Stockpiling and Replenishing, by CPT Blackfox
Survivalblog.com
As a U.S. Army Battalion Logistics Officer, it became very evident to me that at some point my stockpile of parts, petroleum products, uniforms, etc. would eventually run out, and I needed a way to replenish those stockpiles during steady-state operations. A total collapse situation would unfold in much the same way as a deployment of a military unit would in regard to an interrupted supply chain. Initially, you have no logistics network and you need to rely entirely upon your stockpiles brought with you or kept in your secure location. I learned this the hard way at the National Training Center (NTC) [at Fort Irwin, California] when I decided not to bring enough turboshaft jet engine oil to last our battalion through a month-long field exercise in the desert. As I walk through this experience as a vignette, I will also translate the bigger issues from the organizational level down to the household level in respect to preparedness. Additionally, I will go through how logistics and supply lines are severely interrupted during a disaster or collapse scenario and then how they are reestablished after things calm down somewhat and find their equilibrium.
Bad Assumption #1- The logistics network is already established, so when I become a part of it there will be an easy transition.
When we deployed from our home base to the NTC, I made the faulty assumption, that since I was moving into an existing logistics network, that it would be easy to obtain supplies, because everything on the receiving end was already established and working like a well-oiled machine. I should have known better from my first deployment to Iraq, when our shipping address was set up to a warehouse in Texas, so everything the battalion ordered did not go to Mosul, Iraq but sat in a huge pile doing us no good thousands of miles away. Fortunately, I wasn’t responsible for that fiasco, but my soldiers and I ended up paying for it by cannibalizing our own vehicles to keep up maintenance, not having any sundry items replenished, and being without hot food for two months while this SNAFU was sorted out. Whether you are bugging-in or bugging-out, in a total collapse scenario, the supply networks are going to be totally screwed up. The grocery store shelves will be bare after about four days provided there isn’t a panic, and if they receive any shipments, it will likely be random items which may or may not be of use to anyone. At a minimum, you need to have about six months of everything to operate your household set aside. Primarily this buys you some time. When hyperinflation hits and no one wants to accept paper money, there will be a time when it is a free-for-all before either folks locally decide what is acceptable as a medium of exchange or the government reissues new fiat currency at some kind of crushing exchange rate with the old currency.
Bad Assumption #2- Storing tons of supplies takes too much space and is a pain to transport, so I will just stock up on the basics.
Back to my example, I thought that shipping a couple of 30’ containers of petroleum products would be a huge pain (which it would have been due to hazardous materials shipping requirements) but it was even more painful having to go to the Forward Support Battalion Executive Officer and sheepishly ask for case upon case of turboshaft oil for my tanks. I had brought a minimal amount of petroleum products with us which would last for about a week, but with us entering a new logistics network, it took much longer than I had anticipated for those requisitions to be filled. And when they were filled, the supply depot didn’t just jump on the phone and give us a call to come pick up our order. Typically, supplies could sit for days if you didn’t have an intrepid NCO checking in the morning and evening every day. In our world, yes, your basement might be chuck full of food, water barrels, ammunition, medical supplies, clothing, and everything else, but if you haven’t gone through all of your possessions and thrown out anything you haven’t used in the last two years, you would be surprised the amount of space you can gain. Maximize your wall space too. Utilize shelving wherever practical in order to organize items more effectively and to give better access to what you need. If you have a mountain of boxes in the basement and the toilet paper is in the very back of the room, you might have an emergency before you can get to it! Treat your stockpile like a mini-warehouse. Sort everything by either the military classes of supply or your own system as long as it’s organized. Even a classification system as rudimentary as food, clothing, survival supplies, fuel, and water would work fine. As long as you and your cohorts know where everything is, you will be leagues ahead when you have to find that one tiny specific item you need. As an adjunct, I’ve referenced the Army classes of supply below for your use:
Classes of Supply
Class I - Food, rations, and water
Class II - Clothing
Class III - Petroleum, oils, and lubricants (POL)
Class IV - Fortification and barrier materials (Barbed wire, pickets, sandbags, etc.)
Class V - Ammunition
Class VI - Personal Items (Hygiene, alcohol, tobacco, etc.)
Class VII - Major End Items (Vehicles, radios, tanks, weapons, night vision, etc.)
Class VIII - Medical supplies
Class IX - Repair Parts
Class X - Miscellaneous supplies
Bad Assumption #3- I’ll just order some more later when I get close to running out.
Believe it or not, there are situations where I have bartered as an Army officer for things I needed for the battalion. I had a pallets and pallets of MREs but I needed more bottled water, so I traded for it! You need to have the figurative printing press in the basement to create your own barter items. You should be able to produce something that can be used as a barter item if there is no way you can just go order some more. Whether you practice reloading, canning, candle making, beekeeping, or any other craft, there should be a few items that your household or group are able to produce which would be an appealing medium of exchange. In the past, cigarettes, alcohol, ammunition, chewing gun, and even toys have been used for barter items. Think of something you would miss having. My soldiers and I traded books & magazines that we brought to Iraq, since we would read them from cover to cover as our only entertainment. Last night, watching the movie The Book of Eli, I was struck at how clever it was for Eli to trade Kentucky Fried Chicken wet naps with the Engineer in the town, so that he could get a new charge on his battery. This scenario is not really that outlandish, considering how difficult it is to keep good hygiene when there is no running water available. During our deployment to Iraq when our unit shipping address was wrong, baby wipes became worth their weight in gold, since you could do all of your daily hygiene with three of them if you were careful. If you can’t produce the item you need yourself, you had better have something in hand that people are willing to trade for it.
Survivalblog.com
As a U.S. Army Battalion Logistics Officer, it became very evident to me that at some point my stockpile of parts, petroleum products, uniforms, etc. would eventually run out, and I needed a way to replenish those stockpiles during steady-state operations. A total collapse situation would unfold in much the same way as a deployment of a military unit would in regard to an interrupted supply chain. Initially, you have no logistics network and you need to rely entirely upon your stockpiles brought with you or kept in your secure location. I learned this the hard way at the National Training Center (NTC) [at Fort Irwin, California] when I decided not to bring enough turboshaft jet engine oil to last our battalion through a month-long field exercise in the desert. As I walk through this experience as a vignette, I will also translate the bigger issues from the organizational level down to the household level in respect to preparedness. Additionally, I will go through how logistics and supply lines are severely interrupted during a disaster or collapse scenario and then how they are reestablished after things calm down somewhat and find their equilibrium.
Bad Assumption #1- The logistics network is already established, so when I become a part of it there will be an easy transition.
When we deployed from our home base to the NTC, I made the faulty assumption, that since I was moving into an existing logistics network, that it would be easy to obtain supplies, because everything on the receiving end was already established and working like a well-oiled machine. I should have known better from my first deployment to Iraq, when our shipping address was set up to a warehouse in Texas, so everything the battalion ordered did not go to Mosul, Iraq but sat in a huge pile doing us no good thousands of miles away. Fortunately, I wasn’t responsible for that fiasco, but my soldiers and I ended up paying for it by cannibalizing our own vehicles to keep up maintenance, not having any sundry items replenished, and being without hot food for two months while this SNAFU was sorted out. Whether you are bugging-in or bugging-out, in a total collapse scenario, the supply networks are going to be totally screwed up. The grocery store shelves will be bare after about four days provided there isn’t a panic, and if they receive any shipments, it will likely be random items which may or may not be of use to anyone. At a minimum, you need to have about six months of everything to operate your household set aside. Primarily this buys you some time. When hyperinflation hits and no one wants to accept paper money, there will be a time when it is a free-for-all before either folks locally decide what is acceptable as a medium of exchange or the government reissues new fiat currency at some kind of crushing exchange rate with the old currency.
Bad Assumption #2- Storing tons of supplies takes too much space and is a pain to transport, so I will just stock up on the basics.
Back to my example, I thought that shipping a couple of 30’ containers of petroleum products would be a huge pain (which it would have been due to hazardous materials shipping requirements) but it was even more painful having to go to the Forward Support Battalion Executive Officer and sheepishly ask for case upon case of turboshaft oil for my tanks. I had brought a minimal amount of petroleum products with us which would last for about a week, but with us entering a new logistics network, it took much longer than I had anticipated for those requisitions to be filled. And when they were filled, the supply depot didn’t just jump on the phone and give us a call to come pick up our order. Typically, supplies could sit for days if you didn’t have an intrepid NCO checking in the morning and evening every day. In our world, yes, your basement might be chuck full of food, water barrels, ammunition, medical supplies, clothing, and everything else, but if you haven’t gone through all of your possessions and thrown out anything you haven’t used in the last two years, you would be surprised the amount of space you can gain. Maximize your wall space too. Utilize shelving wherever practical in order to organize items more effectively and to give better access to what you need. If you have a mountain of boxes in the basement and the toilet paper is in the very back of the room, you might have an emergency before you can get to it! Treat your stockpile like a mini-warehouse. Sort everything by either the military classes of supply or your own system as long as it’s organized. Even a classification system as rudimentary as food, clothing, survival supplies, fuel, and water would work fine. As long as you and your cohorts know where everything is, you will be leagues ahead when you have to find that one tiny specific item you need. As an adjunct, I’ve referenced the Army classes of supply below for your use:
Classes of Supply
Class I - Food, rations, and water
Class II - Clothing
Class III - Petroleum, oils, and lubricants (POL)
Class IV - Fortification and barrier materials (Barbed wire, pickets, sandbags, etc.)
Class V - Ammunition
Class VI - Personal Items (Hygiene, alcohol, tobacco, etc.)
Class VII - Major End Items (Vehicles, radios, tanks, weapons, night vision, etc.)
Class VIII - Medical supplies
Class IX - Repair Parts
Class X - Miscellaneous supplies
Bad Assumption #3- I’ll just order some more later when I get close to running out.
Believe it or not, there are situations where I have bartered as an Army officer for things I needed for the battalion. I had a pallets and pallets of MREs but I needed more bottled water, so I traded for it! You need to have the figurative printing press in the basement to create your own barter items. You should be able to produce something that can be used as a barter item if there is no way you can just go order some more. Whether you practice reloading, canning, candle making, beekeeping, or any other craft, there should be a few items that your household or group are able to produce which would be an appealing medium of exchange. In the past, cigarettes, alcohol, ammunition, chewing gun, and even toys have been used for barter items. Think of something you would miss having. My soldiers and I traded books & magazines that we brought to Iraq, since we would read them from cover to cover as our only entertainment. Last night, watching the movie The Book of Eli, I was struck at how clever it was for Eli to trade Kentucky Fried Chicken wet naps with the Engineer in the town, so that he could get a new charge on his battery. This scenario is not really that outlandish, considering how difficult it is to keep good hygiene when there is no running water available. During our deployment to Iraq when our unit shipping address was wrong, baby wipes became worth their weight in gold, since you could do all of your daily hygiene with three of them if you were careful. If you can’t produce the item you need yourself, you had better have something in hand that people are willing to trade for it.
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