Archive: https://archive.is/2025.03.26-113538/https://www.ft.com/content/eeb1ee80-00b8-4f9f-b560-a6717a80d58d

EU households should stockpile essential supplies to survive at least 72 hours of crisis, Brussels has proposed, as Russia’s war in Ukraine and a darkening geopolitical landscape prompt the bloc to take new steps to increase its security.

The continuing conflict in Ukraine, the Covid-19 pandemic that brutally exposed a lack of crisis response capabilities and the Trump administration’s adversarial stance towards Europe have forced the continent to rethink its vulnerabilities and increase spending on defence and security.

The new initiative comes as European intelligence agencies warn that Russia could attack an EU member state within three to five years, adding to natural threats including floods and wildfires worsened by climate change and societal risks such as financial crises.

Europe faced increased threats “including the possibility of armed aggression against member states”, the European Commission warned on Wednesday as it published a 30-step plan for its 27 capitals to increase their preparedness for crisis and mitigation measures.

  • lurch (he/him)
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    7123 days ago

    I’m from EU and this is way less than my country suggests, which is 2 weeks.

    I actually have 2 weeks supplies, but I’m gonna eat baked beans and vegan chocolate and drink coke zero the last few days 😅

    • atro_city
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      1523 days ago

      Yeah, 3 days is a joke. Do they expect a war to be over in 3 days?

      • Meldrik
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        2423 days ago

        It’s an estimate on how long you need to survive on your own, before the government is able to help.

        • atro_city
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          1323 days ago

          I think that’s very optimistic. Looking at how COVID went, I have no faith at all in people’s ability to stay calm. The government isn’t going to be able to help those in need 3 days in with the masses of idiots around. No way.

          • @[email protected]
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            1123 days ago

            Well, during COVID the idea was still that things should run as normally, with a market economy and stuff. During an actual war, any sensible government would immediately take control of the distribution of food, water, energy and other essentials. Scalpers would be immediately detained, rather than to allow them to run rampant.

            • atro_city
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              823 days ago

              One would hope so, but I bet you enough people would be influenced by a Russian disinformation campaign to trigger riots on the streets because “Russia is a friend, we are the aggressors” or whatever other bullshit they come up with. Then troops would have to be pulled away from the border to deal with the riots.

              • @[email protected]
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                122 days ago

                I have acquaintances who are invested in the Russian propaganda, and this is very possible.

                It’s insane, talking about it does nothing as the root issues are others.

                I can’t help them.

            • trollercoaster
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              123 days ago

              Any sensible government would.

              But any government consisting of a bunch of greedy opportunists who are only in it in order to enrich themselves, there is endless opportunity to become very rich by fucking over the public even more than in peacetime.

          • @[email protected]
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            23 days ago

            If it’s an actual war they can throw their weight around just fine, idiots will just have to deal with it. Actually, that happened during covid too. I don’t remember starving, just an every-increasing whinging in the background as the problem was dealt with efficiently.

      • @[email protected]
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        823 days ago

        More likely they expect to be able to get support/reinforcement/aid in, within a couple of days.

        It’s big enough to be a useful stopgap, but small enough not to accidentally cause a run on the supermarkets. It also makes people think about it more. If they update it to 2 weeks later, people are more likely to have a feel for what they need, and what will keep.

        • @[email protected]
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          23 days ago

          I think big part is that people would go out and empty the shelfs imediately if they all started stockpiling for two weeks starting tommorow.

          I started getting a bit more everytime it was on sale about three years ago, and have a decent stockpile that probably lasts me for more than 4 weeks… It’s an art to not get too much so that you can eat it when it gets close to expiration date though, so it’s better to not buy everything at once but to spread it out.

          But in the end, canned food will likely last many more years than the expiration date suggests.

          • @[email protected]
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            222 days ago

            I’ve maintained a basic stock for a while now. I suspected people would panic buy with COVID. I stocked up well before, and so dodged most of it. I’ve kept an extra buffer since.

          • @[email protected]
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            022 days ago

            Just chipping in to say I ate a can of food that was made during WW2 in 1990, so yeah cans do keep for a long time … when they get very old the trick is to shake the can before opening and if it sounds like there’s air inside it’s gone bad

      • @[email protected]
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        22 days ago

        They cant say the real number or it would cause panic. 3 is a sensible number people can get behind without causing a run on grocery.

      • Don Antonio Magino
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        123 days ago

        Yeah, everyone should stock up on a year’s supply of food, at the very least.

        That’s how long a war will likely last, anyway.

        • lurch (he/him)
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          223 days ago

          the problem is that you would need to eat canned food every other day to make sure it’s not going bad

      • sircac
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        022 days ago

        It is not just for war, but disasters in general, imagine a colapse or jamming of internet network or credit card buying or isolation from a flood or erathquake, help and minimum delivery infrastructures may take easily 3 days in effectively reach the people in need, is a reasonable amount to recover from the shock having around in average the minimum to survive in the mean time. Worse problems will be waiting for solution but this could save lives and improve significantly circumstances.

        • PostiveNoise
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          323 days ago

          Slightly less percentage of raw red meat in the final product, with cute packaging featuring the color green

              • @[email protected]
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                23 days ago

                So jokes aside, do you really think veganism is just eating a little less meat of a certain type?

                • PostiveNoise
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                  122 days ago

                  No. Why do you assume I don’t know what veganism is, after I already said I was joking? It’s not eating animal food products, including not eating foods that contain some animal food products. Let’s please finish this conversation…

          • @[email protected]
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            423 days ago

            In case it’s not clear by now, chocolate sometimes has milk and I guess OP doesn’t like dark chocolate.

          • Skua
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            1023 days ago

            That’s “vegetarian”. Veganism avoids all animal products (there’s more to it than that, but that’s the simple version), so the dairy in most chocolate is out

            • @[email protected]
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              023 days ago

              Vegetarian is not just “without meat”, it means “no animal has to die for me”. That also technically excludes some cheeses as they contain rennet (although this is often overlooked due to nescience). Plus we’re only talking food right now, not clothing and other lifestyle products.

              • @[email protected]
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                223 days ago

                It bothers me that vegetarians don’t care beyond this very un-though-through concept of ‘animals dying’.

                Dairy is a product of the mass rape and imprisonment of cows in horrific factory farms, and chickens are also kept in massively over crowded and unsanitary conditions.

                And this is not to mention the constant cullings of male animals, which aren’t considered food as testosterone tastes so bad, and male animals can’t produce eggs or milk.

                Or the constant culling of animals that no longer produce eggs or milk to quota.

                Or the mass culling of the diseased or at risk of disease from being forced to live in such disgusting environments.

                Vegetarianism is not a moral stance, it’s delusional and harms and kills animals at the same rate as eating both meat and dairy.

                • @[email protected]
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                  623 days ago

                  I get what you want to say and principally, I agree. However, I would highly advise against making better the enemy of perfect. Vegetarians usually are on the right track, they’re often just not educated enough, thinking that some animal products can be sourced ethically (as demonstrated by the other comment).
                  In my experience, vegetarianism often is just a waypoint towards veganism.

                • irelephant [he/him]🍭
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                  022 days ago

                  In ireland, free range eggs are the norm, and most cows graze on actual fields. but, we have barely any wild areas anymore,.

                • @[email protected]
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                  -223 days ago

                  I mean, plant agriculture isn’t exactly great for wildlife either. Hell, being wildlife isn’t great for wildlife. We theoretically could keep animals in a way that’s fine for them, we just usually don’t.

                  I eat a mix of free-range eggs and backyard eggs, and avoid milk where possible. Unfortunately the challenge scales pretty rapidly after that. Directly eating meat that can only be gotten in an unethical way feels a lot worse.

                  It’s delusional and harms and kills animals at the same rate as eating both meat and dairy.

                  How does the math on that work? Less animals harmed is less animals harmed.

      • M137
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        022 days ago

        It’s 2025, how the fuck do you not know what Vegan means? People like you are why it’s taking so long to make the world better.

    • @[email protected]
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      022 days ago

      Yeah, I live halfway up a small mountain (in Europe) and usually have everything needed to survive a month, including if the water and power are cut.

      We’re currently putting together a pair of bug-out bags as well though, so we can be mobile in an emergency too

  • @[email protected]
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    2323 days ago

    Just a question for people here who do not have 72 hours of food stored in their homes? Do you go to the supermarket every day? Or do you cook at all? What are you doing on the weekend? What happens when you’re sick and can’t go shopping?

    • @[email protected]
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      1122 days ago

      Do you go to the supermarket every day?

      There’s 5 food stores <7 minutes away from my apartment,. Why stockpile when you can just walk and pick up fresh food every other day.

      What happens when you’re sick and can’t go shopping?

      Is that a common occurrence? Just get a friend or family member to shop for you if you’re that ill, or order food delivery.

      • @[email protected]
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        922 days ago

        But don’t you still have some staple stuff like noodles, rice, frozen or canned foods and so on in your house? Combined with the fact that you might buy food in larger quantities (e.g. not just 1 apple, but 6 or maybe 1kg), i’d also imagine that most people have enough food for 3 days in their house.

        The imo more interesting thing would be fresh water.

        • @[email protected]
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          322 days ago

          Rice and onions are just about the only thing I have that last more than a few days. I don’t buy frozen food as I’ll just buy what I need at the store, 90% of my diet is just bread, eggs, chicken and rice, and 1.4kg of chicken is gone within 2-3 days.

          You could always just lower your caloric intake if food became scarce.

          The imo more interesting thing would be fresh water.

          Tap water quality is great in Norway so water is something I never buy unless I forgot to fill up a bottle on a road trip. I don’t really know anyone other soda addicts that keep liquid stored at notable quantities.

        • JustEnoughDucks
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          022 days ago

          Belgium is moving more and more to a much better place just because of regulations anyeay

          Solar panels and batteries in a shit ton of homes because of energy prices and older government incentives

          10000L rain water tanks because government regulations now require rainwater hookups for future toilers and washing machines plus water is expensive here

          Induction stoves to not have to put extraction fans in the kitchen to the outside to boost energy EPC ratings (resale value)

          We always have a bunch of potatoes and cans of tomatoes and pasta for fries, mashed potatoes, or different pastas (but maybe that is just my family)

          A ton of people would be quite OK for a while here I think.

    • Natanox
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      822 days ago

      Might happen at the end of month for me. We go grocery shopping with a car at the beginning of the month, but 31 days are longer than my freezer is big and a backpack can only hold so much. So I respectfully ask Putin not to attack on the 29th.

    • @[email protected]
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      823 days ago

      I have 2 days worth of food in my home. 4 days worth of lunch. When the 2 days of food runs out, I buy more on my way home. Same goes for when the lunch runs out. Meaning if I’m caught at a bad time, I’ll have 0 food

      • Captain Aggravated
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        322 days ago

        I grocery shop every 2 weeks and at any given time I have a month of food in stock. because I live in a hemisphere with hurricanes.

    • @[email protected]
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      322 days ago

      Yep, I have four supermarkets and two discounters in walkable distance and it makes me walk and leave the house daily. Plus my back’s not the healthiest and I can’t carry that much anymore.

    • @[email protected]
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      222 days ago

      72 hours of essential supplies. Do you have 72 hours of:

      • food (cooked, or cookable? see points 2 and 3)
      • stored water (taps out?)
      • stored power generation (powers out?)
      • medicines and first aid (emergency services outages? communications outages?)
      • heat in the coldest months? (see point 3) etc.
    • qyron
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      022 days ago

      You’d be amazed the lack of foresight most have.

      When CoViD hit, I was able to avoid shopping trips for nearly six months, due to having a well prepared pantry. At best, I would go every other week to the store for mostly fruit, which is something I find hard to preserve without requiring huge amounts of sugars, of which I shy away, for personal reasons.

    • @[email protected]
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      021 days ago

      Supermarket daily, mostly microwave stuff.

      I eat what I buy. If I buy a days food I’ll eat it in a day, if I buy 2 days food I’ll probably also eat that in 1 day. If I’m sick I wear a mask, if I’m super sick I ask someone to deliver me some shopping but then it is more than a days worth because I don’t want to ask someone to do my shopping every day.

    • @[email protected]
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      022 days ago

      Do you have 72 hours of food supplies that you can use in case of an emergency? When there is no water and no electricity, and you can’t cook mac&cheese in the oven.

    • @[email protected]
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      523 days ago

      Can you get that?

      My plan has just been flour (or grain and a grinder if it’s more like 72 days) and more time spent baking.

      • @[email protected]
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        923 days ago

        Hope you’re also planning to keep that oven going if there is a power outage…

        It’s something a lot of people (myself included) keep forgetting that without electricity, both your fridge and your stove / oven stop working.

        • @[email protected]
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          23 days ago

          I’ve cooked over open fires before and could do it again. I can even start one without a match.

          The grinder would need a generator or solar panel, though. Thankfully both are fairly plentiful in my area, and depending on the situation oil production could continue to some degree. If it’s comes to mortar and pestle I should maybe just die.

      • @[email protected]
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        122 days ago

        If I’d want to prepare for real I’d get some military rations and the German ones have canned bread

        • @[email protected]
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          122 days ago

          If limited space or weight is and issue that’s how I’d go too. However, they cost significantly more than basic grocery items.

          • @[email protected]
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            122 days ago

            I’ve had it before, the raisin version and it’s perfectly decent when toasted.

            It scares people because bread in a can is unusual but there is nothing wrong with it. No weird ingredients, just…bread in a can :)

  • kbal
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    1823 days ago

    72 hours? No problem. Always have a big bag of rice on hand and you’re done.

    • Tar_Alcaran
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      1423 days ago

      Only if you have lots of water too. And preferably some way to heat it (though you can totally swell rice in cold water)

      • @[email protected]
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        523 days ago

        This brings up an important point. You should have something like a camping stove running on propane or similar stored fuel.

        If the water supply fails you need to be able to cook water for drinking purposes.

        • @[email protected]
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          122 days ago

          A coal bbq could work too and most people have one already, you can use it with wood as well.

          Even better, you can use a barbecue chimney starter as a kind of rocket stove.

        • Tar_Alcaran
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          623 days ago

          I just have a stack of canned stuff I rotate through. I put new ones at the bottom, and make sure the stack in always 4 cans tall. Costs nothing, things are always in stock on the shelves, and in case of emergency, there’s food.

          Of course, I also live about 5 meters below sea level, so if we have real, world war level problems and the pumps shut down and/someone blows up the dikes, I’m not going to shelter in place for months anyway.

  • @[email protected]
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    1622 days ago

    Meanwhile, here in the Uk our government is making sure we won’t have enough money to buy more than two days of food at a time.

    • @[email protected]
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      922 days ago

      I mean, 14 consecutive years of Conservative leadership will do that to the best of nations.

      No doubt the UK has a MASSIVE uphill struggle ahead to bring back a sense of prosperity for its people, but it’s a bit disingenuous to make it sound as though it’s the fault of a Government that’s been in power for less than a year so far.

      It can take mere seconds to destroy something, and multiple times longer than that to fix it.

      In Australia, we are a couple years ahead of the UK (in terms of our first Labor Gov’t following a decade+ of Conservative leadership); things don’t magically get better overnight, but we are at least on the correct path now — here’s hoping we don’t fuck things up by voting the Cons back in later this year 😫

      • @[email protected]
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        022 days ago

        Oh I’m well aware that the Con govmnt has been an appalling dismantling of our country, but Labour are so far appearing to largely be following suit. Remember the Tory repetition about the need for austerity? It just feels like a repeat of that, to put it very breifly. I know 14 years can’t be fixed overnight, but shitting on the poor and needy, who have been suffering the most already is just grotesque. There’s plenty of condemnation by journalists and MPs alike for this as well as some calls to tax the rich instead.

        I’ve never voted for either so I’m looking at what they do through neutral(ish!) eyes and I don’t see politics so much an ever increasing pandering to the corporate economy (over decades).

        I can’t say I’m too knowledgable about Aus politics, but got glimpses of how bad your last govmnt was through the Guardian. Hope you have a better time than us with a new set of faces!

    • @[email protected]
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      022 days ago

      Do what you can to get your people onto here either through Lemmy itself or Voyager for Lemmy along with:

      Bluesky @bsky (All these on Bluesky), Flashes @flashes, Spark @sprk.so, Element @thematrixfoundation, Revolt @revolt.chat, Resonite (For fun) @resonite, & PeerTube @joinpeertube

      Gotta say the UK needs its own version of Run For Something @runforsomething organization. With multiple other accounts and organizations unifying to get stuff done as well

      Best of luck to ya mate, grow the movement in your country everyday!!

      • @[email protected]
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        022 days ago

        Run for Something sounds good. We have a fairly healthy number of independent politicians in the UK I think but something like that can only help improve peoples involvement in local snd national government.

        Assuming you’re from the US by sharing that, I hope you have more than luck to help over there!

    • @[email protected]
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      1423 days ago

      Canada here. Same for us in the food department. though I am less enthused about what may happen to us with yam tits raging downstairs.

      • @[email protected]
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        623 days ago

        Yam tits! That is genuinely a new one for me. Excellent.

        I’ll never, as long as I may live, get over the utter embarrassment of being born and raised in a country who could support that maniac. I suppose the worst thing I could do is leave. The only way to alleviate my shame is to stay and keep voting for the least insane option.

        • @[email protected]
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          423 days ago

          I freely admit I stole Yam TIts from another Lemmy user and I can’t remember who or I would certainly give them credit. I feel it gets right to the point one is trying to convey.

      • @[email protected]
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        223 days ago

        I’ve almost fully figured out how to live off just cans at this point. I also have a basement greenhouse in the works, although I’ve been pleasantly surprised by the local commercial options.

        • @[email protected]
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          223 days ago

          We live rurally and don’t have much money as I have been disabled for almost a decade now. What we do have is seeds and gardens. Loads of them. A large greenhouse as well. We started a small farm before I got sick with the idea that if it didn’t make money at least we would be able to eat. Then I got sick and we just continued to plant. We are fortunate to have planned early to have space to do so. At first we helped others set up homesteads and growing in our area as well and still do to some extent but guess what…we do eat and are not so beholden to the grocery oligarchs and economic system. Any little bit you can do helps.

          • @[email protected]
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            22 days ago

            Yeah, not too far off from my situation. A full-blown greenhouse sounds awesome, I can only dream of that. How much time do you spend tending it?

            Mine is basically just to grow enough leafy greens to prevent scurvy and supply enough to go in sandwiches and maybe salads. Interestingly, parsley has the most vitamin C of non-tropical crops.

            • @[email protected]
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              122 days ago

              We start planting stuff inside and in the greenhouse in Feb/March and go through to November usually. I spend a few hours every day and my wife does as well mid season. She works a real job as well in summer so I’m on my own then. The growing is the easy part really. It’s all the storage and preservation that takes a while.

              • @[email protected]
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                122 days ago

                Hmm. Is there not enough sunlight Dec/Jan? If you could keep some things ready to harvest all year you wouldn’t have to worry so much about that.

                • @[email protected]
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                  22 days ago

                  We do keep greens and such here. We have about mid November to end of February where we don’t have enough light. If we have cold weather crops already grown they will almost always hold. We usually keep greens, hearty herbs and such all year round. If we get carrots and beets and stuff under planted they will also hold in the ground. It becomes a humidity and temperature fluctuation problem with them in the hightunnel. Not to mention bugs and rodents. It’s 20’x50’ and unheated so it gets quite cold at night in the winter.

                  We even grow figs now. Shouldn’t be able to do that here but climate change is real.

          • @[email protected]
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            123 days ago

            It’s not very good in my experience, though. Super watery. On the other hand, the canned custard is great.

              • @[email protected]
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                123 days ago

                Hmm, maybe I just got a bad can or something. The custard is definitely Ambrosia. Maybe I bought a cheap generic…

                I’m not sure, it was a long time ago, and I only did it once. Maybe I’ll try again.

      • irelephant [he/him]🍭
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        123 days ago

        I guess it helps that Ireland is an island, though our defence is a joke. Our current plan is to rely on other countries for help.

      • Mubelotix
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        022 days ago

        Canada being highly dependant on imports, some items could completely disappear from stores in the even of a global conflict

        • @[email protected]
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          122 days ago

          Absolutely. Our family can grow enough for ourselves and a couple of other families. We have friends we basically coop with. We grow some things. They grow some things. We share. We also hunt fish and trap which helps and raise meat chickens and laying hens.

  • Kualdir
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    1123 days ago

    I could survive 72 hours on the food I have at home at any time, it won’t be grand tho and I’ll still need electricity to make most of it.

    Once I move I’m planning on having a small stockpile (cause I’ll finally have space for it) to last about 2 weeks or so, worst case I just need to eat it and restock it later and best case it saves me a lot of hassle in a crisis.

    • @[email protected]
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      Yeah, if you have the space to store stuff and make a fire for cooking it’s just a matter of recipes and FIFOing your stockpile to keep everything nutritious and (in some cases) not stale. If I was in a confined space it would be much more of a challenge, I might end up going with surplus military rations. That’s basically what they’re designed for, after all.

    • @[email protected]
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      23 days ago

      It’s not impossible they’re saying this because they figure that’s how fast the EU could beat Russia if Russia tried something. Or else you’d be dead from a nuke anyway.

    • @[email protected]
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      123 days ago

      To survive the 3day smo you need a battery bank, some candles/flashlights as long as you don’t live on the border.

  • @[email protected]
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    422 days ago

    Develop minimum preparedness criteria for essential services such as hospitals, schools, transport, and telecommunications.

    I hope they are taking this point seriously so that privatized welfare no longer gets special treatment.

    • @[email protected]
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      222 days ago

      I eat a lot of lentils. I’ve got a month of meal prep curry/chilli, and a few months of dry lentils in the cupboard.

    • Baggins
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      223 days ago

      Yes. Don’t forget batteries for torches and a couple of solar charger power banks for your phone.

  • Dropper-Post
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    022 days ago

    what about fasting? I bet we have enough fat to fast couple weeks at least

  • @[email protected]
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    021 days ago

    My grandma lived through WWII and rationing. After she died, we were cleaning out her house to find she had hidden cans of food stockpiled everywhere: behind the washing machine, in the pit in her garage, in the corners of her loft, everywhere.

    If rationing ever came back in, she was more than ready for it.