We have been concentrating on pantry, heat, and defense. The defense I will keep close to my chest and we have enough wood for two to three seasons, including kindling. Kindling has become my wife's personal quest. When we trim a bush, a tree, or find scrap wood, it ends up in our kindling boxes.
Our pantry upgrade, maintenance has been oriented towards: protein, carbohydrates, and fats. We have been picking up tons of extra-virgin olive oil and plan to supplement that with animal fat - a limited numbers of cans of animal fat shortening and lard. We save every single drop of bacon fat for short-term use. We have been testing and evaluating olive oil that is over three years old and have been unable to notice any change in flavor. Maybe we have perfect storage conditions but have not lost a drop. Since here in the dry mountain west we do not have a lot of edible wild greens we have to buy canned items - assorted (important dark leaf vegetables for vitamin A and iron): turnip greens, spinach, mustard greens, collard greens. We have home-canned just about 60 quarts of yukon gold potatoes, a like number of "survival soup" which contains carbs, protein and fat; chicken, antelope, deer, and beef. Stores of carbs (for energy) - tons of beans, both dried and canned, which are good sources of protein. PEANUT BUTTER. Homemade jams, jellies. College students will love this - more Ramen noodles than we can shake a stick at. Pasta coming out our ears - we are using pasta that is ten years old with no appreciable difference - no bugs either. Bay leaves work!
One day we were delivering a load of food to a food bank and the manager gave us roughly ten cases of powdered milk and ten cases of grapefruit juice - nobody wanted it.
It is time to get your stores in place people!
