https://thepreppingguide.com/water-use-in-venezuela/
The writer of these posts is a middle-class Venezuelan prepper, in a country which has the world’s highest inflation rate at more than 4000%. Venezuela is an economic collapse nightmare with extreme shortages of food, violent crime, severe hunger, a crippled economy, crumbling infrastructure, collapsed healthcare system, and a failing government.
If you are at all familiar with survival needs, you will know that everyone needs water to survive. And that’s not just to drink, sure if you are outdoors and lost or trapped you need to drink water. But I am talking about being in the home, when the economy collapses. This is when the pumps fail and the taps stop running, and when you need a self-sufficient water supply How can our water supply collapse?
In any normal situation, water should be a very easy solution to keep running. You see, water companies pump out well water to an elevated tank from which we all share our tap water from. In a perfect world, this would pump water to your taps with an electrically maintained pressure system. If there were to be a blackout, backup generators would be that pressure so that you have access to water.
But when there’s an economic collapse, it is fail-safes like these that, plainly put, fail. For Venezuelans, when the power goes out at the moment, the water does too. This is because city pumps fail to use suitable backups or ill-maintained backups (I’m not sure if they even have backups at the moment). For whatever the reason, blackouts and no water flow come hand-in-hand. Why a self-sufficient water supply is important for preppers
It’s in circumstances like a financial collapse that with a little bit of common sense, any decent household owner would have a reserve system that provides water to the house, or stored water so that they can at least fill some buckets and bottles to wash with, drink and feed the garden. For our household, we have a spare 550 gallon above ground water tank that we keep in case of situations like this. I don’t think we’d really last without it. Some people seem to be content stockpiling water in bottles or in their bathtub, but in all reality, for us, we get extended power cuts that last 5 or 6 days in Venezuela. This is also a short timeframe if you consider that, in an economic collapse, it is likely that a public service might not have the parts to fix the problem, let alone the technical specialties in their employees, as most of them would have been made redundant.
I have also seen this happen in the US as well, in circumstances where disasters have cut water supplies, leaving areas without running water for a week or more. And let’s not forget Capetown, in South Africa, and their severe water shortage where an entire city was about to run out of its water supply. Call me paranoid for having a huge water tank in my backyard, but it’s water, and it’s something my family and I need to live.
With the right filtration and sterilization methods, rainwater tanks like these can store plenty of water for drinking and keeping your food garden flourishing
The writer of these posts is a middle-class Venezuelan prepper, in a country which has the world’s highest inflation rate at more than 4000%. Venezuela is an economic collapse nightmare with extreme shortages of food, violent crime, severe hunger, a crippled economy, crumbling infrastructure, collapsed healthcare system, and a failing government.
If you are at all familiar with survival needs, you will know that everyone needs water to survive. And that’s not just to drink, sure if you are outdoors and lost or trapped you need to drink water. But I am talking about being in the home, when the economy collapses. This is when the pumps fail and the taps stop running, and when you need a self-sufficient water supply How can our water supply collapse?
In any normal situation, water should be a very easy solution to keep running. You see, water companies pump out well water to an elevated tank from which we all share our tap water from. In a perfect world, this would pump water to your taps with an electrically maintained pressure system. If there were to be a blackout, backup generators would be that pressure so that you have access to water.
But when there’s an economic collapse, it is fail-safes like these that, plainly put, fail. For Venezuelans, when the power goes out at the moment, the water does too. This is because city pumps fail to use suitable backups or ill-maintained backups (I’m not sure if they even have backups at the moment). For whatever the reason, blackouts and no water flow come hand-in-hand. Why a self-sufficient water supply is important for preppers
It’s in circumstances like a financial collapse that with a little bit of common sense, any decent household owner would have a reserve system that provides water to the house, or stored water so that they can at least fill some buckets and bottles to wash with, drink and feed the garden. For our household, we have a spare 550 gallon above ground water tank that we keep in case of situations like this. I don’t think we’d really last without it. Some people seem to be content stockpiling water in bottles or in their bathtub, but in all reality, for us, we get extended power cuts that last 5 or 6 days in Venezuela. This is also a short timeframe if you consider that, in an economic collapse, it is likely that a public service might not have the parts to fix the problem, let alone the technical specialties in their employees, as most of them would have been made redundant.
I have also seen this happen in the US as well, in circumstances where disasters have cut water supplies, leaving areas without running water for a week or more. And let’s not forget Capetown, in South Africa, and their severe water shortage where an entire city was about to run out of its water supply. Call me paranoid for having a huge water tank in my backyard, but it’s water, and it’s something my family and I need to live.

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