More as an exercise than anything else, I put together some items for emergency use. Actually, a bug out bag is for survivalists, I think. This is not.
I have a desert camo backpack which holds everything. Items like a genuine Kabar,(not Chinese crap!) alcohol stove, three methods for making fire, Water filtration, two water containers, Flashlight, crank and battery powered, four cyalume snap sticks, simple compass, two freeze dried meals (10 years life), survival blankets, first aid kit, and other misc.
My latest addition is a Henry AR7 .22 survival rifle, which fits easily in the back pack. Haven't tried it for accuracy or reliability yet but I've heard good reports on the Henry as opposed to the Charter Arms version. About 100 rounds of Minimax ammo.
I also have a two meter small handheld (meets Mil Std 810 for waterpower, vibration, and shock) and covers many frequencies receive and three bands on transmit.(I'm an inactive ham). Not the best , has a rechargeable battery pak and can also use AA batteries. Weak spot is recharging.
Just some ideas, nothing special.
I have a desert camo backpack which holds everything. Items like a genuine Kabar,(not Chinese crap!) alcohol stove, three methods for making fire, Water filtration, two water containers, Flashlight, crank and battery powered, four cyalume snap sticks, simple compass, two freeze dried meals (10 years life), survival blankets, first aid kit, and other misc.
My latest addition is a Henry AR7 .22 survival rifle, which fits easily in the back pack. Haven't tried it for accuracy or reliability yet but I've heard good reports on the Henry as opposed to the Charter Arms version. About 100 rounds of Minimax ammo.
I also have a two meter small handheld (meets Mil Std 810 for waterpower, vibration, and shock) and covers many frequencies receive and three bands on transmit.(I'm an inactive ham). Not the best , has a rechargeable battery pak and can also use AA batteries. Weak spot is recharging.
Just some ideas, nothing special.