>>2428349>This was known as bushcraft a few years ago i think. It includes destroying freshly grown trees and working a few hours to get a viable bedding. Most people just bought a gas stove and sleeping pad and moved onNo need to be salty. Bushcraft is fun when you prefer to create simple items instead of hiking. Of course any camping gear easily beats anything you can made from natural materials. Unfortunatelly when it comes to prepping, deluded people think they can just fuck off into the woods and craft/forage/everything they need pioneers style which is stupid. We do see a lot of weeks-months long disasters which forces people to live in public shelters or friend's/family house. While sudden worldwide catastrophes are unlikely (and should be the last thing you prepare for) I think we can safely assume climate change will create more events like food shortages, economic depressions or 30 year long wars like in the middle east. They come gradually. Ability to farm or bushcraft skills can be nice insurance for those while equipment, stockpiled food and water, evacuation plans are kind of cushions to sweeten the initial fall
>/Burgerinformationen/In Poland there's this:
https://www.gov.pl/web/rcb/akademia-bezpieczenstwa-rcbThe leaflet they've created after the war in Ukraine broke down seems to be made in a hurry and of mixed quality:
https://www.gov.pl/web/rcb/badz-gotowy--poradnik-na-czas-kryzysu-i-wojnyYou cannot take those government guidelines seriously. They're good for bare minimum. Either it's FEMA, Red Cross or governments. You can see it's aim is to make as much as possible of citizens gather few days of supplies for blackouts so they could schedule resources and personnel somewhere else. That's not nearly enough if you want to feel your family isn't on someone else mercy