- Assuming you live in a suburban home or apartment
- Had friends that went through this last year in TX
- At time of recording Nord Stream pipeline appears to be crippled. Europe is facing some challenging times ahead / winter will probably be difficult there.
- We’ll break up the items by category.
- If you’ve been preparing for awhile, you’ll probably have most of these items already.

- Battery operated

- Don’t get the small kind, get a decent sized one.


- Do not sleep directly on floor: will suck your body’s warmth way. Have a pad or blankets under the sleeping bag.


- Cheap
- Can line clothing with these to reflect body heat back

- Put hot water in these
- Can keep in your sleeping bag to keep you warm
- Great to sip on to keep core body temperature up

- Set this up in your designated area
- Get several people in one of these: will produce warmth that can be contained.
- Also can line the inside with the survival blankets to reflect back the heat.
- No tent? Use a table and throw blankets over it and get underneath.

- Be sure to move / calisthenics

- Mr. Heater Buddy have a sensor to detect low oxygen levels and shut off. Probably safest option on the market.



- Be very careful with open flames

- Heat and lighting
- We prefer this over an open flame

- Not our first choice, but an option
- Works with propane bottles


- Eat the refrigerator (perishable) items first
- Can place food outside at night
- Put buckets of water outside to allow to freeze and then put them in the refrigerator in the daytime
- Warming foods easy to cook: canned chili or soup, oatmeal. Easy to prepare and clean up.

- Bring water containers into your heated area as they can retain heat and slowly dissipate it over night
- Plus helps them avoid freezing




- Let faucets inside house drip.
- If extended cold weather / consider filling up containers / shut off water to house / drain pipes

- Move to your designated room and begin preparing it.
- Ideal room would be part of kitchen as cooking will add heat to the area.
- Lock windows to keep tension.
- Cover windows and doors with your plastic sheeting. This doesn’t need to be airtight. Simply slowing the exchange of warm and cold air is often sufficient enough.
- We are hesitant to recommend the DIY heaters with candles.
- We mentioned the UCO lantern which is safe, but beyond that, be careful with open flames.
- Regarding sanitation
- Keep trash to a minimum as
- Check on your neighbors
One Response
We live in Canada and have butane cooking stoves available. They are the single burner stoves that chefs often use for demonstrations. We have a “Thunder Range” and several bottles of butane which we use frequently during power outages. I put one of my rimmed cookie sheets upside down as a heat disperser then put the stove on top. It works well.