The Folly of the Bug Out Bag
I talk to lots of people about prepping and survival. Almost
always they mention having or planning to put together a bug out bag. I have a
bug out bag. In fact, I have created multiple bug out bags – one for each
family member. They include shelter and sleeping gear, food, cooking gear,
water purification, a variety of tools, navigation, first aid, hygiene
supplies, etc. Everything is either in a back pack or a luggable duffel bag. Assume
society as you know it just ended where you are living and you need to escape
another area to live. Your bug out bag would be a valued companion.
Here is how extreme my approach was after spending years
constructing the ultimate bug out bag approach – one that is fully scalable. I
begin by loading 15 MREs and two large parachute bags of gear into my
motorcycle trailer along with shotguns, rifles and ammo. Then a full size
military duffel bag (traditional stand-alone bug out bag) gets strapped on top.
The idea being that if I reach a point where I must abandon the cycle and
trailer, I will toss the duffel over the shoulder and grab a long gun to hoof
it out of the area. If I can’t go further with the full duffel, the small day
pack I carry with my water bladder is packed for a couple nights in the
wilderness. Of course, I would have a handgun and stout blade stashed under my
cycle jacket.
WAIT. WE ARE ALL CRAZY! And
perhaps I am king of the loonies.
Inherent in the concept of having a bug out bag is actually
having some place to bug out to – or at least a means to get somewhere you can
call home in the future. That really is not going to happen in the area I live
in.
Let’s back up a minute. I live in Orange County, just
southeast of Los Angeles. The number one thing people prepare for here is
earthquakes. Now I have seen many earthquakes since moving here – several with
some real damage in a relatively small area. If you lived in that immediate
area, you may need to seek shelter for a few days or, in the worst case,
actually find a new place to live after yours has been condemned. These people
go to a local hotel, shelter or family home for their immediate housing needs. Exactly
the same behavior is seen with wild fires, mud slides, etc. In these scenarios
you need an escape plan with basic supplies to get to your next destination –
which is seldom a real bug out type location. You normally will be more focused
on pulling insurance and other important documents versus actual living
supplies.
OK, we hear a lot of talk about “The Big One!” That would be
the mother of all earthquakes which would begin under the Salton Sea and follow
the San Andreas Fault northwest to the Pacific Ocean. Models for this
earthquake show that all major routes to the north and east of the greater Los
Angeles area will be completely cut off by the fault. Those of us who may be
far enough west of the fault, in an area where the rippling destruction has not
completely fanned out, will be severely shaken amid buildings which may be
crumbling, but perhaps not buried. The only way out of this region is to head
south and follow Rt. 8 along the border of Mexico. That is 80 miles from my
home (I drove it Monday night). FYI, I
drove a long section of this route in June and there is NOTHING for hundreds of
miles but open, arid desert.
If you have not personally experienced the daily nightmare
of traffic in the greater LA region, you have certainly seen it depicted on TV
and in movies. Believe me, it is worse to sit in than it ever looks on the TV!
Now picture millions of survivors from the region all trying to get south to
Rt. 8 with the thought of escaping to the east. It just is not going to happen!
Most people don’t even keep enough gas in their car to get that far. They will
try though, resulting in thousands of abandoned cars blocking the already over
filled roadways.
No, a bug out bag is not going to help you in this
situation. If you find yourself still alive, your best bet is probably to
shelter right where you are – which means your shelter-in-place supplies are
more critical than a bug out bag.
How about economic collapse? Still, a bug out bag is
probably not the right answer. Anyone concerned about potential economic
collapse (that should be everyone!) really must read “The Modern Survival
Manual: Surviving the Economic Collapse” by Fernando FerFAL Aguirre. FerFAL
will lead you through the reality of a modern collapse and what life after the
collapse really is – based on his personal experience in Argentina in the past
decade. This is a very broad topic, but a bug out bag really doesn’t have a
role in it.
The only scenario I can conceive that would merit a real bug
out bag in Southern California would be a Red Dawn type invasion. Even then,
would we actually be able to get out of the area or are we better off finding
hidden shelter in defensible locations within the local area? For instance, my
prior home had huge drainage pipes in place in case of flooding which never happened. After a few
years the large vertical inlets were hidden by brush and debris. I still knew
where they were and made a point of confirming accessibility to them when
hiking alone nearby – just in case a quick hideout was needed (OK, I am that
crazy).
Perhaps the area you live in is different. Yet, stop and
think through any scenario that you are planning for and ask “Is a bug out bag
what I really need?” In most cases I believe you will concur that an Immediate
Needs Kit, Get Home Bag, basic Emergency Response Kit, and a good Shelter In
Place plan are what you really need. We will discuss all of these in future
posts.
In the meantime, continue to Prepare/Protect/Persevere!