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A Bug Out Bag is Your First Prepper Project
A bug out bag is one of the first things a new prepper tackles — and for good reason. The bug out bag (a.k.a bugout bag, BOB, get out of dodge bag, ready bag, 72-hour bag) is your go-to item in the event of an emergency evacuation of any kind. It is generally recommended to have three days of supplies in your BOB. Whether you keep it at home, at work, or in your vehicle will depend on your specific circumstances, but the basic idea is that it should always be handy so you can grab it and go on short notice. In this article we’ll look at the following:
What Makes a Good Bugout Bag?
Any good BOB should have the following characteristics:
With all this in mind, here are a few recommendations. These are by no means exclusive possibilities — just some that I’m familiar with, and meet the criteria.
Maxpedition Doppelduffel
This is the bag I currently use for a BOB. It has the right size, and it’s well made. However, the shoulder straps are just an add-on — it’s not designed primarily as a backpack. With that in mind, I’m transitioning to the Eberlestock G4 Operator. Video: Review of the Maxpedition Doppelduffel.
Eberlestock G4 Operator
Eberlestock packs are a phenomenon in the competitive shooting community. The G4 is designed as a sniper’s pack, and that’s exactly what makes it suitable as a BOB. It actually has a built-in scabbard with a butt cover that allows you to fully conceal a weapon up to 60″ long. The scabbard places the weapon right along your center of gravity, as it should.
Maxpedition Falcon 2
This is actually the bag I use for everyday carry, but it’s borderline big enough to work as a BOB, provided you’ll be in an area with plenty of surface water. Because it’s my EDC, it’s always with me, and I keep a water bottle with a built-in filter, the Sport Berkey (Video). If I find myself needing to bug out, I’ll have the option of stuffing the smaller bag to the gills and be able to move a little faster.
What to Pack in Your Bugout Bag
Keep in mind the primary purpose of a bugout bag — it is not to sustain you indefinitely, but to provide your needs temporarily in case you need to evacuate quickly if a disaster should strike. Your needs will vary depending on where you live, your physical condition, and the kind of disaster you’re preparing for, so it’s important to understand principles of survival, and apply them to your specific circumstances. For example, some people will plan to hunker down at their home in the event of an emergency, so their bugout bag will be designed primarily to get them home. Others will need to evacuate their home, and their bugout bag will be designed to get them safely to a bugout location, like a shack in the woods or the grandparent’s homestead in the country. See our checklist for stocking the bugout location.
7 Must-Have Items for your Bugout Bag
With these variables in mind, pick and choose wisely from this suggested bug out bag packing list:
Where to Keep Your Bugout Bag
The best places to keep you BOB are:
Where I live, the greatest risks I face are tornadoes, winter storms, and political/economic meltdown. In either case, I estimate that my best bugout location is my own home, located in a rural area. It is well stocked with enough supplies to sustain myself, my family, and a few refugees indefinitely. Accordingly, my primary plan no matter where I travel is to get home. My bugout bag is set up for this purpose. Recently, I was in Arizona with my family for several months working on the Jack Phoenix movie project. Before we left, we prepared a plan for getting home in the unlikely event of a political or economic disaster, and a bugout bag was an essential part of that plan.
Now, admittedly, our specific plan involved seven people, so a single bugout bag was not adequate, but it was a good teaching opportunity for everyone in the family. Several of us prepared bugout bags, and we were able to overlap some of our supplies. For instance, we didn’t need seven shelters, but only enough shelters to shelter seven people. In any event, where we kept the bugout bag was important — it didn’t do us any good back at the home base, so it had to go with us. Most of the time it was stored in the vehicle.
If you have a workplace, you should store a bugout bag there and at home. In general, depending on the length of your commute, you can get away with just keeping an everyday carry bag in your commuter vehicle. But if you travel long distances, you should consider keeping the bugout bag in your vehicle at all times, possibly packing separate bugout bags at work and in the vehicle.
~SnoMan
2012-12-14 07:40:26