Why Your Food Won’t Last When the Grid Fails Unless You Do This

Let’s stop pretending everything is fine. You’re smart enough to see the cracks forming. Every month, the world grows more unstable—power grids stretched to their limits, infrastructure rotting, supply chains one bad day away from snapping. And the average person? They just scroll on their phone, complaining about inconveniences while being completely dependent on a system that can’t even keep the lights on during a windy afternoon.

That’s why you, the person reading this, already know what most refuse to accept: if the grid goes down for real—whether it’s a cyberattack, an EMP, civil unrest, or just the inevitable collapse of aging infrastructure—nobody’s coming to save you. And food? Food will be the first thing to vanish, right after sanity.

So let’s talk about how to preserve food in a grid-down situation… because if you don’t take this seriously, you may as well hand your pantry over to your neighbors when they start pounding on your door.


Why You Need to Think About Food Preservation NOW

People love to mock preppers—until they’re hungry. Until they realize that grocery stores keep, on average, three days of food on the shelves. Three days. That’s it. If the trucks stop rolling, the grid dies, or the government decides to “ration” supplies, you’ll watch shelves empty faster than a politician’s promise.

And when the grid goes down?
Your fridge is useless.
Your freezer is a liability.
Your “fresh food” is now a ticking time bomb.

Most Americans can’t even go a day without DoorDash. Imagine them trying to salt a piece of meat or ferment vegetables. They won’t last a week.

But you aren’t going to be one of them. You’re here to prepare, even if the world calls you paranoid.

Good. They can stay unprepared. You’re going to stay alive.


1. Canning: The Skill the Modern World Forgot

Canning is one of the oldest, safest, and longest-lasting ways to preserve food—and I’m always amazed at how many people refuse to learn it because “it looks complicated.” You know what’s complicated? Starving.

There are two main methods:

Water Bath Canning

Perfect for high-acid foods like:

  • Tomatoes
  • Pickles
  • Fruits
  • Jams and jellies

Pressure Canning

For low-acid foods, which is basically everything else worth eating in a crisis:

  • Meat
  • Beans
  • Soups
  • Vegetables
  • Broths

If you don’t have a pressure canner, get one now, before prices skyrocket again or shelves go empty—because they absolutely will in a crisis.

Canned food can last 5+ years, and unlike a freezer, it doesn’t stop working when the power does.


2. Dehydration: Turning Fresh Food into Survival Food

You don’t need electricity to dehydrate food—though electric dehydrators certainly make life easier during “normal” times. When the grid collapses, there are alternatives:

Solar Dehydrators

These can be built from scrap wood, screen material, and a little patience. They use sunlight and airflow—nothing fancy, nothing fragile.

Air Drying

Great for herbs, some vegetables, and thin cuts of meat (jerky), if humidity isn’t a problem.

Dehydrated foods are lightweight, compact, and can last decades when stored properly. And unlike MREs or store-bought survival food, you know exactly what’s in them.


3. Fermentation: The Preservation Method Civilization Was Built On

People forget that before refrigerators, fermentation was how entire populations survived winters, plagues, and wars.

Fermentation doesn’t require electricity—just salt, time, jars, and a little common sense. You can ferment:

  • Cabbage (sauerkraut)
  • Carrots
  • Beets
  • Cucumbers
  • Radishes
  • Garlic
  • Peppers

Fermented foods are packed with probiotics, vitamins, and calories—exactly what your body needs during stress and scarcity.

And the best part?
Fermentation can’t collapse because the grid does.


4. Smoking and Salting Meat: Because Your Freezer Will Fail You

Most people hoard their freezers with food, thinking they’re prepared. They’re not. When the power dies, they’ll be trying to figure out how to keep 200 pounds of meat cold before it turns into a bacteria buffet.

The old methods still work:

Smoking

Smoke adds flavor, removes moisture, and creates a protective layer on meat and fish. Build a smokehouse or use a barrel—you don’t need a fancy setup.

Salting

Salt pulls moisture out of the meat and prevents bacterial growth. It’s one of the most reliable preservation methods in human history.

Salt is cheap now.
It won’t stay cheap.
Stock up.


5. Root Cellaring: Nature’s Refrigerator That Won’t Betray You

You don’t need electricity to store food at stable temperatures. A root cellar—whether built into your basement, buried in the ground, or improvised with barrels or coolers—can keep food fresh for months.

Foods that store well in a root cellar include:

  • Potatoes
  • Onions
  • Carrots
  • Cabbage
  • Apples
  • Beets
  • Winter squash

Imagine that—storing food naturally instead of relying on a grid that barely works on the best days.


6. The Importance of Backup Storage: Mylar, O2 Absorbers & Buckets

Screenshot

You’ve probably seen the panic buyers hoard rice and beans during every “emergency” the media announces. But guess what?

They store them wrong every time.

If you want your dry goods to last 10–30 years, you need:

  • Mylar bags
  • Oxygen absorbers
  • Food-grade buckets
  • Desiccant packs (optional but helpful)

Pack it right once, and it’ll outlive the chaos.


7. The Hard Truth: People Will Come for Your Food

No one wants to talk about this part. But as a prepper, you know it’s true: when people are hungry, they turn violent. When they’re desperate, they stop being rational.

You can have the best food stockpile on the planet, preserved every which way…
but if you don’t defend it, you’re just storing it for someone else.

So prepare quietly. Preserve your food without broadcasting it to the world. The unprepared masses will mock you today—but they’ll envy you later.

And envy becomes danger.


Final Thoughts: Don’t Rely on a System That Has Already Failed

Every year, the grid becomes less stable. Every year, disasters—natural, political, or fabricated—add more strain to the system. And every year, the average citizen becomes more helpless, more dependent, more vulnerable.

But not you.

You’re doing what the world refuses to do: learning real skills, preserving real food, and building real security. When the grid goes down—and it will—your preparations will be the only thing standing between survival and starvation.

Start today.
Because when collapse comes… you won’t get a warning.

Idaho Homestead Lifestyle: Back to the Dirt and Done with the Nonsense

Let me tell you something right now: the world’s gone soft. Somewhere along the way, folks traded hand tools for smartphones, wild food for drive-thrus, and grit for convenience. But not out here—not in Idaho. Out here, we homestead. Out here, we take care of ourselves. And if that makes me a grumpy old dirt farmer with a pile of firewood and a root cellar full of potatoes, so be it.

I’m not here to sugarcoat anything. Homesteading in Idaho is work. It’s early mornings, cold fingers, aching backs, and long days. But it’s also freedom, independence, and one hell of a satisfying way to live. You don’t ask for handouts—you build. You mend. You butcher. You sew. You raise kids who know the difference between a rooster and a hen and don’t panic if the Wi-Fi drops out.

If you’re thinking of joining us out here, good. The more the merrier—but only if you’re ready to earn your place. This ain’t a vacation. It’s a lifestyle. Let me walk you through what that really means, Idaho-style.


15 Homestead Skills You Damn Well Better Learn

1. Animal Husbandry
If you can’t tell when your goat is about to give birth or why your chickens stopped laying, you’re in trouble. Learn to care for animals like they’re your lifeline—because they are.

2. Canning and Food Preservation
Store shelves aren’t reliable. Your pantry and root cellar? That’s your grocery store now. Pressure canner. Water bath. Fermenting. Master them.

3. Gardening for Survival
Not some Instagram “raised bed” crap with ornamental kale. I’m talking rows of potatoes, corn, beans—enough to feed your family through a brutal Idaho winter.

4. Seed Saving
If you’re still buying seeds every year, you’re not serious. Save your own, select for what thrives, and you’ll never be at the mercy of the seed catalogs again.

5. Hunting and Processing Game
Elk, deer, grouse. Idaho’s full of protein on the hoof. Learn to shoot, track, dress, and preserve meat without wasting a scrap.

6. Firewood Harvesting
We don’t turn on the heat—we chop it. Learn what burns hot, how to season it, and how to split it without throwing out your back.

7. Carpentry and Construction
You’ll need fences, coops, sheds, and maybe a house. Get handy with a hammer or go broke hiring someone else.

8. First Aid and Herbal Remedies
You think there’s a doctor nearby? Think again. You need to handle injuries, infections, and illness with what you’ve got on hand.

9. Cooking from Scratch
Boxed meals don’t cut it out here. Learn to bake bread, butcher a chicken, and make stock like your grandma did.

10. Welding and Metal Work
When your trailer hitch snaps or your plow blade needs reinforcing, you’ll wish you had a welder and knew how to use it.

11. Water Management
Rain catchment, well maintenance, gravity-fed irrigation. Water is life, and you better know where yours is coming from.

12. Solar and Off-Grid Energy
If you’re lucky enough to be off-grid, solar’s your friend. Know how to wire, monitor, and maintain your system—or you’ll be lighting candles all winter.

13. Soap Making
Forget store-bought junk. Make your own lye soap with goat milk, and get clean the honest way.

14. Foraging and Wildcrafting
Morels, huckleberries, yarrow, pine nuts—the land provides, but only if you recognize what you’re looking at.

15. Bartering and Community Trade
You won’t have everything you need. That’s where neighbors come in. Trade eggs for honey, jerky for firewood. Build trust. Build local strength.


3 DIY Homestead Hacks That Save Time and Sanity

Hack #1: Five-Gallon Bucket Chicken Waterer
Tired of refilling water every morning? Drill a few holes near the base of a 5-gallon bucket, set it in a tray (like a repurposed oil pan), and flip it. Chickens drink clean, and you only refill every few days. Simple. Cheap. Effective.

Hack #2: Pallet Compost Bin
Why pay a dime for a fancy compost tumbler when pallets are free all over Idaho? Nail four together into a square, add hinges for a front gate, and you’ve got a three-bin compost system for nothing. Let nature break it down while you drink coffee and admire your pile.

Hack #3: Gravity-Fed Rainwater System
Mount a few barrels under your gutter system, raise them on cinderblocks, and run hoses or PVC pipe downhill to your garden. Now your plants drink Idaho rain, and you don’t lug watering cans all summer. Bonus: No water bill.


The Harsh Truth

Idaho homesteading is not a lifestyle for the faint-hearted. The winters will test you. The isolation will challenge your marriage. You’ll lose crops to hail, predators to coyotes, and sometimes your damn mind. But every morning you walk outside and see your land—your chickens scratching, your tomatoes ripening, your kids hauling water like pioneers—you’ll remember why you started.

And let me say this: if you’re running from the city hoping to “unplug” with a latte in hand, do us a favor and stay home. Homesteading is not a trend. It’s not a weekend project. It’s not something you watch on YouTube and master in 30 days. It’s blood, sweat, tears, manure, and joy all mixed together under the big Idaho sky.

You will fail. You will cry. You will want to quit.

But if you stick with it, if you lean into the hard days and count your blessings when the pantry is full and the kids are healthy—you’ll never want to go back.


Final Words From a Grizzled Soul

The Idaho homestead lifestyle is the real deal. It’s the antidote to modern madness. It teaches you to rely on yourself and respect the land. It’s dirty. It’s beautiful. It’s real. So pick up that shovel, load that wood stove, kiss your kids, and go milk the damn goat. You’ve got a full day ahead of you—and that’s just how we like it out here.

And if anyone tells you it’s “too hard,” just smile and hand them a jar of your homemade pickles.

Because we don’t need easy.

We need real.

California Homestead Lifestyle: The Real Grit of Living Off the Land

You think California’s just about sun-drenched beaches, Hollywood glam, and avocado toast? Think again. Try telling that to someone who’s been scraping and clawing for every scrap of dirt they can turn into a living, breathing homestead in this damn state.

The California Homestead Lifestyle isn’t some weekend hobby or Instagram photo op. It’s a relentless, bloody commitment to independence, grit, and self-reliance. It’s about waking up every day knowing you’ve got to beat back the drought, the wildfires, the invasive regulations, and the overpriced land that’ll bleed you dry if you let it.

Here’s the cold, angry truth: if you want to homestead in California, you better come prepared with some serious skills and hacks—because out here, nature doesn’t give a damn about your fancy dreams. You either adapt or you fail.


15 Must-Have Homestead Skills for California Living

  1. Water Management
    This isn’t just important, it’s life or death. California’s droughts aren’t some rare event—they’re a brutal, recurring enemy. Learn how to capture rainwater legally, build cisterns, and recycle gray water. Every drop counts, so know your drip irrigation, mulching, and soil moisture retention techniques.
  2. Fire Prevention & Control
    Wildfires ravage California yearly. Knowing how to create defensible space around your homestead, clear brush, and have a fire plan can save your life and your home.
  3. Soil Building & Composting
    The Golden State’s soil isn’t uniformly fertile. You need to build it up with organic matter, compost properly, and use cover crops to keep your land productive.
  4. Permaculture Design
    Designing your homestead with the land’s natural flow in mind saves work and creates resilience—critical for surviving California’s erratic climate.
  5. Seed Saving & Plant Propagation
    Don’t trust the grocery store or seed companies. Save seeds from plants that thrive in your microclimate and propagate through cuttings or grafting.
  6. Animal Husbandry
    Whether chickens, goats, or bees, raising animals for eggs, milk, honey, or pest control is a cornerstone of a thriving homestead.
  7. Butchering & Meat Preservation
    This one’s not for the faint of heart, but knowing how to process and preserve meat means you aren’t dependent on the butcher or supermarket.
  8. Canning & Food Preservation
    You better master canning, dehydrating, and fermenting, because the summer bounty isn’t going to last all year.
  9. Tool Maintenance & Blacksmithing Basics
    If your tools break, you can’t wait for Amazon. Sharpen blades, fix equipment, and maybe even do some basic metalwork.
  10. Alternative Energy Setup
    Solar panels, battery storage, and maybe even a wind turbine can keep your homestead powered without relying on the grid, which gets sketchy during fires or blackouts.
  11. Natural Building & Repairs
    Knowing how to fix a fence, patch a roof, or build with local materials (adobe, cob, reclaimed wood) saves you a fortune and keeps you independent.
  12. Herbal Medicine & First Aid
    Access to doctors isn’t always a given in remote areas. Learn to identify and use medicinal plants, and basic first aid.
  13. Wildcrafting & Foraging
    California is rich in wild edibles—acorns, mushrooms, herbs. Know what’s safe and how to harvest without destroying the ecosystem.
  14. Hunting & Fishing
    For many homesteaders, this supplements their diet with fresh protein. Learn local regulations and sustainable practices.
  15. Community Networking & Bartering
    No homestead is an island. Build relationships with neighbors for skill swaps, trade, and mutual aid when the chips are down.

The Raw Reality of California Homesteading

You want a slice of this California dream? Here’s the kicker: the state’s got more red tape than a Christmas tree lot. Permits for wells, restrictions on rainwater catchment, zoning laws that try to squeeze you into a suburban box, and the constant threat of eviction or fines for “non-compliance.” It’s enough to make a seasoned homesteader spit nails.

You need to be savvy, legal, and stubborn as hell. You have to know how to work within the system while pushing back hard when the system tries to throttle your way of life. A homestead here isn’t a fairy tale; it’s a battlefront, and you’re the last line of defense.


3 DIY Homestead Hacks to Survive & Thrive in California

1. DIY Solar Water Heater from Old Tires and Black Paint

Forget expensive solar water heaters. Take some discarded car tires, slice them open flat, and paint them flat black. Arrange these on a south-facing wall or roof where they get full sun. Run a loop of black tubing through the tires and hook it up to your water tank. The tires absorb heat, warming your water cheaply and sustainably—perfect for chilly desert nights or foggy coastal mornings.

2. Swale Trenches for Water Harvesting

In drought-ridden California, every drop counts. Dig swale trenches along your contour lines—shallow ditches that catch and hold rainwater, allowing it to slowly seep into the soil instead of running off. This traps moisture and revitalizes the land around your crops. You don’t need fancy equipment, just a shovel, some patience, and knowledge of your land’s slope.

3. DIY Rocket Stove from Salvaged Bricks and Tin Cans

Cooking fuel is expensive and scarce in some areas. Build a rocket stove from reclaimed bricks and tin cans for an efficient, smokeless cooking option. It uses tiny amounts of wood and burns hot—great for canning or cooking without relying on electricity or propane.


What the Hell Are You Waiting For?

If you think you’re going to just “set up a homestead” in California like planting a few tomato plants and calling it a day, you’re dead wrong. This lifestyle demands everything you’ve got—blood, sweat, and yes, sometimes tears. But when you succeed, there’s nothing like eating food you grew yourself, knowing you’re off the grid and free.

So pick up those skills, learn the hacks, get your hands dirty, and fight for your slice of the homestead dream. Because out here, freedom isn’t handed to you. You take it.

Connecticut Homestead Lifestyle: A Gritty Guide for Those Who Won’t Be Bullied by the System

I’m not here to sugarcoat this fancy Connecticut homestead lifestyle crap you’ve been daydreaming about while scrolling through Instagram on your smartphone. Living off the land here isn’t a picnic. It’s a battle. The weather’s a whiny mess — sometimes hotter than hell in July, then freezing your butt off by October. The soil can be rocky and stubborn, and you’re still breathing the same old New England air thick with traffic fumes when you’re not stomping around your yard. But you want to homestead, right? Fine. Then you better be ready to get your hands dirty, sweat, and maybe curse a little.

I’m gonna lay down 15 essential skills that every serious Connecticut homesteader should master — skills you won’t learn in any trendy YouTube video filled with sunshine and smiles. And I’ll toss in 3 practical DIY hacks that’ll save you a fortune and keep you from losing your mind.


15 Gritty Homestead Skills for Connecticut

  1. Soil Testing & Improvement
    If you don’t know what the hell is in your soil, you’re digging a grave for your garden. Connecticut soil can be acidic and low in nutrients. Learn to test your soil’s pH and amend it with lime or organic matter. No miracle crops will grow if your soil sucks.
  2. Composting Like a Beast
    Throwing away kitchen scraps? Are you nuts? Composting turns garbage into gold. Learn to manage your compost so it doesn’t stink or attract every critter within a five-mile radius.
  3. Season Extension Techniques
    Frost comes early here, so you better master cold frames, cloches, and row covers to keep your plants from biting the dust come October.
  4. Wood Splitting & Stacking
    Heating with wood is a rite of passage. Learn to split, dry, and stack firewood properly. If your wood’s wet or stacked wrong, you’re freezing your tail off come winter.
  5. Canning & Preserving
    Fresh tomatoes and berries last about five seconds in Connecticut. Master water bath and pressure canning to preserve your harvest for winter or when the grocery store’s prices make you weep.
  6. Basic Plumbing Repairs
    Leaks and frozen pipes are the homesteader’s nightmares. Learn to fix your own plumbing so you don’t call some overpriced plumber for every drip.
  7. Bee Keeping
    Honey isn’t just sweet; it’s a homestead goldmine and a lifesaver in winter. Connecticut’s native bees aren’t that easy to wrangle, but it’s worth the battle.
  8. Chickens & Poultry Raising
    Eggs straight from your yard? Nothing beats it. Learn about coop building, feeding, predator-proofing, and disease management.
  9. Basic Veterinary Skills for Small Livestock
    You’re your own vet out here. Know how to spot common illnesses in chickens, goats, or rabbits and handle basic treatment before it turns ugly.
  10. Herb Gardening & Medicinal Plants
    The land offers more than food. Learn to grow and harvest herbs like echinacea, calendula, and yarrow for teas, salves, and wound care.
  11. Root Cellaring
    Don’t just store your veggies willy-nilly. Master cold, dark, humid root cellars to keep potatoes, carrots, and apples edible for months.
  12. Basic Carpentry
    Whether it’s fixing a fence or building a chicken coop, carpentry skills will save you from spending a fortune on contractors.
  13. Trapping & Pest Control
    Those varmints will eat your crops, your chickens, and your sanity. Learn humane trapping and deterrents to protect your homestead.
  14. Water Management & Rainwater Harvesting
    Water is life. Master gutter systems, barrels, and filtration to keep a steady supply without relying on the grid.
  15. Seasonal Foraging
    Connecticut’s woods and fields are loaded with edible wild plants — fiddlehead ferns, ramps, wild berries — but you better know your plants or you’ll be in trouble.

3 DIY Homestead Hacks That’ll Make Your Life Easier and Keep Your Wallet Fat

Hack #1: DIY Cold Frame From Old Windows
Don’t buy expensive greenhouses or fancy setups. Scavenge old windows from construction dumpsters or Craigslist, stack them on a low wooden frame over your garden beds, and voilà — a cheap cold frame that traps heat and extends your growing season. Bonus: It’s easy to open for ventilation and sunlight.

Hack #2: Build a Chicken Tractor With Scrap Wood and Hardware Cloth
Predators are everywhere, and fixed coops can be a pain to clean or move. Build a lightweight chicken tractor — basically a movable coop without a floor — so your hens get fresh grass and bugs daily. Use scrap wood and chicken wire/hardware cloth to keep the raccoons and foxes at bay. Move it every day or two, and your garden soil thanks you.

Hack #3: Reuse Plastic Bottles to Create Mini Greenhouses
Cut the bottoms off large plastic bottles and use them as mini cloches over seedlings in your garden. It traps heat and moisture, helping seeds germinate faster in Connecticut’s fickle spring weather. When the plants outgrow them, recycle the bottles again or stash for next year.


Why I’m Furious About Connecticut Homesteading Culture

Now let me get real about why I’m pissed. Too many people romanticize this homestead lifestyle like it’s some quaint hobby or a weekend escape from city life. Connecticut’s homesteading isn’t an Instagram filter with fresh eggs and rustic sunsets. It’s backbreaking labor, sleepless nights watching for predators, hours of pruning under unforgiving sun or rain, and a never-ending war against nature’s bullshit.

You’re not just growing food — you’re building resilience. You’re fighting a system that wants you dependent on expensive food, toxic chemicals, and corporate farms. You’re proving you can do better with less. But to do that, you need skills. You need grit. You need to get off your ass and learn these 15 essential homestead skills or be prepared to fail.

You can’t just buy heirloom seeds and hope for the best. You can’t trust that your cute little coop will keep out every predator. You can’t rely on the grid or Amazon deliveries when the power goes out or the truck drivers go on strike.


The Hard Truth About Connecticut Weather

This place will humble you. Winters in Connecticut aren’t the worst, but they’re cold enough to kill your plants if you don’t plan ahead. Spring is unpredictable — one day 60 degrees and sunny, next day snow and frost. Summer will roast your garden or drown it in humidity and bugs. Fall’s short, and then winter’s here again, mocking your efforts.

Your homestead needs to be flexible. Your skills need to be sharp. Your resolve needs to be ironclad.


What It Really Means To Live the Connecticut Homestead Lifestyle

It means waking up before dawn to feed chickens and check your garden for pests. It means hauling firewood in freezing rain because your furnace needs a boost. It means learning to preserve every ounce of your harvest, because food waste is a sin when you’ve worked that hard.

It means scouring the woods for wild edibles, even if your back aches and the bugs swarm like crazy. It means fixing broken fences with whatever you have on hand, because if the coyotes get in, you lose everything.

It means learning to be self-reliant but not too proud to ask for help from your homestead neighbors when the well runs dry or a sickness hits your animals.


So yeah, if you want the Connecticut homestead lifestyle, put down your phone and get to work. Learn these 15 skills, try out the 3 hacks, and prepare to fight every day for your little patch of earth. Because the only thing sweeter than fresh eggs or ripe tomatoes from your own garden is the satisfaction of knowing you did it all yourself — no handouts, no gimmicks, just hard, honest work.

Now go sweat, curse, and get your hands dirty. Your homestead won’t wait for you to be ready.

Colorado Homestead Lifestyle: No Bull, Just Grit and Grind

I’ve been through the bitter winters, the scorching summers, and the endless droughts. I’ve wrestled coyotes, battled blizzards, and hauled water uphill like a mule. And I’m still standing. So listen good: If you want to survive — hell, thrive — on a Colorado homestead, you better learn these skills and be ready to put in the work. No whining, no excuses.


15 Must-Have Homestead Skills for Colorado

  1. Water Management and Conservation
    You don’t get rain every day on these high plains. Learn how to capture, store, and ration water. Rain barrels, cisterns, irrigation channels—master this or kiss your crops goodbye.
  2. Well Drilling and Pump Maintenance
    If you don’t have a reliable well, you’re just waiting for death by dehydration. Know your pump, your plumbing, and how to fix leaks before they turn into a catastrophe.
  3. Fence Building and Repair
    Coyotes, deer, and the occasional neighbor’s ATV will test your fences daily. Build ’em tough with strong posts and barbed wire. Fix ’em fast or you’ll be feeding the wildlife.
  4. Livestock Handling
    Whether it’s chickens, goats, cattle, or pigs, you’ve got to know how to herd, feed, and care for them. Sick or injured livestock means less food on the table.
  5. Gardening in Rocky, Arid Soil
    Colorado soil isn’t some lush earth— it’s rocky, alkaline, and dry. Amend your soil, know your native plants, and plant in raised beds or containers if necessary.
  6. Composting and Soil Building
    Build soil fertility with compost, manure, and mulch. If your dirt’s dead, your garden dies. This skill will keep your land productive through every season.
  7. Food Preservation (Canning, Drying, Freezing)
    You can’t always count on fresh produce. Learn to can, dry, or freeze your harvest. Don’t let a single tomato or ear of corn go to waste.
  8. Woodworking and Basic Carpentry
    When your barn door falls off or your coop collapses under snow, you better know how to fix it with what you have. Nailing boards together isn’t rocket science.
  9. Basic Electrical and Solar Setup
    Power outages aren’t a rare inconvenience—they’re a fact of life. Know how to run basic electrical lines and keep your solar panels humming.
  10. Animal Butchering and Processing
    If you raise animals, you better know how to butcher and process meat. No fancy abattoirs out here—just you, your knives, and a whole lot of grit.
  11. First Aid and Herbal Medicine
    Ambulances don’t race out to the middle of nowhere. Know first aid, wound care, and how to use local herbs for common ailments.
  12. Firearms and Pest Control
    Predators and pests will threaten your livestock and crops. Know how to defend your homestead legally and safely.
  13. Seasonal Planning and Crop Rotation
    Colorado’s short growing season demands planning. Know when to plant, what to rotate, and how to extend your harvest with cold frames or greenhouses.
  14. Trapping and Hunting
    Sometimes the freezer needs filling and the garden isn’t enough. Know how to trap small game and hunt legally to supplement your food stores.
  15. Heavy Equipment Operation and Maintenance
    If you want to move dirt, clear land, or fix machinery, learn how to operate a tractor or an ATV. When it breaks down, fix it yourself or you’re stranded.

3 DIY Homestead Hacks That’ll Save Your Skin on a Colorado Homestead

1. Solar Water Heater From Old Car Radiators
Don’t pay for fancy gear—use old car radiators painted black, hooked to your water storage. Set them in a south-facing window or roof rack to heat water with sunlight. Cheap, effective, and tough enough to handle our Colorado sun and wind.

2. Plastic Bottle Greenhouse Wall
When the cold hits hard, you need protection. Collect empty plastic bottles, cut the bottoms off, and stack them as insulated walls inside your greenhouse. It traps heat and saves your seedlings from freezing nights without costing a dime.

3. Tire Raised Beds for Rocky Soil
Forget digging into stubborn clay and rocks. Stack old tires to create raised garden beds filled with imported soil and compost. They retain heat, drain well, and keep critters out of your plants. Plus, it’s recycling done right.


Why This Life Isn’t for Everyone

Some city slickers come out here thinking it’s all fresh air and fun. Ha! Try hauling fifty pounds of feed uphill in a blizzard. Try waking up at 4 a.m. to milk a stubborn goat in sub-zero temps. Try fixing a leaky roof with frozen fingers and no hardware store for miles. This life demands you be tougher than the elements, smarter than your mistakes, and hungrier than your hunger pains.

You’ll have neighbors who vanish every winter and friends who back out when the going gets rough. But those of us who stay? We build something real. Something that lasts. We wrangle the land into submission, one fence post and one seedling at a time.


The Colorado Challenge

Colorado isn’t just one place—it’s mountains, plains, deserts, and everything in between. Homesteading here means adapting. Up in the mountains, you fight altitude, snow, and short growing seasons. Out on the plains, you battle wind, drought, and soil that doesn’t want to grow a damn thing.

And don’t get me started on the wildlife. Between bears, mountain lions, coyotes, and an endless parade of rabbits, squirrels, and rodents, you’ll either get smart or you’ll lose your garden, your chickens, or worse.


Get Ready to Work

If you want a “lifestyle” that means sipping coffee while your crops grow themselves, move to the suburbs. But if you want a life where every sunrise means grit, grind, and earning your keep—welcome to the Colorado homestead.

Learn the skills, build the muscle, and carry the scars with pride. Because this land doesn’t owe you a damn thing. It only rewards those who earn it.

You Ain’t Gonna Make It Unless You’re Ready: A Survivalist’s Guide to Food Storage & Preservation

Let me tell you something straight—you either prep or perish. When the trucks stop rolling, the power goes down, and the store shelves go bare in less than 24 hours, your excuses won’t keep your stomach full. You can cry, beg, or pray all you want, but if you haven’t put in the work to build a rock-solid food storage system, you’re screwed.

Food storage and preservation aren’t hobbies—they’re life-or-death skills. The kind of skills your great-grandparents used just to get through the winter, and here you are in the 21st century, still relying on frozen pizzas and two-day shipping. Shameful.

So pull your head out of the sand and start learning the hard truth about what it takes to stay alive when the system crashes. I’m going to give you 15 survival skills and 3 DIY survival hacks that will keep you fed long after your neighbors have eaten the dog food and torn into their drywall looking for mice.


Survival Skills for Food Storage & Preservation

1. Canning (Water Bath & Pressure)

Master both. Water bath is for high-acid foods—tomatoes, jams. Pressure canning is for low-acid foods—meat, beans, veggies. Don’t screw this up unless you want a side of botulism with dinner.

2. Dehydrating

Buy a good dehydrator—or build one yourself. Dry fruits, jerky, herbs, even cooked rice and pasta. Light, compact, shelf-stable. Perfect for bug-out bags or tight storage.

3. Freeze-Drying

Yeah, the machines are expensive, but so’s your life. Freeze-dried food lasts 25 years. No power needed to keep it good. And unlike that freeze-dried crap from big box prepper stores, your homemade version isn’t full of garbage chemicals.

4. Vacuum Sealing

Oxygen is the enemy. Suck it out and your food lasts longer. Pair it with Mylar bags and O2 absorbers and you’re halfway to invincible.

5. Root Cellaring

No power? No problem. Learn to store potatoes, carrots, apples, cabbage, and more the old-fashioned way—buried in cool, dark places. This is pre-electric refrigeration technology. Use it.

6. Smoking Meat

Salt, smoke, and time—three ingredients to survive. Whether it’s fish, pork, or game you hunted yourself, knowing how to preserve meat without a freezer is priceless.

7. Fermentation

Kimchi, sauerkraut, kefir, pickles. This ain’t hipster nonsense—it’s a time-tested, bacteria-friendly preservation method that boosts gut health and keeps your food edible for months.

8. Making Jerky

Lean meat, sliced thin, salted, and dried. Easy to make, easy to store. It’s what nomads and pioneers lived on. You should too.

9. Using Mylar Bags with O2 Absorbers

This is non-negotiable. Store rice, flour, beans, oats—anything dry—in these and it’ll last a decade or more. Stack your buckets, seal your bags, and sleep better at night.

10. Salt Preservation

You got salt? You got food. It pulls moisture out, kills bacteria, and keeps things shelf-stable. From salt-cured fish to dry brining meat, it’s a primitive technique that still works.

11. Making Hardtack

It’s like eating drywall, but this flour-water-salt cracker lasts forever and keeps you alive. Store it dry and rehydrate it in soup when your taste buds finally revolt.

12. Rotating Your Pantry

Oldest in front, newest in back. You don’t want to find a crate of bloated tomato cans five years from now. Rotate monthly. Label dates. Be meticulous.

13. Batch Cooking & Canning Meals

Don’t just can green beans. Can chili. Can beef stew. Can soup. When it’s cold and you’re exhausted, opening a ready-made meal you canned yourself is worth gold.

14. Making Pemmican

This high-calorie mix of dried meat, fat, and berries can last years without refrigeration. Used by Native Americans and polar explorers. Make it now before you need it.

15. Building a Real Prepper Pantry

Don’t just throw stuff on shelves. Organize by type, date, and calories. Include spices, comfort food, and barter items. Your pantry should be an armory of nutrition.


DIY Survival Hacks That’ll Keep You Fed and Ready

Hack #1: DIY Zeer Pot (Desert Fridge)

Take two unglazed clay pots, one smaller than the other. Fill the space between them with wet sand, cover with a damp cloth, and place your perishables inside. As the water evaporates, it cools the inner pot—primitive refrigeration with zero electricity. Works best in dry climates.

Hack #2: Homemade Solar Dehydrator

Grab some scrap wood, black paint, clear plastic, and a screen. Build a box with airflow and sunlight access. Let nature do the work. Dehydrate apples, jerky, herbs, and more without touching your grid-powered devices.

Hack #3: Dig-a-Hole Cold Storage

No root cellar? No problem. Dig a 3-4 foot deep hole in a shaded spot. Line it with bricks or wood if you can. Place your sealed buckets or containers inside and cover with a tight lid or a pallet and tarp. Natural insulation keeps things cool year-round.


The Uncomfortable Truth

Let’s be clear: if you think this is overkill, you haven’t been paying attention. The government won’t save you. FEMA will roll in three days too late, and the National Guard won’t hand out pizza and soda. If a cyberattack hits the grid or supply chains collapse, the people with full pantries and solid skills will be the last ones standing.

This isn’t about fear. It’s about responsibility—to yourself, your family, your community. You don’t prep for fun, you prep because you understand how fragile civilization really is. Every time you put a new jar on the shelf or vacuum seal a bag of rice, you’re buying a little more time when it all goes to hell.

The rest of them? They’ll panic-buy bottled water and microwave popcorn. You’ll be sitting on beans, bullets, and a five-year plan. And when they come knocking? That’s your call to make. But you better believe you’ll feel a hell of a lot better turning people away from a stocked pantry than being the one begging for handouts.


Closing Rant – And You’d Better Listen

So here’s the deal: Quit waiting. Quit making excuses. Quit telling yourself you’ll start next month. Next month, the inflation will be worse, the shelves emptier, and your window to act even smaller. Start today. Learn the skills. Build your pantry. Do the work.

Don’t just survive. Overcome. Because when SHTF, you don’t rise to the occasion—you fall to the level of your training. So you better train like your life depends on it.

Because it does.

How I Slashed My Canned Goods Expenses By Half

I always knew that canned foods are the one of easiest ways to make sure you always have food to eat.

However, when I looked at how much I need to stockpile, things started getting a little out of hand.

Some people say you need to store 3 to 6 months’ worth of food. Others even say a year.

This wouldn’t be a concern in the past, but with everything that’s going on lately, I simply can’t afford to shop for this much food.

Even if I shop in bulk.

So I did what any family man would do. I made them myself.

I looked into it and found several ways to make canned food.

And since I am not an experienced prepper, I used the simplest method there is. Water bath canning.

This is the exact process I followed

  1. Gather your food. This could be anything from fresh fruits and veggies to homemade sauces or jams.
  2. Pack the food into jars. You’ll want to use specially designed canning jars for this, and make sure there is some space at the top (referred to as ‘headspace’).
  3. Secure the lids. Once your jars are filled, put on the lids and screw bands, ensuring they are tightly sealed.
  4. Submerge the jars in a pot of boiling water. This is where the magic happens. The heat eliminates the bacteria, yeasts, or molds that could cause your food to spoil.
  5. Let the jars cool. Once you’ve boiled them for the recommended time, take them out of the water and let them cool. As they cool, the lids will seal completely.
  6. Inspect the seals. After the jars have cooled, inspect the seals to make sure they’re airtight. Any jars that haven’t been sealed properly can be reprocessed or refrigerated and used first.

And voila.

This simple process reduced my canned goods expenses by about half.

Bear in mind, you don’t have to store just beans.

You can use the same method for fruits, vegetables, jams, sauces, or whatever you like.

And you will have nutritional food that will last you through any emergency.

Why don’t you try it?

Your Grocery Bills Are About To Increase (Unless You Do This)

If you are an American, eggs are probably not ever missing from your house.

There was some bad luck around eggs, however, that will make you reconsider your breakfast options.

I love my scrambled eggs in the morning as much as the next guy.

But they are about to become so expensive that they will be leaving a bad taste in our mouths.

As if inflation wasn’t enough.

The bird flu just affected 52,700,000 poultry in the U.S. alone.

This is not a small number.

Chickens are either dying or being put down because of that disease.

And eggs are already almost 3 times more expensive than what they were a year ago.

I also read that a fire recently broke out at an egg facility in Connecticut, and killed 100,000 birds.

It is almost like eggs are cursed.

They will keep getting more expensive.

How much more can our wallets take?

If you don’t want your jaw to drop every time you shop for groceries, I suggest you raise your own chickens.

Raising your own chickens is not just good for your wallet, but for your health too.

You will be the one who chooses what to feed them.

So you will know that they’ll produce nutritious eggs that are not filled with any weird hormones.

With just a little bit of effort, you can set up a small coop in your backyard and start raising a few chickens.

It’s a fun and rewarding hobby, and it will pay for itself in no time.

There are many breeds of chickens out there.

And you can even choose breeds that are known for their laying ability.

This will also give you peace of mind, knowing that if things come to worse, you will always have emergency food.

If you enjoy eggs as much as I do, this decision is a no-brainer.

It will assist you with feeding your family nutritious eggs even when they become too expensive.

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See what to look out for when raising your own chicken.

How much emergency food should every American stockpile?

Most survival experts out there say every American, no matter your age or weight, needs a 72-hour supply for each person in your house.

3 days in other words.

But let’s be real. When was the last time an emergency packed up and left in exactly three days?

Exactly.

You gotta have at least a two-week supply of food.

And that’s for short emergencies.

But what about when the unexpected turns into the indefinite?

This is where things become more complicated.

In emergencies like these, where supermarkets become a memory and the grocery store aisles are bare, the rules of the game begin to shift.

And if you’re unprepared, you might as well lay down and accept your fate.

Let’s talk about what most folks neglect.

Preservation is your ally.

Learning to preserve food can be a game-changer.

Canning, dehydrating, and smoking are methods that can extend the lifespan of your food significantly.

Ever thought about pickling those cucumbers or making jerky from that deer meat?

This is the time to do so.

But you have to be careful!

This is what happens when you don’t can your food properly.

But don’t worry, if you’re not sure you’re able to can your food properly, you have more options.

Grow your own food!

In an indefinite emergency, becoming self-reliant is non-negotiable.

Take advantage of your backyard.

Even a small patch can produce a surprising amount of food. And don’t forget about herbs and sprouts, they can be grown even in a sunny window.

Bulk up on knowledge

Knowledge trumps everything.

The more you know, the safer you are.

This is why the emails you’re reading are so important.

Because I hold nothing back.

And I talk about everything that lets me survive in the world’s harshest conditions possible.

Keep learning about foraging, hunting, and fishing. Understand your local environment and what it can provide.

And stay curious. That’s important, brother.

Community strength

Humanity’s lived so long because we’ve stuck together.

Pooling resources, sharing knowledge, and supporting each other can make a world of difference.

The Mental game

This one’s tricky.

You can’t underestimate the power of a positive mindset.

The ability to stay calm, think clearly, and keep morale high is just as crucial as any physical preparation you’ve made.

This is how you build mental toughness.

Folks, preparing for prolonged emergencies ain’t easy.

And that’s why most folks don’t do it.

But I know my readers are not like most folks.

You guys are tough.

This is why I tell you these things.

Because I know you’re going to put in the work.

So keep doing what most folks aren’t willing.

And do whatever necessary to keep your family safe.

Also, I created a rather in-depth survival prepper TikTok account that you may want to check out!