with a certain health condition or the, “only one,” going through a personal crisis. Feeling as though you’re the only prepper in town is just as hard. You feel isolated, a little paranoid, and yet there’s a deep need to talk with others who are on the same wavelength, but everyone you know isn’t a prepper for any number of reasons.

I felt very alone, year after year. A couple of fledgling prepper MeetUp groups began around that same time, but I didn’t take advantage of their meetings, and I should have. Joining in on forum discussions is a good option but it can’t take the place of face to face conversations. It would have helped me identify more quickly what my priorities should have been, and it would have been comforting to know that I wasn’t the, “only one.” Preppers University live classes offer one of the best ways to network with others who have the same survival perspective and get an education at the same time.

5) I should have kept my mouth shut around family and close friends
To this day, no one in my family or my husband’s family is on board with preparedness. In short, I could have saved myself a lot of awkward explanations and times of feeling defensive if I would have stayed quiet.

Eventually, preppers “self-identify” when they’re around people they know and trust. They are suddenly familiar with names like Gerald Celente and Alex Jones. City-dwellers develop an odd interest in raising chickens and turning their backyard pools into tilapia ponds. It’s not hard to figure out who’s prepping if you pay attention, and keep your mouth shut until you’re pretty darn sure they’re on the same page as you.

6) And, we should have focused on financial survival first instead of third, or fourth
In the beginning I felt a mad rush of urgency to buy, to stock up, to preserve, to read. I wish I had felt that same urgency when it came to money. I should have doubled down on paying off debt, saving money, learning about and buying precious metals. We did these things eventually, but it would have made life easier if we had taken financial survival a little more seriously from the get-go.

As an experienced prepper, I now realize the importance of financial prepping. In fact, you could almost say that it sets the stage for all other prepping steps but it’s overlooked by most prepper writers and websites, and that’s a shame. From finding ways to earn extra money to creative ways for cutting back on expenses, it’s possible for just about anyone to come up with enough extra dollars each month to afford a good first aid kit, freeze-dried food, a Sun Oven, and many other helpful products. I’m also a big fan of having extra cash on hand for emergencies.

Looking back, what prepper mistakes did you make?
 
6,guilty :(
4,no chance here where I live,no one admitts to be one and I don't trust any to admitt/tell I do.
1,but thanks to the tv show doomsday preppers,I found this site.

no one knows I prep,all family knows I hunt,have a small garden and I'm active in the reserve,my cousin calls me with love "the gardening green terrorist" ;)
 
it came to me like a flash from nowhere; comms,don't underestimate the importance of a comms system.
this is something I and the rest of my comrades in the squad found out the hard way,while we were attacking,defending us and trying to evade the opfor
in the war games ( opfor had been issued good and plentiful comms system,we were not )...we were meant to take a beating ;) but we gave the opfor
a good fight for the money.

physical fittness;keep it up,my friends,keep it up,I had to work my butt off keeping or trying to keep the same pace or even close with my squad buddies
15-20 yrs younger than me,so do something on regular basis

a solid lesson or two or more learnt.
 
I jumped into the pantry thing too quickly and bought foods I didn’t even like just to fill shelves. Live and learn. At least I’ve been pretty good about rotating and have pretty much given most of the unusual stuff to the food bank by now. I’ve been working more on storing some freeze dried cans due to their 35yr shelf life. Beats regular or home canned goods by far.
I really liked two things mentioned here. Both financial and physical prepping are more important than most think.
Get your debt behind you, and stay out of debt, then you get to keep what you make, or use it to buy more preps....;)
Staying fit not only makes you feel better and live longer but how are you going to carry all that gear you’ve been collecting if you’re an overweight couch potato! :rolleyes:
 
The kids have labeled us 'preppers'. . . I call us homesteaders ;). I can't say we've made mistakes per say, but we have learned a lot in our endeavors. Like what grows well in our soil, animal husbandry has been a biggy. What our friend dealt with with his livestock up north has been totally different than what we have dealt with down south. We learn how we can do better. We've never been ones to buy on credit except for the house and land. And we try to buy the best quality products we can afford at the time, except maybe that first skid steer hunny bought that was a total lemon. We are trying to sell that one now that hunny has fixed it back up. My immediate family knows we garden and put up what we harvest and so do some coworkers, but not the full extent of what my stockroom holds. My boss know when and when she can not work me extra hours due to the gardening season. She is a close friend who I trust. . .she doesn't have the extra time to garden herself, but her dad does and she gets her produce from him. Only the kids know of our house generator, but since Harvey happened a few others know about our well. I guess that is really one that some would consider a mistake.
 
Trying to do everything all at once and getting slightly paranoid in process. For a while I completely lost focus on the big picture, ie; Real Life and got sucked in by all the doom and gloom and I'm certainly guilty of 1 and 4.
I got a massive dose of what I have heard call preppers fatigue and sort of rebelled against it for a while. In that time I did a risk asessment and took stock of what matters to me, what is most likely going to happen in my lifetime and how I can reduce the impact on my family.
Because of that epiphany, I realised I had collected a lot of stuff that I'm never going to use and over the years I have given away, swapped or sold things I don't think I'll need.
Whether I'm right or not to have done this, I don't know, what I do know is that I now have a clear idea of where I want my preparations to be and how best I can help my family in a crisis.
 
I have my share of mistakes I think I posted a good number on the forum and the corrective measures , from testing new equipment on three day hikes by not taking my age in consideration to the equipment that was packed to misloading the pack for unlevel grounds.

1) I don't do youtube really I'll watch links people have sent me or read other blogs so that's out for me except for the one folks have sent or someone here have posted.
2) We don't buy much crap but we spent money on things that come to find out we cant really use it
3) I probably wasted money on things we didn't need again this correlates to 2) above
4) We tried to network with other folks, even gone to the meets but to much focus was placed on firearms and tactics not reality
5) Not a problem with 5
6) We don't have any debt, we have our stash for rainy days and insurance that covers most everything

I've been doing this way before the internet and sure there are far more mistakes I just don't remember. I have learned new techniques by folks here lot of it in forms of gear. Retiring my 50s and 60s gear for more modern ones basically going from pack mules to backpack.
 
We have been pretty levelheaded with our preps. If anything, buying a freeze dryer was pushing it due to the expense, but we have ran the crap out of that thing, which in turn has helped with saving food in general plus the prepping aspect of it.

I have a few people who know about our preps, but they prep as well. As a general rule though, VERY few people know that we prep.

Oh, I did piss away a fairly small amount of money on a get home bag, but not much more than $100. I learned a long time ago that if you’re buying a tool, don’t buy crap. We have applied that to our lives in general.

As far as groups, the very few around here think they’re a bunch of Rambo types who won’t make it very long before being shot, or at least hiding in a corner crying. We’ve gone to a few prepper shows, but didn’t find much that was reasonably priced that couldn’t be had for less money. I don’t think that having a couple hundred vendors and more than half are selling body armor is that reasonable. I can’t imagine my elder butt running around with heavy body armor.
 
I bet we all have told others about some of our preps at some time or other. It’s hard to not want to ‘help’ others, and enlighten them to the wisdom of prepping. The truth is in the old saying of you can lead a horse to water but can’t make him drink. I have pretty much stopped initiating any contact with other people about prepping, but will always engage if someone asks me about it. If you really think about it, advertising that you have supplies and resources is really not very smart. If, and when, things get tough, do you really want a lot of lazy people that didn’t ever work to take care of themselves showing up at your door and begging for your limited resources?
 
but it's so much fun.. :rolleyes:
did that last week,it looked so easy when the youngsters did it...not so for me,so I'll prolly invest in a decent plate carrier
I’ve never really looked into it but aren’t Kevlar vests for sale out there? I can’t imagine carrying around a heavy ceramic or metal plate though.
 
I bet we all have told others about some of our preps at some time or other. It’s hard to not want to ‘help’ others, and enlighten them to the wisdom of prepping. The truth is in the old saying of you can lead a horse to water but can’t make him drink. I have pretty much stopped initiating any contact with other people about prepping, but will always engage if someone asks me about it. If you really think about it, advertising that you have supplies and resources is really not very smart. If, and when, things get tough, do you really want a lot of lazy people that didn’t ever work to take care of themselves showing up at your door and begging for your limited resources?

Exactly why I keep my mouth shut. The few that do know found out because they had talked to me about their preps, and they’re people I feel like I can trust.

One is a good friend whose dad had to have an oxygen generator. We had a run of tornadoes that cut a lot of people’s power for several days. That made my friend start thinking.
 
I’ve never really looked into it but aren’t Kevlar vests for sale out there? I can’t imagine carrying around a heavy ceramic or metal plate though.

They do, but if I remember correctly, they have a life span.

On top of that, can you imagine trying to live in one of them in our climate? I’d sweat 5 gallons a day.
 
upload_2018-3-11_23-30-24.jpeg
this is what I carried...only 48 lbs..snow was ankle to knee deep, so plate carrier will be nice
 

Latest posts

Back
Top