How hardcore are your preparations?
Moderator: Peak Moderation
How hardcore are your preparations?
I'm interested in how much people on PS have changed their lives on a practical level in advance of PO.
For the record, I have done bugger all, really.
For the record, I have done bugger all, really.
"We're just waiting, looking skyward as the days go down / Someone promised there'd be answers if we stayed around."
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- Posts: 2525
- Joined: 22 Nov 2007, 14:07
I voted:
I am making fairly minimal changes (stocking up on tinned food, investing in gold, etc.), but don't have the time/inclination/space/money to do anything more substantial.
Plus I'd rather not be fixed into one location by too many preparations as it could be hard to leave that much work behind if I had to move in hurry (floods? riots etc)
I am making fairly minimal changes (stocking up on tinned food, investing in gold, etc.), but don't have the time/inclination/space/money to do anything more substantial.
Plus I'd rather not be fixed into one location by too many preparations as it could be hard to leave that much work behind if I had to move in hurry (floods? riots etc)
I voted 2. However we do have a fairly large plot of land and various animals.
Self sufficiency is an interesting concept.
If there was no-one else in the world and we had to survive alone I reckon we could. However that is not a scenario IMO so we will be surviving as part of a community if we like it or not.
So I didn't vote 1 but chose 2 instead.
Self sufficiency is an interesting concept.
If there was no-one else in the world and we had to survive alone I reckon we could. However that is not a scenario IMO so we will be surviving as part of a community if we like it or not.
So I didn't vote 1 but chose 2 instead.
- biffvernon
- Posts: 18538
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- Location: Lincolnshire
- Contact:
I voted 1 and would have done many years ago, long before I heard the term 'PeakOil'. (Though of course I did read and inwardly digest Limits to Growth back in the '70s.) For the last 30 years I've had enough land and knowledge to be able to survive without starving though unless push comes to shove I will choose to eat more satsumas than jerusalem artichokes.
- emordnilap
- Posts: 14814
- Joined: 05 Sep 2007, 16:36
- Location: here
I voted 2 but it's really a combination of 2 & 3. Not enough money really to do what I want, so I'm trying to aim for living with very little.
Veganism is a cheap diet, which is a good start. We have a reasonable community spirit around here. A partner willing to muck in with anything is a great help. Optimism is useful too.
Veganism is a cheap diet, which is a good start. We have a reasonable community spirit around here. A partner willing to muck in with anything is a great help. Optimism is useful too.
I experience pleasure and pains, and pursue goals in service of them, so I cannot reasonably deny the right of other sentient agents to do the same - Steven Pinker
Ah but as an optimist you would say that, wouldn't you.emordnilap wrote:Optimism is useful too.
I voted 2 too, although like you I'm probably 2/3, I've just done everything which it's physically possible to do with a terraced house with a small back garden.
Andy Hunt
http://greencottage.burysolarclub.net
http://greencottage.burysolarclub.net
Eternal Sunshine wrote: I wouldn't want to worry you with the truth.
I'm at number two. I bought land with 2000 tons of standing timber on it. I aim to supplement my income with wood products such as fuel and fencing as well as producing a fair proportion of my own food and selling a surplus of nuts and fruits.
If, as is looking likely, the industry I work in collapses then I will have more time to spend planting, beekeeping and woodworking - all within walking distance of my house.
I'm actually pretty confident that I could feed my family on what I can grow or shoot and I have been thinking up designs for a communal boiler system from which I could sell heat to, say, 5 of my neighbours.
If, as is looking likely, the industry I work in collapses then I will have more time to spend planting, beekeeping and woodworking - all within walking distance of my house.
I'm actually pretty confident that I could feed my family on what I can grow or shoot and I have been thinking up designs for a communal boiler system from which I could sell heat to, say, 5 of my neighbours.
- hardworkinghippy
- Posts: 568
- Joined: 16 Aug 2007, 02:03
- Location: Bergerac France
- Contact:
Janco2,
Peak oil gave me the excuse I needed to do what I've wanted for the past 20 years !
We don't do our own shoes or plastic buckets, healthcare or computers but we can eat and drink, build and make most of our own clothes. We only need to earn money to pay taxes....
Peak oil gave me the excuse I needed to do what I've wanted for the past 20 years !
I'm a 1 voter too and that's exactly how I see it too contadino.I voted for 1, but it would be unjust to claim it all as PO preps. I'm heading down the self-sufficiency path not through fear of PO, but because it's what I want to do. PO just influences the way I do things rather than being the main driver for change.
We don't do our own shoes or plastic buckets, healthcare or computers but we can eat and drink, build and make most of our own clothes. We only need to earn money to pay taxes....
Our blah blah blah blog is HERE
- UndercoverElephant
- Posts: 13500
- Joined: 10 Mar 2008, 00:00
- Location: UK
I'm a 2 that wants to be a 1 but does not currently have the means to do so. I can't grow anything in my garden because of the infestation of snails and slugs. Guess I could eat the snails. But I make up for it by foraging for food.
I just (today) bought a new Citroen C1, which is supposedly the second most efficient production vehicle on the market after a Prius. That is a car for the 21st century.
I just (today) bought a new Citroen C1, which is supposedly the second most efficient production vehicle on the market after a Prius. That is a car for the 21st century.
Last edited by UndercoverElephant on 27 Nov 2009, 18:43, edited 1 time in total.
I should have made the last 2 options less facetious. A single option, "I'm just going to wait and see what happens" might have been more appropriate
It's interesting how many people here seem to be naturally attracted to the practical lifestyle, rather than having been reluctantly persuaded it's the only way forward. I probably fall into the latter camp!
It's interesting how many people here seem to be naturally attracted to the practical lifestyle, rather than having been reluctantly persuaded it's the only way forward. I probably fall into the latter camp!
"We're just waiting, looking skyward as the days go down / Someone promised there'd be answers if we stayed around."