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Preparations
"You must not only be able to survive the crash, but continue afterward"
The experts and politicians have no plan B to fall back on. On a global scale Peak Oil is a problem without a solution.
It is extremely difficult to gather and process the enormous amount of information available and figure out what to do about it. Is it not a problem with an immediate solution or as some say a condition without a remedy. You must not only be able to survive the crash, but continue afterward.
We must shortly choose a new path, or one will be forced upon us
In the short time available, attempts to make collective changes
are most likely to fail. Energy expert Simmons
says that once energy peaks, the shock will be greater than anyone could imagine, while there is no solution to the problem other than to pray.
However, on the level of the individual/family there is much that can be done at relatively low cost to not only prepare for an economic crash, but to leapfrog past it to a post oil paradigm. While the present infrastructure continues to function you still have vast resources disposable that are only a click away.
Once a crisis
begins, it may be too late.
There is probably no cluster of solutions which do not
involve some major changes in lifestyles, especially for the global affluent.
Peak Oil presents the potential for quite catastrophic upheavals, but also some
more hopeful possibilities, a chance to address many underlying societal
problems, and the opportunity return to simpler, healthier and more community
oriented lifestyles.
Hope for the best, Prepare for the worst, and Accept whatever comes.
*the
majority of the preparation (perhaps as much as 2/3) is mental preparation.
Acceptance of a new future is crucial and knowledge about Peak Oil will give you
a new perspective on life and the future and will serve as an excellent guidance
when making important decisions in areas such as careers, real estate and
retirement, even absent a well defined 'plan B'.
*protection
of your wealth is a crucial step, and having many of your assets hedged against
inflation, in my opinion, is never going to hurt you, even if a peak oil crisis
fails to materialize in the short or medium term future. Purchasing power will
most likely have a positive impact on survival chances during a crisis.
*if
you think the crisis is going to be severe, if
you can afford it, it would be a good idea to plan some sort of safe haven, at
least 200 miles or so from any major city / metropolitan area. Where this should
be is a difficult question, but there is some in-depth information and research in
the Peak Oil Survival guide about
which countries are likely to fare better than others.
*I
am fairly pessimistic about the feasibility (especially long-term) of isolated
retreats. It is going to involved extensive, informed planning tailored to the
precise needs of the people who will use it. The problems that you must resolve
in making such an arrangement viable are enormous and most likely unachievable.
*land
ownership laws may be meaningless in a post-oil world
*it
is useless to be well prepared if you are in the wrong place to start with. Some
countries around the globe will without doubt suffer much more than others as a
result of a Peak Oil crisis. The odds of eventually being discovered are not
negligible and will go up as a function of general population density. And then,
once you have been discovered, the chances of you becoming a target of jealous
& needy thieves, mobs or organized gangs much depend on how relatively
well-off a country is as a whole during a global crisis.
As an example there is the story about a village in India during a
famine. After a while, the starving villagers noticed that some villagers did
not seem to be as starving as the rest of them. The end result was that the well
off who had stored food were killed and the food stolen. You may be better off
ill-prepared, but in the right place than vice-versa. There are going to be some
countries that may remain relatively immune, based on their geographic position
and potential degree of self-sufficiency, where ambient chances of survival are
relatively higher. This is why the focus of my research & planning is on
individual countries.
*when considering strategic
relocation and you want to also take into account climate change, an excellent
and very recent source of information on average predicted temperature changes
is the
BBC site that ran an experiment involving millions of computers from around
the world. In its conclusions, countries like New Zealand will be relatively
unaffected, while other areas like Asia and Central America will be greatly
affected.

*you
can never be sure what will happen, and it is extremely difficult to cross that
mental barrier to jump into action. Any life impacting decision you make, you
must be able to live with until the crisis unfolds, even if this is still a
decade away.
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HISTORY AS A GUIDE TO SURVIVAL....
For a year five experts ditched
theory for practice, running a Welsh farm using
17th Century methods. What lessons for modern
living did they learn?
The BBC series Tales from the
Green Valley follows historians and archaeologists
as they recreate farm life from the age of the
Stuarts. They wear the clothes, eat the food and
use the tools, skills and technology of the 1620s.
It was a time when daily life
was a hard grind, intimately connected with the
physical environment where routines were dictated
by the weather and the seasons. A far cry from
today's experience of the countryside, which for
many involves a bracing walk ahead of a pub lunch.
While few would choose to live a
17th Century lifestyle, the participants found
they picked up some valuable tips for modern life.
1. Know thy neighbours. Today
it's possible to live alone, without knowing
anyone within a 20-mile radius (the same goes for
townies). That was simply not possible in the past
- not only did the neighbours provide social
contact, people shared labour, specialist skills
and produce. "And women were judged on good
neighbourliness," says historian Ruth Goodman. "If
you were willing to help others - particularly
during and after childbirth - then others would be
more prepared to help you in times of need."
2. Share the load. It was nigh
on impossible to run a 1620s farm single-handedly,
and the family - either blood relatives, or a
farmer, his wife and hired help - had to be
multi-skilled. Labour, too, was often divided
along gender lines, but at busy periods, such as
harvest time, it was all hands on deck.
3. Fewer creature comforts have
some benefits. No electricity meant once daylight
faded, work stopped in favour of conversation,
music-making and knitting. And no carpets meant
fewer dust mites, which are linked to asthma and
allergies. "They scattered herbs on the floor
which released scent when trodden on - this drove
out flies and other insects," says Ms Goodman.
4. Eat seasonally. Today it's
because of "food miles" and the inferior quality
of forced products. In the 1620s, it was because
foods were only available at certain times of year
- and not just fruit and veg. Mutton, for
instance, was in abundance in spring, soon after
shearing time. This was because a sheep's wool
quality plunges after eight years - thus animals
of that age were killed after their final fleece
was removed.
5. Tasty food comes in small
batches. Today farmers' markets are a tourist
attraction and many delight in regional
specialities. For these producers play to the
strengths of their ingredients, unlike, for
instance, the makers of mass-produced cheese. This
has to taste the same year-round, despite seasonal
variations in milk quality. "So high-quality milk
in the spring is downgraded so the finished
product is consistent throughout the year," says
Ms Goodman.
6. Reuse and recycle. Today we
throw away vast mountains of packaging, food,
garden waste and other materials. In 1620s, there
was a use for everything, with tattered bed linens
made into fire-lighters and animal fat into soap.
Even human waste had uses. Faeces was a
fertiliser, and urine was stored to make ammonia
to remove laundry stains.
7. Dress for practicalities.
Today fashion and social convention dictate our
wardrobes. While polar fleeces and
high-performance tramping boots may be all the
rage when going rural, the wardrobe of 400 years
ago proved more comfortable. "While the crew
shivered in their modern garb, we never felt the
cold in just two layers - a linen shirt and
woollen doublet," says archaeologist Alex
Langlands. Breeches meant no wet and muddy trouser
legs, and staying covered up - rather than
stripping off in the heat - prevented bites,
stings, sunburn and scratches.
8. Corsets, not bras. "By that I
don't mean Victorian corseting," says Ms Goodman.
"Corsets support your back as well as your chest,
and don't leave red welts on your skin like bra
elastic does. They made it hard to breath walking
up hills, but I get short of breath doing that
anyway. And most people feel sexy in a corset."
9. Biodiversity protects against
unforeseen calamity. While the developed world no
longer counts the cost of crop failure in
starvation and mass migration - the result of
Ireland's Great Potato Famine in 1845 - the 2001
foot-and-mouth crisis decimated farms up and down
the country as animals, the farmers' livelihoods,
were put to death. The 1620s farm had grains,
fruit and vegetables, and a range of animals - if
one failed, alternatives were available.
9. Reliance on any one thing
leaves you vulnerable. Hence the country ground to
a halt during the petrol blockades of 2000, and a
shortage of coal during 1978-9's Winter of
Discontent caused electricity shortages. On the
1620s farm, when oxen used to plough fields fell
ill, the implements were reshaped and horses did
the job instead.
10. No pesticides means a richer
variety of birds, butterflies and other insects,
many of which feast on pests - a result as
desirable for the gardener as the farmer. And the
hedgerow and fields of wild flowers of the past
are today making a comeback, as these provide
habitats for these creatures and allow edible
plants to flourish.
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