The Prepper’s Water Survival Guide: Are You Ready for a Long-Term Water Emergency?

 Guest Post by Daisy Luther

Are you truly prepared for a water emergency?

How long could your family survive if the water stopped flowing from the municipal supply and none was available at the store? If the answer is not “indefinitely” then you need to check out my new book, The Prepper’s Water Survival Guide: Harvest, Treat, and Store Your Most Vital Resource.

This comprehensive book contains life-saving information about how to:

  • Store fresh water
  • Collect rainwater
  • Purify water from lakes and rivers
  • Dig a well for groundwater

In addition to harvesting water, you’ll gain the tools to keep large stores untainted for long periods of time, test the water you collect for dangerous toxins, and treat water-related illnesses that are commonly contracted during a disaster.

This book is very research heavy, with the latest in-depth information about the contaminants lurking in our water supplies and water-borne illnesses, as well as tips for conservation and sanitation during times when your lifestyle is decidedly off-grid.

I hope you enjoy this excerpt from the book.

The Prepper’s Water Survival Guide

If you’ve been prepping for a while, you’ve probably heard of the survivalist’s “Rule of Three.”  You can survive:

Three minutes without air.

Three days without water.

Three weeks without food.

If a disaster has hit and you’re still breathing, then your next concern has got to be water.

Have you ever watched any of those survival shows on the Discovery Channel where people are dropped off in the middle of nowhere and left to survive with limited tools and supplies? In nearly every single episode, the biggest issue is finding and purifying water. Often, they wait so long that they become desperate and engage in risky behavior, like drinking water from a stagnant pool. In one particularly notable episode, the contestants had to be rescued because they became too weak from dehydration to seek water.

  • You don’t have to be a contestant on a survival show or a survivor of a major disaster to require a water supply or a way to acquire it. There are a myriad of smaller issues that can spiral into a personal disaster if you don’t have supplies on hand. What if:
  • Your car broke down when you were driving through the desert and you had to wait or walk for help? Without water you could dehydrate very quickly in hot temperatures.
  • You forgot or didn’t have the money to pay the water bill and your utilities were cut off for a week?
  • Your community was under a water restriction due to contamination of the water supply?
  • The power went out and your home was on well water, thus halting your running water until the electricity was restored?
  • You were out hiking and got lost, then were forced to spend a few nights in the woods with only the supplies in your daypack?

As you can see, those random occurrences that happen out of the blue can strike anyone at any time.

When Water Is Limited, Chaos Erupts

It’s easy to say, “Oh, I’ll just go to the store and grab a few bottles,” but when everyone else in your area has the same idea, it doesn’t take long for the shelves to clear, potentially leaving you and your family without water.

Back in 2010, a water main broke in Boston, Massachusetts. The resulting leak flooded into the Charles River, and officials were forced to use the untreated backup reservoirs. A state of emergency was declared, a boil order was announced, and absolute chaos erupted as more than two million people suddenly found themselves without running water. A local news outlet reported:

The run on bottled water caused near panic at some stores throughout the Boston area Saturday night.

At the BJ’s in Revere, the crowd got so big and the rush for water so intense that police were called in. In order to maintain control of an unruly crowd, the store was shut down for the night.

Shortly after residents in Boston received an emergency call warning them of the water crisis, supermarket aisles stocked with water were quickly wiped out.

“They are fighting over it, literally fighting over water,” said a customer at the Roche Bros. in West Roxbury. “I just had to fight my way through the aisles ’cause it’s crazy in there.”

“Not since Blizzard of ’78 have I seen something like this,” said the store manager. “New shipments that arrived were gone within seconds.”

In Coolidge Corner in Brookline, long lines formed at Trader Joe’s, CVS, and Walgreens for any kind of bottled water, including sparkling and pricey designer bottles.

The Governor of Massachusetts was able to lift the boil order a mere three days later, but during that short span, the National Guard was dispatched to deliver water, businesses were called upon to increase the water inventory brought to the local stores, and many restaurants were forced to close their doors due to the lack of safe drinking water.

You’re Going to Need More Water Than You Think

Even if you are able to jostle your way to the front of the line and victoriously snag the last 24-pack of individual water bottles, if the situation lasts longer than expected, that paltry amount is not going to see you through it.

Why not? Because on average, the expected rate of consumption is one gallon per person per day. That doesn’t include consumption for pets or what you’ll use for sanitation. If the situations persists for more than a couple of days, you’re going to need to bathe, clean, and wash dishes. Not only that, but you’ll have to figure out a safe way to dispose of human waste.

The water that you store for your family should be enough to see all members of the household through a two-week period without running water. This is the bare minimum supply you should have on hand.

What If the Situation Persists for More Than a Few Days?

Sometimes, even an abundant stored water supply isn’t enough. In more dire situations, water supplies can be interrupted indefinitely.

Do you remember the earthquake that devastated Haiti? That unexpected natural disaster took place in 2010, and some areas still do not have running water five years later. Five years. There’s no way a person could store enough water to last for that long, so the people affected have had to completely change their way of life. They’ve had to learn how to acquire water for their needs, how to purify it so it doesn’t make them sick, and how to conserve the limited amount they have available.

 Finding Water Isn’t Enough

Did you know that oftentimes, more people die in the aftermath of a disaster than in the disaster itself? And the number one cause of death? Contaminated water.

If you are thirsty—truly, desperately thirsty—it’s human nature to drink whatever is available because your imminent demise from dehydration is more concerning to you than the pathogens in that dirty water you are gulping down.

But drinking contaminated water can lead to a host of dreaded diseases like dysentery, hepatitis A, viral gastroenteritis, cholera, shigellosis, typhoid, diphtheria, and polio.  Just one person handling personal waste improperly can contaminate the water supply for hundreds, even thousands, of other people downstream from them.

Fresh Water Is Your Most Vital Prep

Whether you are just getting started in the preparedness lifestyle or you’ve been at it for a long time, there’s always something new to learn about water. There’s just so much information about water that it deserves its own book, instead of just one chapter in a general preparedness guide.  Aside from air, it is the most vital element of human survival. In this essential guide, you’ll learn that:

  • You must store a substantial supply, but it isn’t enough to just store it.
  • You must know how to acquire it in case your stores run out.
  • You must know how to make it safe to drink.
  • You must know what could be lurking in your water in order to combat it.
  • You must know how to conserve the water, because you have to make the water you acquire last until you can get more.
  • You must know enough about basic sanitation to keep you and your family safe and healthy.

What’s more, a water supply and source aren’t only important during disasters. It’s vital to know about the things that could be lurking in your water even if it assumedly flows safely from your taps. Municipal water supplies and wells can contain things you’d rather not consume. Sometimes these contaminants are mild and only cause issues when consumed over a long period. Other times, the contaminants can make a susceptible person ill almost immediately.

There is nothing you can store that is more valuable than water or the means to purify water. There is no greater preparedness measure that you can take than that of securing a safe, abundant source of water. Without this one vital element that makes up 50 to 70 percent of your body, you’re as good as dead.

This could be the most important preparedness information you ever read.

The Prepper’s Water Survival Guide: Harvest, Treat, and Store Your Most Vital Resource is a #1 new release on Amazon and is also available at Barnes and Noble.

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16 Comments
Homer
Homer
May 30, 2015 5:51 pm

People in the habitual thinking can not believe that it would get that bad. Government will save them.

hahaha I can’t contain may laughter. haha

Homer
Homer
May 30, 2015 5:53 pm

Not to worry I have a two year supply of dehydrated water. hahaha!

Homer
Homer
May 30, 2015 5:57 pm

If you run out of water, go to you store and buy dihydrogen-oxide. It will keep you alive, if the tap water out of your faucet goes dry. It works. folks.

Stucky
Stucky
May 30, 2015 7:41 pm

I love dihydrogen-oxide!! I usually get mine in dehydrated form …. just add water … Presto!!

ASIG
ASIG
May 30, 2015 9:42 pm

WARNING!! Dihydrogen-oxide or AKA dihydrogen monoxide is potentially very dangerous. It can and does kill people every day. It will kill you in minutes if inhaled, in its gaseous form it will burn on contact with your skin, in its solid form will cause gangrene with prolonged contact.

If you’re not familiar with what dihydrogen monoxide is all about –PLEASE DO YOUR RESEARCH !!

bluestem
bluestem
May 30, 2015 9:43 pm

Way to go Stucky, your war of 1812 writing appeared on Zero Hedge. John

Stucky
Stucky
May 30, 2015 9:56 pm

bluestem

really?? Nice! Thanks for letting me know. I’m famous!!!!

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Zarathustra
Zarathustra
May 30, 2015 10:05 pm

Tonight has been a second pounding of thunderstorms in Houston. While there has been no flooding in my neighborhood, the local creek was only a few feet short of the bank when I drove over it earlier today and that was before the rains began. Keep in mind that local waterways are dredged about 20 feet, with banks that slope about 40 degrees on either side, so you can get an idea of how much water has backed up. It looks like a lake.

The rain started at about 5 PM my time and from the looks of the weather map, it will continue throughout the night. Tomorrow things are supposed to return to sunny skies as drier air moves in.

Billy
Billy
May 30, 2015 10:46 pm

We had a long conversation about this… given that our weather people here are apparently hired directly off the street at random..

Don’t know how many times I’ve been watching the weather report and Mr. Blow-dried says something completely ridiculous like “And taking a look at our Uber-SuperDooper Doppler Radar, the chance for rain tomorrow is 50%…”

That means it might rain.

Or not.

At which point, I usually say to myself “Well, hell… I can do that! I aughta go be a weatherman. I can be on TV and be wrong too!”

Or they spend 10 minutes describing highs, lows, the El Niño, La Niña, whatever’s coming out of Canada or out of the Gulf of Mexico… then tell us that given all that mess, somehow that equates to a 20% chance of rain…

How? How do you quantify something as chaotic as all that and distill it down to a hard number like 20%? Is there some sort of secret weatherman algorithm that’s only taught in Weatherman School that allows you to quantify stuff like that? They have a series of Cray supercomputers in the back room they load all this data into, crunch the numbers, just so they can give us a meaningless percentage?

And really, what does that percentage mean? That out of 100 random days with similar conditions, 20 of them will have rain, while 80 won’t?

Well, what the hell does all that mean to me, realistically?

Local weather douche was telling us how today would be “mostly sunny”, and it was teeming down with rain outside… I couldn’t help myself. I yelled “HAVE YOU LOOKED OUT THE WINDOW?!?” at the screen…

Weather reports… I’d rather they just come on and say “Well, I took a look at the radar and if it were me, I wouldn’t take the kids to the amusement park today, ’cause it’s probably gonna rain”…

I’d be totally happy with that… take about 15 seconds and no custom graphics or green screens…

Zarathustra
Zarathustra
May 30, 2015 10:53 pm

Billy,

At least in Oregon where I grew up before all the high tech radar and other gizmos, the TV weathermen were actually trained meteorologists and knew their shit. Given a choice though, I think I would prefer a pretty woman with big boobs reading a teleprompter over those middle aged, partly bald white guys.

bb
bb
May 30, 2015 10:59 pm

Billy ,the weather guy would probably think your as dumb as a box of rocks for questioning his expertise. Just saying.

Billy
Billy
May 30, 2015 11:44 pm

Zara,

Now, how did I know you were from the Oregonian wilds?

Was watching “How the States Got Their Shapes” on Hisree Channel last night, and the host – that guy with the huge nose – asked somebody “What’s Oregon’s state animal?”

Without thinking, I said “A stoner hippie”.

Turns out, it’s the Beaver.

I like my answer better.

(NB Yeah, you’re right. I kinda like hot chicks with big hooters telling me if it will rain tomorrow or not… takes the edge off things… what’s her face on Fawkes Snooze that does the weather… she looks like a Hot Chick bobblehead… she’s like 3 foot nothing, head like a balloon and big hooters… should be stuck to the dashboard of my truck with a suction cup…. )

Zarathustra
Zarathustra
May 30, 2015 11:59 pm

Billy says:

Zara,

Now, how did I know you were from the Oregonian wilds?

Was watching “How the States Got Their Shapes” on Hisree Channel last night, and the host – that guy with the huge nose – asked somebody “What’s Oregon’s state animal?”

Without thinking, I said “A stoner hippie”.
___________________________________

You should read Ken Kesey’s novel, Sometimes a great notion. Those stoner hippies were also loggers, farmers and fishermen. Some still are.

Stucky
Stucky
May 31, 2015 4:51 am

Billy

You rant against weather reporterfuks reminded me of the weather report from “Good Morning Vietnam”

Stucky
Stucky
May 31, 2015 4:54 am

Let it henceforth forever be known that Billy prefers a stoned hippie to a nice BEAVER.

He said so hisself.

IndenturedServant
IndenturedServant
May 31, 2015 11:25 am

Working in concrete construction I tried to rely on weather reports to determine when to set forms and when to pour mud. It would have been less time consuming to throw a dart at a board marked “pour” / “don’t pour”. Instead, we just carried enough 7 mil visqueen to cover a football field. When the visqueen came out, the dart board was wrong.

Being on the western edge of the Rockies with a consistent north easterly weather flow, it’s pretty damned tough to be accurate. Weather systems can back up and stall, pass right over or get pushed in a southerly direction causing it to spin right over us for days. I always figured if they would just go about 50-75 miles east and launch a daily weather balloon to determine pressures at different altitudes above the mountains, the weather jockeys could become scary accurate. For now I just assume it’s going to be “Partly ______ to mostly ______ with a ___ chance of ________.” I’m usually right except on the days when it gets biblical.