Do you have any "prepper-adjacent" hobbies, recreational pursuits that you think build real skills, or may be useful in a real disaster?
Posted by Signal_Brain_933@reddit | preppers | View on Reddit | 475 comments
I really got into ultralight backpacking a few years ago (thanks to r/ultralight). Trimming my base weight forced me to think completely differently about “survival math”. Every gram/ounce has to justify its existence, and luxury items are constantly reevaluated. You start semi-obsessively asking questions like: what does this item or piece of gear actually do for me, and what's the lightest way I could accomplish the same thing? That line of thinking bled directly into how I think about bug-out bags, redundancy, comfort vs practicality, and more. And the “fun suffering” of walking long distances in nature, sleeping outdoors in a variety of conditions, dealing with hunger, water purification, critters, boredom, physical strain… I imagine this would help my mindset in a real emergency.
The other one might sound ridiculous, but I read a lot of post-apocalyptic fiction. Good authors put their characters under believable pressure and stress and the decisions they make often leave me wondering how I’d react in that situation, fictional or not. And there’s often some valuable practical info and prep wisdom buried in those stories. And mentally, it helps me foresee how communities could fracture, or how quickly norms might collapse. What people actually barter for versus what they think they'll barter for. You get a kind of low-stakes mental simulation of scenarios that can’t really be reproduced outside of fiction. “The Road”, “Station Eleven” (awesome Canadian novel), “Lucifer's Hammer” (my favorite), “Bird Box”, “The Passage” (trilogy), and so many more. I probably pulled more mindset insight from those than from half the forums I hang out at.
So what's your prep-adjacent hobby? What do you do that isn't officially prepping but is actually making you more prepared or resilient?
InterviewThick2660@reddit
I've been in the SCA [http://www.sca.org] for over 40 years so I got a wide exposure to a lot of medieval skills and am fairly good at textile arts, herbals, etc. on top of being used to outdoor camping for periods at a time and have the gear.
AbleKnowledge5937@reddit
I have started to make mead and wine at home so far I've bottled about 15 good batches planning to gift some away for holidays & birthdays, but most will be stockpiled for trade or personal use if SHTF.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Invite me to your SHTF launch party please! ;)
mcapello@reddit
Blacksmithing, hunting, gardening, bushcraft, pottery, flintknapping. I'm not particularly good at any of them and the last three are mostly useless for most situations, but they're a lot of fun.
thisbitbytes@reddit
While digging a planting hole with a rock today (because I was too lazy to get up and find my hori hori) I thought of my college professor who was so good at flintnapping, he made the stone tools for Clan of the Cave Bear. RIP Dr. Dibble. Flintnapping is rad.
mcapello@reddit
That's wild!
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Wow, awesome skill base. Getting into blacksmithing must be one heck of a learning curve!
mcapello@reddit
It is, and very hard to learn on your own, at least for me. I can make very basic knives and tools out of scrap steel, but that's about it. If anyone interested can afford it, I recommend finding places to take classes, and if you're self-teaching, get a propane setup. I didn't have any money when I started so I built my own forges out of garbage lying around the farm. Kinda fun but it also meant that I didn't make much progress in actually learning proper smithing skills.
WishIWasThatClever@reddit
I do love occasionally binging Forged in Fire. Such a great niche show.
Resident-Welcome3901@reddit
I started blacksmithing with charcoal, a box of dirt forge, a sledgehammer head in a bucket of cement, visegrips and a flea market hammer. Lots of intro courses available at living History museums and craft schools, community colleges and local shops.
mcapello@reddit
For me the trouble was always airflow. The number of Wile-E-Coyote contraptions I built to get air through some of those early forges was hilarious.
8Deer-JaguarClaw@reddit
I don't think bushcraft is a useless skill at all. It's useful now even if just for camping.
mcapello@reddit
Well yeah, but that's sort of like saying bushcraft is useful for doing bushcraft. :)
I just don't think I've really used it much in any emergencies I've ever had to deal with (yet). But yeah I could also see it happening. Bushcraft is so flexible that it's hard to rule out transferring a skill to something else.
shewhoownsmanyplants@reddit
Hello, kindred spirit! I sincerely hope things never get bad enough that we need our flintknapping skills, but it’s a pretty fascinating hobby.
horotheredditsprite@reddit
Flint knapping
Stone flake arrows still rock any wild animal and stone hand axes still work just fine when steel is worn to nothing.
Return to monkey, smack rocks together.
dittybopper_05H@reddit
Hunting. Flintknapping. Primitive biathlon. Amateur radio. Also cooking 18th Century foods.
I don’t really hunt anymore, but I did for about 35 years using all manner of implements. A 6 foot blowgun for squirrels (bring a pair of pliers!) when I was a teenager. I used modern guns and a compound bow for years before switching to flintlock rifles and wooden longbows for deer.
For amateur radio I mostly to mobile HF and portable HF. So I can basically communicate from anywhere. I even have a complete HF setup that fits into a plastic ammo can for taking up mountains (Summits On The Air).
I’ve been a big fan of the Townsends YouTube channel for years now. I’ve made a lot of the recipes, and I have a number of 18th Century cookbooks. Though honestly they are more “aids memoire” than recipes. I even have a Dutch oven for cooking over a fire in the back yard. I’ve cooked a few things in it, just soups and stews. Need to try baking bread in it, and cooking the distaffbopper’s favorite meal, beef steak pie, in it.
I’m currently preserving some cut up pork chops in salt to recreate 18th Century salt pork.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Curious about salt pork - is it any good, or more like “survival rations” passable?
dittybopper_05H@reddit
I have not eaten any yet.
MsFenriss@reddit
Going to regional burns. At least twice a year we roll up on an empty field somewhere on the east coast and then live there for a week on strictly only what we bring with us, and the mutual generosity with others in the same position. When we started prepping we already had so much of what we needed.
fakele55@reddit
Ended up here by accident, but I think trail running might come in handy at some point. There’s something reassuring about knowing that a 60km hike on an unfamiliar mountain trail with 3km of elevation gain isn’t going to kill me.
Though honestly, I’d be better off learning how to build electronics out of scrap 🙂
Nature-Medicine-888@reddit
I’m learning herbal medicine
Purple-Literature781@reddit
Not real sure how valuable it is but I recently got into slingshots. Ive gotten fairly decent with it. Pop cans dont stand a chance against me. I guess it could put food on the table in a disaster. These other posts have much more valuable skills than this. Its just what ive been doing lately.
Smart_Cookie_99@reddit
I love slingshots. I’m fortunate to live by the beach with an endless supply of rocks and driftwood targets.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
I actually love slingshots, ever since I was a kid. Could definitely be a useful skill.
Head-Engineering-847@reddit
Checkout r/airsoft
Purple-Literature781@reddit
I got into it because of a group I saw here on reddit. Way more fun than I expected!
Skitzafranik@reddit
Slingshot is a great one! Especially in those areas where many pew pew is hard to obtain! You can get a decent quality one for a budget price from places like Harbor freight(US)
Smart_Cookie_99@reddit
For me, keeping strong and agile, foraging/herbal medicine-I like being familiar with the local plants and knowing what I can eat and where to find it. Facility with camp stoves, water purification methods, food preservation like drying and fermenting. For fibre arts-sewing and darning, and maybe wet felting wool, because it doesn’t require any particular skill or tools except soap and hot water, and manual labour, and you end up with warm durable fabric that you can use for whatever you need. Ooh and peg loom weaving is very under appreciated I think. I do archery and occasional slingshot practice and am learning to use a balearic sling (handy for slinging tennis balls for the dog). On my list of things to learn this year: wilderness first aid and meshtastic, which I know almost nothing about, but it looks super cool and not too expensive.
ferds41@reddit
I feel like this post was designed for me to brag about all my hobbies, but to be very honest I designed my hobbies around prepping. Because the idea of preparedness appeals to me at the core of my being all of these "hobbies" are passions in their own right, I list them in what I think will be order of usefulness.
Fitness, I enjoy functional types of workouts, farmers carries box jumps, military press etc, combined with an endurance element. I suppose you can call it crossfit adjacent, but I simply refuse to join a crossfit gym or label myself as a "crossfitter"
Backpacking and trail running, pretty self explanatory.
I am basic survival proficient and do additional courses whenever I can, so bushcraft, knots, hunting and slaughtering, water purification techniques, outdoor meat preservation etc.
Orienteering - Google it, basically land navigation and trail running combined.
Adventure motorbike enthusiast, I know 100s of kilometres of gravel routes around my city, I can ride 6km onto a gravel road and get to my bug out location 230kms away.
Competitive 3 gun shooting, provincial level IPSC handgun shot (production optics). Reloading developed as a necessary skill to do this, ammo is costly in my country so if you really want to train enough reloading is an essential element of shooting.
I frequently host training events that involve shooting and truama first aid combined (I am not the instructor myself but I believe that the more people are equipped with these skills the better for the community)
Currently busy with my remote pilots license for commercial drone use, and also studying for HAM operators license.
Next on the list to train in/master is horticulture and basic animal husbandry (focusing specifically on rabbits).
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Wow! With that many skills you must almost be hoping for some sort of major societal breakdown ;)
ferds41@reddit
Really hoping to never have to go through that, but in my situation necessity dictates, I live in a country that is politically deteriorating and very unstable, we have had insurances of civil unrest that has brought the country to a halt before. Voilent protests remain a fixture of daily life here.
Karma111isabitch@reddit
Knot tying
hmoeslund@reddit
I stared on intermittent fasting to lose some kilos. I have for the best parts of my life being afraid of having no food and feeling hungry. After intermittent fasting I found out it is not dangerous not to eat konstant. So I tried to fast for two days and it went well. So in a disastrous situation I know I can easily go without food for 2-3 days, it calms my brain
EnvironmentalFox7532@reddit
On another note intermittent fasting also decreases insulin resistance. I’m type 2 diabetic and eat one meal a day which has decreased my reliance on meds.
Been Working heavily with alternative medicine and herbalism for years to reduce and maybe even replace some meds including my pain meds for chronic back pain. Started growing a red flower Reddit won’t let me mention for tea, which does wonders for pain. Collect a bunch of difference mushrooms for thier anti inflammatory and nerve pain alkaloids, and have many remedies and herbals I use stocked at home. Generally I forage or grow all what I need on a annual basis
hmoeslund@reddit
That actually sounds pretty cool. When is the red flower ready to harvest for tea?
Rheila@reddit
Gardening (almost 20 years,) pruning & grafting (just starting out)
Dog training (I used to train service & therapy dogs such as wheelchair assist etc)
Hunting & trapping
Animal husbandry (have done or am doing: ducks, rabbits, chickens, cows…)
Food preservation: canning, dehydrating, fermentation etc
Mushroom picking & foraging, plant ID
Hiking (I really fucking miss the mountains!)
I also apparently really like making documents. I have a lot of documents I’ve made and am working for tracking ideas, plants, animals, processes etc for our property. It’s sort of become a hobby, lol.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Awesome list! And dog training is a PERFECT example of something that’s not an obvious prepper skill that would actually be super useful in a long societal breakdown, when the need for trained dogs would become even more critical.
Rheila@reddit
Even in a non SHTF scenario. Having a dog that will pick up anything and everything for you if you’ve dropped it or need it, even coins, if you are injured and can’t bend over. Or will recall and stand to let you use their shoulders to pull yourself up. and get back into a chair etc. Or knows what “go to so-and-so” means to go get help or we used to send written messages to each other for funsies.
FalseOmens@reddit
Trapping and my local network in the area. We already have started to eat some furbearers to figure out recipes and raccoon/beaver isn’t bad
wasteyourmoney2@reddit
I build terraces. Seems pretty relevant on my hillside.
ElderBarenziah@reddit
Soap making and spinning wool
frissonic@reddit
Collecting flashlights. Not Walmart flashlights... r/flashlights flashlights. Super bright, great UI...
vacitizen76@reddit
Skinny dipping with your cousin if you're not married... yet.
txchainsawmedic@reddit
Camping, 4x4 driving, offroad rescue/recovery, paracording, being at least semi handy with all manners of tools, hiking, mapping remote dirt roads/4x4 trails, fishing, firearms/knives enthusiast, and a general love of solitude.....
I also have a "prepping" adjacent career: Paramedic for 2 decades, now a RN. Also worked for significant amounts of time working professionally as a cook, landscaping, and in construction.
Beagle001@reddit
Gardening. Moved off grid for the lifestyle of it. To get away from the city. We came to the edge of the map. Mainly for surf. But it requires me to learn quickly. How to fix a hot water heater. How solar works. How to fix your vehicle. Solar. Etc. Gardening because I found out how bad most store bought veggies actually are. I didn’t really even love veggies till grew my own and found out how good they could taste.
Boxwinoisback@reddit
Same! I also learned how to can veggies and jams, and also how to dehydrate my own spices and teas. I want to learn more ferments I like this year.
buddymoobs@reddit
I just planted some echinachia and lavender plants to make my own tea this year. I love that they come back each year and spread on their own.
OpheliaLives7@reddit
That’s so cool! Canning seems so intimidating to get into for me
Ingawolfie@reddit
It just takes practice. Start small with jams and jellies, as you can just put them in the refrigerator if they don’t seal properly. Then move onto fruits that you can can in a water bath. Meats and vegetables require pressure canning which is a bit more advanced. Order the Ball Blue Book and read it.
onceIwas15@reddit
If been thinking about making jams. How do you know if it doesn’t seal properly
8takotaco@reddit
I found starting with tomato sauce and hot sauces were the easiest. Jams and jellies can fail to set, but the other two (&salsa) are very straightforward. You can also do small batches - just a couple of jars.... and fill the canner with jars with no lids to fill the space too. My first salsa was a few jars with increasing levels of hot peppers(heat). Helps figure out what you like.
Normal_Comedian_5423@reddit
Or fill the spacer jars with water so you have canned water for the pantry.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Will do! Thanks so much for the tip!
Salty-Gas-1172@reddit
As everyone is saying start with the Ball Blue Book. Water bath canning is simple and the equipment isn't too expensive. It's good to look for u-pick farms to start with if you don't have a garden.
Soft_Yellow1757@reddit
the upick farms with me are family destination spots- so more expensive than other places to buy fruit.
QueenBKC@reddit
I would suggest avoiding any "rebel canning" sites/influencers and stick with tested and approved recipes from the Ball Blue Book.
polyamy74@reddit
Or another tested and trusted site like healthycanning.com.
Beagle001@reddit
On our way to this eventually. We’re doing some picking and simple stuff but need to to pick up our game.
Michaelalayla@reddit
Also gardening! Canning, drying, and otherwise preserving food. Raising sheep. Fiber crafts - I've unlocked the whole skill tree now, shearing and prepping the wool, spinning, weaving, crochet and knitting, and sewing. Adding a section to my garden for dyer's plants. I ordered all my equipment for soap making and am doing a big batch of soap, hosting a workshop this spring for the people I'm building community with. The tallow is from our goats and sheep, and the lye from our woodstove.
And my husband does blacksmithing, woodworking, and can figure out how to fix pretty much anything so he's often tinkering or making things for our home and small holder activities.
The gardening and shepherding is more for the Tuesday prepping aspect, just being resilient. The fiber crafts and so on are for if (when) supply chains break down or become less accessible due to rising costs.
mike-42-1999@reddit
We live in a city, but still garden, do canning, and do some foraging. Have collected acorns and made acorn flour. I'm an adult leader in Scouts, so we all camp alot and have done 7day Canoe trips in the wilderness of N MN. Camping and moving daily, while keeping up with hygiene, food prep etc is a good skill. Also, really learning knots and their functions is really fun. With some rope and branches, it's easy to make alot of what is useful in camp, stools, chairs, tripod for cooking.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Wow. I'm so impressed. Fiber crafts is such a perfect example of "prep adjacent" hobbies!
Beagle001@reddit
You guys are hardcore!!! Yeahhh!!!
Soft_Yellow1757@reddit
just home ownership has done that- spent all day saturday fixing a sump pump in the basement.
BoneyardRendezvous@reddit
I grow my staple vegetables, but I try to grow something new and different every year.
Beagle001@reddit
Yeah, I just planted sweet potatoes yesterday. We'll see how that goes. Had a good test run 6 mos ago. Planting some weird peppers too. See what happens.
BoneyardRendezvous@reddit
I did bucket potatoes one year. Lots of them but none got too huge. I might try the straw bale thing this year.
mexican-street-tacos@reddit
100% this. I have been building veggie gardens and learning how to grow all veggies that grow in my region. It's very challenging. I am about to install a rain barrel so I have water during drought conditions, (which happens here, and watering restrictions can happen.) Also, this past year I set up grow racks in my basement, so I can collect and grow from seed. There are amazing varieties of seeds to buy. Way more diversity than what's at big box stores.
TheCarcissist@reddit
This, gardening is both harder than you think, and simultaneously easier than you think.
themanwiththeOZ@reddit
Piggy backing off of this to say backyard orchard as well. Lots of fruits can be preserved in many ways. Trees take about 4 years to get going so the best time to start is NOW.
Beagle001@reddit
So cool. Can’t really get our fruit trees going. But we live in a very harsh environment.
Salty-Gas-1172@reddit
I had a dream I'd do that someday but someday came and went. I'm as close as I'm likely going to get. If I can just get some solar going that would be the next step. Maybe...
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
That’s awesome. Do you see this learning and practical knowledge acquisition as a skill? Do you actually enjoy gardening, repairing things, or is it more about the satisfaction you feel afterwards?
Boxwinoisback@reddit
I think it actually started during Covid lockdown as a place to discharge all my anxiety haha. Then I ended up liking it. I also went through a power outage (about five days) and realized I needed to can and preserve so I didn’t lose all my harvest. I don’t have every prepped skill, but I have a couple good ones. 😊
Beagle001@reddit
I’d say both? Absolutely necessary I feel like. And yeah. If something is wrong with the old Tacoma and I YouTube how to fix it and it works, I feel super satisfied. Also nothing like sitting down and eating and entire meal you harvested and caught yourself feels good.
buddymoobs@reddit
I've recently got into freeze-drying. It's pretty fun. I think I will pay for the cost of the machine within a year just by not having food spoilage. It's also cool to have "fresh" fruits and veggies on hand without having to make a trip to the grocery store, or having half of it go bad before I can eat it. I have freeze-dried green onions and kimchi on hand for ramen whenever. I'm going to do some boiled egg slices for ramen too! I also garden, and this year will be freeze-drying a LOT of homegrown veggies and herbs. I will be planting an apple tree and I have blueberries, blackberries and raspberries as well.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
My pleasure! Yeah, try The Passage by Justin Cronin, it’s phenomenal.
I’ve played with dehydrating a bit, but freeze drying is definitely next level!
buddymoobs@reddit
It's a ton of fun which I find odd to even admit.
cyanescens_burn@reddit
I want a freeze drying machine so bad, but as a city dweller I can’t afford the space (and the cost of the machine would be a hit to my pocket too).
buddymoobs@reddit
I hear that. Even the small one takes up a whole section of counter space, and it was a big chunk of change, even "on sale."
2AThoughtLeader@reddit
Fishing, hunting, gardening, and physical fitness. Need I say more?
Expert-Isopod-8902@reddit
Soap making, gardening, canning, freeze drying, sewing
PainterOfRed@reddit
Lucifers Hammer is a favorite! We don't do ultralight (but have considered) but we do boondock camp. We also like to learn foraging and field medicine - comes in handy... We do edible landscaping and a food forest, just for curiosity but it's more interesting to us than planting veg in straight rows. Of course, we do small "off grid style" tweaks to our home - passive solar and a few devices powered by small panels (light touch off grid).
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
I’ve always dreamed of somebody making Lucifer’s Hammer into a movie (although Hollywood would likely ruin it!); I was actually hoping to try boondocking soon, I feel like my kids might enjoy that too!
PainterOfRed@reddit
It would be a good film. I could see a longer format like The Stand... Meanwhile, even if you don't truly go far into the outback, rent a campsite, away from crowds, but along a river or lake for fishing and skipping rocks. The kids will love it.
speedysnailhomestead@reddit
Gardening, and many facets of it (permaculture systems to keep it lower maintainance, guerrilla gardening to create living cache sites that I can return to in times of need and hunger, and a better grasp of just how much seed does it take to make food in a large enough amount to feed a small family, and seed saveing to name a few) is a huge skill I would call vital to all, better to be a warrior In a garden and all that.
Blacksmithing, not vital for everyone but it's been a lifelong dream job of mine, and now I can create tools and repairs for other people and that is valuable in many ways.
Home brewing, this is often seen as a trade good skill or a silly way to get killed cause people are looking at brewing as alcohol production exclusively. The real strength of brewing is turning fruit you otherwise wouldn't eat or would spoil due to small damage to the skins into a shelf stable nutritional drink.
Dyeing, I can take cheap acu/ucp camo and turn it into very nice brown camo with black walnut dye just for one example. You can also use tye die and similar to turn regular clothes into something more mottled that blends better.
Just the first few that come to mind, I surely overlooked many!
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Wow. That’s truly an impressive list! I’m really hoping to have the opportunity to learn some of these when my kids are older and I have more time on my hands.
speedysnailhomestead@reddit
If your interested in learning any of them let me know, I'm happy to teach the basics!
northernlair@reddit
I'm on a make food from scratch kick right now. Its gotten to the point where Ive learned to make the ricotta a mozzarella for my lasagna.
I can now make butter, sour cream etc from the milk. Things like sour cream and and certain commercial cheeses are more economical to buy from the store but others actually save money.
Today Im making Greek yougurt for the first time because I use it a lot and its cheaper to make at home.
Last year I grew the types of beans I use in my regular chili. I grew and processed tbe tomatoes. So besides the beef and some spices Ive had several batches right from the garden.
Its pretty cool because its learning the skills, learning about supply chains and food manufacturing and in general getting a better appreciation of what it takes to feed us. I also am getting better at weighing convenience ingredients vs completely from scratch.
So I can now make my lasagna noodles from scratch and wow is it yummy but practically its a special dinner thing. Oven ready noodles are good enough.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Making Greek yogurt at home? That’s brilliant: I’ve never even considered this possibility, and I eat a TON of it. Have to look into this asap!
Hard_Luck7@reddit
I’ve been practicing gardening for 7 years now (just for fun) and recently realized how ahead I am in comparison with most people that don’t even know how his favorite fruits plant looks like. Gardening is not really hard, but there is a lot of things that you only learn by time and experience. I’d recommend anyone to start learning the basics about taking care and organize an edibles garden.
Also, I’m a trauma surgeon so I think that’s very valuable in any disaster situation.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
100% - a trauma surgeon would be an invaluable asset to any post-societal collapse community, and having a green thumb on top of it would make you a pretty epic asset in any group.
Doc_Hank@reddit
Aside from being an emergency physician?
Amateur radio operator Boating Flying Hunting Orienteering Cooking Carpentry Mechanic (rebuilding older vehicles) Gardening
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Wow… yeah, if you’re already an emergency physician, everything else is just icing on the prepper cake! ;)
FingerHashBandits@reddit
Hunting (and learning how to clean the animals or debone fish) I garden heavy for both joy and food. I use a “medicinal flower” I grow myself but they won’t let me mention as a salve for pain and tinctures for pain and stomach issues. My name should tell you what I’m referring to lol I like hand sewing and mending my clothes and such it makes me happy to preserve it Are these hobbies? Idk if that counts but it’ll help if needed someday
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Yup, username checks out! Might not be considered medicine now, but in a prolonged disaster it would likely be an invaluable asset.
FingerHashBandits@reddit
The salves themselves are SO effective but you don’t have any intoxication affect cuz it didn’t break the blood barrier. I have arthritis and it’s saving me so hard. Without pharma we may need alternative medicine
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Is there a salve recipe you’d recommend? I have basal thumb arthritis and would love to give it a try.
FingerHashBandits@reddit
So I make a very basic RSO which is I soak everclear with the flower I leave it for a week or so somewhere dark and shake it up occasionally then strain it and cook it down in a slow cooker (in a ball jar) and then I mix it with coconut oil, sometimes aloe if I need it or sometimes shea butter ect It’s suuuuuuuuuuuper basic but it does me well there’s fancier probably more proper ways to do it but that works for me
that-1-chick-u-know@reddit
Gardening and crocheting. Gardening is self-explanatory, and I've gotten into composting and want to try worm farming next, all of which would increase soil quality, and therefore self-sufficiency and crop yield. I know the latter is harder to imagine as an asset, but I can (and have) make bags of various strengths and purposes, and can make nets. I also, of course, can repair holes in fabric and turn old fabrics into rugs and blankets. Those things aren't typical "prepper" skills, but I can think of ways they would come in handy for sure.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Worm farming is an excellent example of this!
OptimizedPockets2@reddit
Kind of a silly one, but watching Technology Connections on YouTube has really expanded how much I understand consumer electronics and home appliances. Understanding is one of the early steps of knowing how to repair things.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Cool! I just started doing that this year - YouTube helped repaired my stove, dishwasher and dryer all in a few months. It saved me a ton of money!
Spiley_spile@reddit
Ive been a wilderness backpacker for at least 15 years. The knowledge and skills Ive gained from that have been endlessly beneficial and appkicable for my prep.
Likewise, I take into account the weight of my evac bag. Im in big earthquake territory. A lot of people have a go bag plan in which their go bag rides in a vehicle. But the roads are not going to be roads,after a mag 9 eathquake. And there's a good chance Ill be injured. So my go bag needs to be lightweight.
Fewer skills mean people need to carry more gear to create a large enough safety margin. That's whete I started.
Lots of backpacking allowed me to carry less gear over time. I was learning along the way how accomplish more problem solving with fewer items. A popular addage is "One is none and two is one". Backpacking reversed that in a big way. 1 became 25 different uses, and none became "Im able to find plenty of other ways".
Ultralight can be very expensive. But it doesnt have to be. A person can drop $400-600 on an ultralight tent. Or they can buy a used tent footprint to use as a tarp shelter. I recently spent $19 on a 8"x8" footprint that weighs 1.5lbs. It's waterproof and very sturdy. Works just fine as an ultralight shelter for me.
In contrast, I dont rely on a lot of fiction to inform my prep. I love reading. But when I became a disaster first responder, I realized the fictional books were excited but well, fictional. In reality, the vast majority of people become more altruistic when shtf, not less. I still enjoy reading fiction. But my preps have turned to better focus on better equipping people to more skillfully engage their altruism. :)
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Awesome reply, thanks for chiming in! Good to meet a fellow backpacker here. Yeah, UL equipment is crazy expensive - I’m not into the Dyneema crazy, but as a hammock camper, I’ve learned to cut weight pretty aggressively without sacrificing comfort. If I hadn’t learned this by backpacking my go bag would probably still weigh 60+ pounds!
robinhood_glitch1@reddit
Rucking.
I still think it’s silly when people post pics on here of their severely overloaded bug out bags and think they’re just going to hike out into the woods or something if SHTF—but if it came down to it I actually *could* do that, I guess. I like to load up 40lbs on my back and go hike in the mountains for fun.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Awesome, a fellow rucker! I’m at 40 lbs also in my GoRuck pack - I head out about 3/week with my dog (so I guess I’m DogRucking, or Drucking maybe?, and I love it! It’s done wonders for my health.
UP-North617@reddit
Hunting, foraging, cooking, preserving food, wine making, crochet, woodworking.
I took automotive repair classes and EMT classes as a fun way to keep busy and not just doom scroll after work.
I also love that you lump reading into a prepper adjacent hobby, 100% agree!
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Thanks! Yes, reading might be my favorite prep-adjacent skill. I think anybody who takes the time to absorb knowledge - even through fiction, but ideally combining non-fiction and educational/knowhow books also - would have a significant leg up in a societal breakdown.
Serious_Lettuce6716@reddit
I’m a former mobile mechanic so I’m used to working outside on the ground, and have many “shade-tree” tricks up my sleeve for improvising with the “wrong” tools when I can’t get the right ones, fabricating the right tools out of other things, repairing and/or fabricating small parts, and altering some wrong parts to fit and work where needed. But a lot of what I do relies on power tools which would be a hindrance without power.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
I wish I had your skill set- I really admire people who can repair anything.
firedude1314@reddit
I’ve become a big Ham Radio and Meshtastic nerd. Not sure if those are already “prepper” activities
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
According to this sub, they definitely are!
cyanescens_burn@reddit
I think they are. I just ordered my first meshtastic device. I went with a plug and play model so I could get used to the network and software. But long term I plan to bulk buy maybe 10 of those DIY-type kits and gift to close friends (for off-grid adventures and for disaster prep in our city).
I went with this one for my first one: https://a.co/d/0bqm6Vv6
I’m thinking of getting like 5-10 of these to gift, but get them bulk from alibaba or something, and either 3D print or make some other things into the case for it: https://a.co/d/0ePQhp2M
I’m open to suggestions for other devices though.
I’m reading up on GMRS and HAM for my next comms tool. I know I need a license for those ones.
firedude1314@reddit
Nice man! GMRS is just a $30 fee to the FCC, and it covers your whole family, no testing required, so that’s an easy one. HAM you actually need to study for, but it’s been a lot of fun so far
OldSchoolPrepper@reddit
large gardening (see saving, food preservation), animal husbandry (birthing animals/slaughter/veterinary), construction, blacksmithing, understanding small engine repair, how to make biogas (methane) and making biodiesel, how to find and harvest salt, how to make and use a still, herbalogy, medical knowledge/pharmaceutical knowledge, sewing, cooking, i can go on and on..... as an aside i'm sure you've read Swan Song but have you ever heard of or read these two highly (highly) under rated books: The Living Dead by Romero and Kraus and Etiquette for an Apocalypse by Mendel. Both well worth a read and no one seems to have heard of them.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
I’ve read (and own the hardcover) The Living Dead and loved it! I agree that it rarely comes up as a recommendation, but I tore through it cover to cover. Haven’t read Etiquette for an Apocalypse yet (hadn’t heard of it), but adding it to my TBR list now!
professor_jeffjeff@reddit
I have lots of hobbies that would be helpful in a variety of situations, but one of the most important things that you can prepare is yourself. This is both physically and mentally. A lot of people talk about their "get-home bags" but I'd be absolutely shocked if they were physically able to walk 10 miles (or more) to actually get to their home from their office. You don't need to be able to run ultra-marathons but you should be able to easily do at least a 5 mile hike over moderately rough terrain in reasonable weather conditions while carrying whatever gear you'd normally be carrying in that situation. If you can't do that, then start exercising. Remember that when you're exercising there's a difference between strength training and building up your endurance and stamina. You need to be doing some weight lifting but you also want to be doing a lot of things like interval training. Also work on flexibility too, since that will help you prevent injury when doing normal stuff.
For hobbies, I'm a blacksmith, welder, metal fabricator, woodworker, gardener, mechanic, tailor, chef, heavy equipment operator, and I know a variety of martial arts including various melee weapons and I'm a pretty good shot with most weapons using iron sights. I've also had first aid training, although that's one area that I think would be worth investing some more time and learning in. I'm also in pretty good shape overall since my life involves being very physically active for much of the time. I'm pretty confident that if there was a real disaster that I'd be able to get through it and would be a valuable member of the community wherever I end up finding myself when that disaster happened.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Nice! You sound like a modern Renaissance Man, or a potential post-apocalyptic MacGyver (if that reference still makes sense to anybody).
Purple_oyster@reddit
Thanks for the reading recommendations
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Sure! Hope you enjoy them as much as I did!
Wee_Besom@reddit
I'm excited to check out your book recs. I enjoyed Parable of the Sower for the same reasons, it really made me think. As far as other hobbies, I really enjoy sewing and I'm trying to increase my skills at gardening.
smish_smorsh@reddit
Parable of the Sower was my gateway drug too. I return to it often!
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Same! What a great book.
Academic_1989@reddit
Gardening - both therapeutic and useful, but I mostly suck at it and pray I don't ever have to grow food to feed us. Working on learning to make candy and cookies that are low in carbs from shelf stable products - it is a fun challenge when you have celiac and t2d! Writing and reading - both fiction and STEM non fiction, plus family history and cookbooks..
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Cool! Any low-carb candy recipes to share? I’ve really cut back on sugar over the past couple of years but really miss gummy candies.
APSteel@reddit
Not a hobby but dedicating time to become an EMT. Not just a class but actually volunteering for a local agency. The experience will be invaluable in so many ways. You also see firsthand that statistically we’ll die from heart, disease or cancer.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Very true - heart disease remains the #1 killer, and the tragedy is that it’s mostly preventable, but our modern lifestyles and diets just aren’t built around being heart healthy.
Mechbear2000@reddit
I'm going to throw a curve ball in here with the great responses.
Front line manager for fast paced hourly workers. You will hopefully learn to spot bull shitters a mile away before they can do you damage. You should get the hang of spotting traits of people by how and what they talk about.
Or you can come from a family of dirt bags but not become one. Seeing their behaviors first hand for years and seeing the outcomes is a real education.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Really valid perspective - and something we don’t talk about much in here. I remember loving the show “Lie to Me” because it was all about reading people, figuring out their truest intentions and hidden motives.
Mynplus1throwaway@reddit
Mainly:
Gardening
Camping
Ham radio & meshtastic type stuff
Foraging
Hunting
Datahoarding
Food preservation for camping
Welding
Guns & reloading
Lesser so:
Climbing
Sailing
Machining
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Datahording? I’ve been a datahorder all this time without knowing it had a name!
Mynplus1throwaway@reddit
DVDs will keep morale high when the Internet finally dies or the the of the world takes a while
8Deer-JaguarClaw@reddit
Gardening and food preservation, for starters. Although I have to admit my fear of impending collapse partially drove both of those interests...that and a desire to relearn what my grandparents knew as daily reality.
I've been doing hobby electronics for almost 20 years now, and that might be handy beyond just fun stuff one of these days.
And like you, I read a lot of doomer fiction (and non-fiction), with a focus on works that are at least semi-realistic.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Agreed - I like books that at the very least feel plausible, where I can at least visualize myself in the story, and wonder what I would do if faced with those choices.
GoalHistorical6867@reddit
The Foxfire books.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
I love these!
AB-1987@reddit
I‘m extremely interested in what I would call historical housekeeping, including how to build and produce everything from scratch (i.e. not only sewing clothes, but how to spin and dye and weave and knit, how to run a historical farm including crop rotation etc, how to build and use use i.e. water wheels, historical medicine, really anything that would help to build a world from scratch to about 1900 level). Have always been interested in that and have acquired lots of niche knowledge in things I can’t talk about with anyone in real life (I mean isn’t it interesting how to build a kiln and produce lye?).
3orangelove@reddit
Historical housekeeping sounds fascinating. Have you considered a vlog/YouTube channel? 🙂
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
I’ll second that - this would make an awesome YouTube channel, podcast, etc!
stonetime10@reddit
I’m a big fan of post apocalyptic/speculative/dystopian fiction as well. Do you have any favourites?
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Hi! I have so many favorites (named several in my original post) but just realized I left out two of my top picks: The Dog Stars (I think about this one all the time), and Earth Abides! What about you?
stonetime10@reddit
Ha sorry. I’m an idiot, see you listed some of those. Agreed with a lot of your picks, especially the Road and the Passage. Also like 1984, Parable of the Sower/Talents, the Stand to name a few more. I also like to listen to pulpy “trash” style on audiobook. Just listed to a fun series called Slow burn and got halfway through the Coming Home series which was written by a prepper and is very prepper lifestyle heavy. It started strong but tailed off pretty hard.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
I got into audiobooks big time a few years ago. Such a fantastic way to fill the more menial moments of your day (doing the dishes, laundry, etc) with entertainment!
8Deer-JaguarClaw@reddit
I've read a ton (good and bad), and here are a few I think are worth reading as a prepper:
Fiction:
Non-Fiction:
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Awesome list! You've given me a few leads on my next reads - I'd never heard of High Rise, sounds compelling!
8Deer-JaguarClaw@reddit
High Rise is a great "case study" on collapse, just played out on a micro scale (the confines of a single high-rise apartment building).
littlest_homo@reddit
I recently read Moon of the Crusted Snow by Waubgeshig Rice and enjoyed it. He has a sequel out too but I haven't got to that one yet
stonetime10@reddit
Nice. That’s on my list to read.
PhoebeMonster1066@reddit
SM Stirling, the Dies the Fire series and related
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Read these a few years ago, really great series!
miss_osmose@reddit
The Last One - Alexandra Oliva
The Last - Hanna Jameson
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Thanks! I'm taking note of these suggestions, I don't know those two. Always excited to find new PA reads :)
cyanescens_burn@reddit
The TV show Revolution is a good one with a decent cult following. The premise is the power goes out worldwide and no one knows why. They quickly jump to the main storyline which begins like 15 years after the blackout. I love it, and have rewatched like 6 times.
A journalist and author named Robert Evans did a fantastic essay before the pandemic about a potential second American civil war, and reads it himself in podcast format. It’s worth a listen and I was glued to it.
Here’s the trailer. I think they stream it on most big services for free. It’s the first season of the show (they switched formats after that season).
https://www.iheart.com/podcast/105-it-could-happen-here-30717896/episode/the-second-american-civil-war-30751081/
When you finish that, he did a speculative sci-fi/dystopian book and read that as a series of podcast episodes as well. It’s called After the Revolution. Recommend the civil war one first.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Downloaded, thank you! I love podcasts, looking forward to listening to this while walking my dog in the mornings.
stonetime10@reddit
Ok cool thanks. I always wondered about that show. Premise sounds great but I heard it got cancelled?
cplforlife@reddit
I dont know how useful it'll be.
But god damn do I love rockclimbing. Weather dependant im on the the cliffs every week.
I know knots better than people know how to do basic life functions. I can rope rescue from pretty much anywhere. If I needed to lift a car. With an 80m rope, and a couple carabiners. I could.
Keeps you in shape. Keeps you sharp, and its fun as heck.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
It’s definitely something that if needed, could be a real lifesaver. I read a post-apocalyptic book one time where a character had to rappel down from a chairlift at a ski resort after an EMP. You’d probably be the person to figure that out!
joojich@reddit
What book? Interested in more of your post apocalyptic fiction recs, I love the ones you mentioned!
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
This was one of Kyla Stone’s Edge of Collapse novels - the first one I think. Disclaimer: I know Kyla from hanging out with her from a few author conventions. She’s awesome, and a kick ass writer to boot!
Pando5280@reddit
I keep my repelling gear in my 4th story condo in case theres a fire. Love the mental physical and spiritual aspects of climbing. Truly one of the most efficient ways to stay in shape.
cplforlife@reddit
I had a kick ass moment of rappelling the other day, which was completely unnecessary, unsafe, but fantastic.
2nd floor window to get onto the correct side of a gate to unlock it. Used the carabiner my car keys are on and an industrial extention cord.
Secured the extention cord to a 2" pipe in a bathroom with a bowline, tied a munter, clipped to my leather belt, which is admitted pretty hardy. Repelled to the vehicle park and unlocked the gate so I could go home early and not wait an hour for keys. It was stupid, but felt awesome.
Pando5280@reddit
Batman style. I have an old search and rescue book that shows all the old knots and ways to use basic gear. Amazing whats possible with a sturdy belt, good cordage and a carbiner.
CapGirl80@reddit
Name of book please?
Pando5280@reddit
Wilderness Search and Rescue by Tim Setnicka. First published in 1980.
SnooKiwis2161@reddit
Knots are a wildly underrated skill but I found I got more familiar with them for sailing reasons.
PeanyButter@reddit
Seriously. I've gotten acclimated with them from tree climbing. It's very easy to have some rope on hand but if you dont know a single knot, it's either useless or a danger.
You could easily get your car out of a ditch with a rope, a pulley block, some knot knowledge and a winch or another car.
Michaelalayla@reddit
I just picked up a book at the thrift store, "Useful Knots", and they're proving very useful for fly fishing, weaving, and general farming tasks. You're right - very underrated skill.
Vegetable_Log_3837@reddit
I love this. One of my potential bug out spots (that I can walk to from my house) is rope access only. Good luck finding it without climbing gear.
I’m also pretty good at building and flying drones and RC planes with no GPS, so I’ve got surveillance covered too.
HaveaTomCollins@reddit
Ham radio. It’s fun! Also, camping.
Writing_is_Bleeding@reddit
Home brewing. *thumbs up
Undeaded1@reddit
This might sound crazy... but yardsales. Going to them, having them, and have turned it into a side business flipping on eBay. Similar to the ultralight hiking experience you had, it forced me to analyze goods, evaluate quality of goods. Separate nostalgia, from quality, from demand.
Side benefit, it's amazing how much preparedness supplies I have picked up at yardsales. Everything from cases of MREs, lifestyles, large frame packs, great quality knives, fixed and folded. Tools, how to and repair manuals. Even came across a few firearms and ammo galore.
ProofRip9827@reddit
I've been cooking since I was a kid. Also been gardening and getting into radio stuff like gmrs and ham radio
BayouGal@reddit
I also love Lucifer’s Hammer! Station Eleven is also great. I hoard books on how to do things. Have a whole set of Encyclopedia Brittanica. I’m a Master Gardener, so grow things. This year will be learning to can. Getting chickens & rabbits this summer. Stockpiled coffee beans, booze, chocolate & ammo for possible future barter situations. Got a compound bow for Christmas, so am learning to use that!
We also moved away from the city, practically to the end of civilization, but it feels nice to be away from big population areas.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
I also hoard know-how books! My houseguests are always perplexed by my library contents. And I’m a fellow compound bow owner (along with a traditional recurve) - archery is so much fun. It’s the bowling of the forest!
NerfEveryoneElse@reddit
Nothing more important than the skills to obtain food and water. Gardening, foraging, compost, collect underground/river/rain water and purify them. Put up a food garden/forest and try to get as little outside input as possible. Identify wild food sources in your area. Also hunting if allowed.
Second is social skill, get out and meet ppl with similar interest, know them so you can have trusty friends when you need them. Especially those with high skills taht you will not likely to master by yourself, like a doctor if you are not one.
BluejayDifferent9388@reddit
I garden, forage, and work on my pond that has a ton of native fish and aquatic plants
littlest_homo@reddit
Probably seems obvious but I've taken a lot more interest in geopolitics and reading books that study geopolitical history. Topics like social collapse, economics, psychology, sociology to help me recognize patterns and hopefully be able to shorten the list of possible outcomes for a given scenario.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
That’s a great one, especially given how history always repeats itself. Lots to be learned from how other civilizations crumbled.
La-Tama@reddit
Also from historical know-how. I'm a medieval reconstructionist and I learned so many things from this hobby. Learning how to start a fire with a striker and a flint, cooking over an open fire, shearing a sheep, sorting and spinning wool, sewing and mending clothing by hand, shooting with a crossbow (amazing!), house building and roof thatching, and so much more.
Not everything has a current days application but damn, reenacting camps do teach you resilience, community and... grit. Let's be honest, not everyone can go several days to a full week without basic hygiene and it does take a toll on your mental health in the beginning.
razorthick_@reddit
Based on all your reading, make a prediction about how the USA collapses, the effects on the rest of the world and what comes after.
littlest_homo@reddit
Well I had said to myself before this latest election that if Trump won there would be no hope of doing enough about climate change to mitigate the cascade that would lead to agricultural collapse, and so far he's done nothing to make me doubt that I was correct.
Otherwise, to me it looks like either civil war or a protracted collapse from a combination of the internal contradictions of an extremely capitalist system and the concurrent rise of fascist extremism. The rest of the world will probably continue to do what they've been doing; divest from the sinking ship that is the USA; China and India are poised to be the new dominant global trading partners although I think with India that's coinciding with environmental issues that will render the subcontinent uninhabitable by humans in the next 100 years or so.
asdevotee@reddit
Idk if it’s allowed but do you have any recommendations for the books?
littlest_homo@reddit
Value(s) by Mark Carney, some of it is pretty dry economics stuff I don't always understand, but it has some good analysis of global events like the 2008 crash and covid.
How minds change by David McRaney, and The Righteous Mind by Jonathan Haidt. Each looks at why and how people can hold such distant opinions and how that's reflected in culture and society.
Collapse by Jared Diamond takes a more anthropological approach to examine past societies and why they no longer exist
karebear66@reddit
Vegetable gardening, camping, fishing, and advanced first aid/CPR.
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AntOk4073@reddit
I wouldn't call it a hobby but being poor growing up helped a lot with prepping skills.
-home maintainance and DIY projects with left overs and salvage
-automotive and small engine repair
-camping for vacations
-bulk storage
Learning self sufficiency goes a long way to surviving in extreme conditions.
rogers6699@reddit
People are always complementing me on being a half-asses Jack of all trades and they all assume I just love to work non stop on projects….truth of the mater is i simply can’t afford to pay someone when something breaks so i learn how to fix it. 🤷♂️ it’s simply driven out of necessity
charlotteRain@reddit
I tried explaining this to my wife once. Growing up poor sucks but there are some benefits.
We didn't hire a roofer because the roof leaked, we put up a tarp and then patched it when we could get shingles. Shower started leaking, there will be some ugly soldering but it probably won't leak for a while.
Alternator going out? Hit it until you can buy a new one and replace it. Starter? You can usually jump it with a screwdriver.
First thing I built after moving to our house was a chair for outside. It's heavy and ugly but it cost me nothing but time because I used scraps from when I took down the very depressing (like the size of a dog house) turkey coop.
Puzzled-Sundae-3089@reddit
My husband and I have this chat a lot. He always had enough growing up, we lived in hotels and cars. The ice storm prep- he just couldn’t get it. Not the same way. One of the few times I was grateful for my upbringing.
AntOk4073@reddit
-jump it with a screw driver-
That brings back memories. Poverty also leads to creativity.
Kilroy1007@reddit
"If it's stupid but it works, it ain't stupid."
--Rule #1
EastTyne1191@reddit
Being poor helped me in that I can make food with whatever weird shit is in my pantry. I grew up surviving on whatever we could get from the food bank, I can make a meal from shelf-stable food and stretch it if need be.
Kilroy1007@reddit
Yeah, living in small spaces and moving constantly teaches you how to pack small or make it small. Extra set of clothes/thermals/rain gear for your go bag but you hate the bulk? Vacuum bags. Extra points for the waterproofing and pest control it provides.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Great tip! I feel like you'd also fit into nicely over at /onebag (one of my favorite subreddits).
SprawlValkyrie@reddit
Yeah this thread has me like hobbies? Most of this is basic hillbilly daily life activities I learned from watching my family. Over the years I've added to my knowledge base, sure, but I never looked at any of it as a hobby. I never had hobbies, I had chores, lol.
Rich people had hobbies: things like skiing, traveling, dance, piano lessons. Stuff that was far, far out of reach for me. I used to be ashamed of how we lived, but now I'd give anything to work beside my great grandparents one last time.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
That was a really touching reply. I think about my grandparents a lot too, remembering how skilled they were in so many things we've mostly forgotten about today.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Totally agree. I forget where I saw this, but there was one post a while back where somebody said “practice being poor” as being a great way to build resilience and preparedness.
Astroloan@reddit
I believe the difference between "prepping" and (actual) "preparedness" is:
a) Planning to be "unexpectedly camping"
vs
b) Planning to be unexpectedly homeless.
AntOk4073@reddit
Yeah as far as disaster prep I like to have nice stuff like powerbanks and climate control. But if there is something major that requires long term survival on limited resources learning self sufficiency is important. Also community, multiple people that are good at lots of things is better than one person who is great at everything.
Guy-Fawks-Mask@reddit
Emergency medicine (wfr/wemt), rock climbing, offroading, hunting, farming, ranching, homesteading, butchery, bushcraft, cyber security, electronics, gunsmithing, lockpicking, sewing/tailoring, cobblering (shoe repair), horseback riding, foreign language, engineering, carpentry, welding, automotive repair, sustainable energy, nutrition, physical fitness, and lots more I’m not able to recall right now
Captainfatfoot@reddit
Tree-marking for work has meant navigating through forests off-trail without cell service. Definitely a skill I’ve improved at through my job
Bradical22@reddit
No one mentioning exercise?
cicada-ghost@reddit
I feel like sewing, textile repair, knitting, weaving, making patterns and clothes in general is not talked about nearly enough. It's essential, useful in non-emergency everyday life, and mostly ignored by the majority of men in this hobby.
I also enjoy low-tech pottery, gardening, learning languages and swimming. As others have said, exercise in general is useful whenever.
randomusername1919@reddit
Gardening along with food preservation such as canning your summer tomatoes for later, drying the apples that are everywhere in the fall, planting and drying herbs so you can have actual flavor in your food. Few people know how to preserve their own food anymore other than to throw it into the freezer. You can even can meat safely, as long as you follow the right process (pressure canning).
Still-Persimmon-2652@reddit
Farming!
CanadaFootyFan@reddit
Growing fruit and nut trees. Admittedly it may be more of an “overlap” issue than an “adjacent” one but I mainly grow them for fun. But it does t hurt that I am constantly building up a perennial, permanent food supply in case I need to buy-in and or the SHTF.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Growing nut trees is a great idea for caloric density; what nuts do you grow? I'm in Quebec, I was just wondering what nut trees would grow well here.
CanadaFootyFan@reddit
It depends on your zone (Quebec probably spans zones 3-6). I am in PEI in an area straddling zones 5 and 6 and I am growing hazels, butternut, buartnut, walnut, black walnut, northern pecan, and shag bark and shell bark hickory. Many were grown from seed and have not yet produced so the experiment is ongoing but all have survived multiple winters.
Check out Grimo nut nursery in Ontario. They sell tons of varieties and seeds in the fall. If you have the time to wait I would def recommend putting in a good seed order.
My one piece of advice is to splurge and buy at least a few grafted trees (of named varieties) if you can afford it. I bought seedlings in many cases or planted seeds but the delays in producing nuts is fairly long. Grafted trees produce more quickly - plus you are assured of quality nuts if you have limited space (and thus have to make the most of it).
bikesandtacos@reddit
Live fire cooking. A lot of people can cook. Not many can cook over open flames of a wood fire in the rain for large groups of people.
kittystudies@reddit
Big fan of navigating with nothing but a compass! I’m getting better at navigation and wayfinding completely with just the sun/ stars as well. Also I’m into hiking and backpacking, as well as teaching myself how to do some field first aid, I recently got cpr certified. I really want to get into more “community prepping”, and find like minding people to build a garden/ small homestead near each other.
floridacyclist@reddit
Ham radio, blacksmithing, bicycle touring,. Pretty good at fixing most stuff
only-uuuu@reddit
Data hoarding. You never know when you might need offline Wikipedia, survival manuals, or just games to not die of boredom
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Totally agree. My Kindle (and backup) has a ridiculous amount of content. But how do you hoard Youtube videos? I didn't even realize they were downloadable.
only-uuuu@reddit
I used [Open Video Downloader](https://github.com/jely2002/youtube-dl-gui/releases/tag/app-v3.2.0)!
Opportunity_Massive@reddit
Haha I do this too
Kalahan7@reddit
Gardening, ham radio (like actually trying to pick up long distange signals and configuring antennas, not just buyng radios), and I took a full 40 hour first aid course.
I'm always looking to learn more skills. I would especially like to learn more homesteading stuff like learning how to make honey, butcher animals, make flour, basic hand-tool woodworking and stuff, but it's hard to find courses that teach you this.
ShrodingersArmadillo@reddit
I like to make things, especially recreations of old machines and farm tools.
For example I've built a few functional breast plows.
turtlepower22@reddit
Foraging, gardening, birding, finding commonality with people that I don't inherently have much in common with.
No-Feed-1999@reddit
Im studying herbal medicine
Steelcitysuccubus@reddit
Home wine making, sewing, gardening
Old-Sprinkles3135@reddit
Gardening and foodscaping my yard.
occularvixen@reddit
Gardening, sewing, I have a medical career and am well stocked in supplies. Preserving the food I grow, growing medicinals now.
Gojo-Babe@reddit
I’ve been delving into gardening. I’ve got beds, grow lights, seed starting supplies, planters, and seeds. I’ve also got a composting system set up that includes Bokashi and a soil factory filled with worms and black soldier fly larvae. I’ve even been experimenting with growing mushrooms outdoors and have had a bit of success
Docautrisim2@reddit
We’ve gardened, canned, and performed animal husbandry as hobbies for a few years. I also learned to homebrew, wines and meads mostly. I may keep some bees in the future if space and time allow. Also I’m a fairly decent shot with a few different weapon types. Additionally, I’m a paramedic so there is that skill set.
MakingItUpAsWeGoOk@reddit
Gardening, spinning, crocheting, sewing, cooking, basic carpentry and home repair. I went to nursing school. Did scouting as a kid and still enjoy camping as an adult so basic primitive cooking, fires, navigating, wilderness survival skills. I know how to cook on a woodstove.
I think my biggest skill is being able to make soap. Therefore washing hands.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Great examples. Soap making is something I know nothing about; I really need to learn more about this, it sounds like a really fun hobby with a huge practical upside!
MagicGuava12@reddit
Building community. Build others up around you and share resources, networking, etc. It repays in spades
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Very true, and often overlooked.
davidm2232@reddit
I have several. I really like repairing and installing generators. I've been playing with off grid solar for 20 years. I hunt. I target shoot. But my main one is working on cars. I have a huge collection of tools along with shelves of oils, coolant, fluids, filters, parts, etc. I can fix pretty much anything
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
I've always been envious of people who have that specific skill set - who can fix anything, tinker with any tool, figure out fixes when things break down. I wish somebody had taught me as a kid.
Redeye7777@reddit
Joined the volunteer firefighting department, meeting new people with almost same mindset. Skills with (heavy machines, first responder)
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
I'd love to do this when I retire.
Rick-burp-Sanchez@reddit
HIKING
Start doing your cardio, folks.
8Deer-JaguarClaw@reddit
Man, I really need to get into hiking. There are so many good trails near me...and I just got a set of hiking poles. Guess I'm all out of excuses.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Go for it! You won't regret it. Or maybe you will for short moments, but then you get to the top of the mountain (or by a crystal lake, or gorgeous forest, whatever), and it was all worth it.
Rick-burp-Sanchez@reddit
As the great sage and real-life cannibal Shia Lebeouf would say:
Just Do It!
cyanescens_burn@reddit
Seriously. There’s deaths when hunting season opens up because sedentary folks load up a bunch of gear and head out on long ass hikes. I’d imagine people would be faced with similar physical challenges in many disaster scenarios, and they should be taking care of their bodies like yesterday.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
100% agree. I’m all about cardio.
TeacherManCT@reddit
My wife can spin fiber, turning it into thread or yarn on an electric or manual wheel. She has three looms and more knitting needles than any knitter needs. She also knows how to pattern draft and sew clothing. So as long as we can access cotton, flax, hemp, or wool, she can keep people clothed.
I can knit (passably), and weave. I’d be her physical labor for things. I have a decent green thumb, can usually pack things with good space utilization.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Sounds like you married a good woman with extremely useful skills!
LaineyValley@reddit
I don't see that.anyone has mentioned ham radio? Although I don't know how to do it myself, I believe communication can be critical.
cyanescens_burn@reddit
Yup. I do a lot of very rural off-grid adventures, both solo and with groups of friends. We do basically survivalist glamping in super remote places. For example, one group of friends set up a 30’ wide movie screen in the desert (30 FEET wide!! it was so far out there and inhospitable that no one but our type of people were out there, no one was bothered, we’re conscientious and are hardcore LNT people, and the rangers that stopped by thought it was amazing), with 3 subwoofers and a sound system that could be used for a rave. They figured out the tech needed to make it 3D using some crazy glasses that I’d never seen.
Anyway, I’ve been in this community of folks for about 15 years, and each year I add new things to my set up (which doubles as disaster prep gear). After figuring out shelter, water, cooking, solar, entertainment, etc, I realized we were struggling with comms. We’d considered using flares to send signals to camps a mile or more away, but realized that could be mistaken as emergency signaling.
Some guys use CB, but I just bought my first plug and play meshtastic device (I hear meshcore is good too, but not as popular yet). This creates a mesh network that does not rely on cell towers, and the more users there are, the better network you get. I plan to buy some simple DIY kits in bulk and gift them to my friends that I want to communicate with on these adventures, but also in the event of a local disaster or emergency.
Some simple ones can connect to phones by Bluetooth, and allow you to text others on the app which looks kind of like the Signal app, but again, you are making your own network and do not need cell towers. You can also get nodes that act kind of like repeaters with a longer range, IIRC.
I’m also reading up on GMRS and HAM radio. I’ll start with GMRS since the license is easier to get, but plan to study for the HAM license.
Being able to get information during an emergency or disaster can mean life and death in some circumstances, or can mean a more comfortable and less stressful experience. For example, you can communicate with people and find they have something you need, and your group has something they need, and you can gift swap. Plus you can keep up with weather, news (from other radio nerds), updates on gov aid (or god forbid gov violence or shakedowns (like them stealing your food and supplies) if you live in a place with a shitty, power hungry leadership that decides it doesn’t like your type of people).
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Wow, so much for me to research from this reply. Comms is definitely my weakest link in my preparedness plans - I'd love to know more about meshstatic devices, that sounds fascinating. BTW, "survival glamping" sounds amazing. That should almost be a business venture. I'd definitely sign up for a weekend of survival glamping :)
Motorcyclegrrl@reddit
Get involved. It's a great hobby. Not expensive to get started. You can start for $100 in the US. Can be expensive later if you want to buy expensive equipment.
DM me if you want to know more about getting started.
AsteriAcres@reddit
Basket weaving, fiber spinning, knitting, woodworking (baby), foraging & plant id, gardening heirloom varieties, seed saving, preserving & dehydrating, permaculture, and those are off the top of my head.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Dehydrating is on the top of my next skills to acquire - blends in nicely with backpacking/camping also!
xamott@reddit
Life long martial artist. Muay Thai with some JJ.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Totally agree! Long time martial artist also (Systema and JiuJitsu). Having a skilled self defense teacherr in a small resilience community would be invaluable.
JRHLowdown3@reddit
BJJ and Systema. Systema works more of the stuff BJJ lacks- working against multiple people, working against and with knives, sticks and handguns. More health related also with the breathing and relaxation/working without undue tension in the body, etc.
grandmaratwings@reddit
Canning, dehydrating, soap making, bread making, motorcycle camping, all of the maintenance and renovating on the house ourselves, sewing, quilting, sausage making, rendering fats, rendering beeswax from wax caps,,, I’m 50 and I do everything as low-tech, hand powered as possible. And it just gets worse every year. ‘How can I make this with the most locally sourced stuff possible’. It’s insane. But it’s so much fun.
Community is a big point too though. I get the raw materials from friends who have livestock and farms. I process it and trade the finished product for raw material. A fair amount of barter goes on around here. Not with any strict trade-value. Just a phone call about ‘hey, do you have X? I’ve got extra Z’.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Awesome. I wish I had a neighbor like you to learn from!
nanneryeeter@reddit
Nearly all of my hobbies are. I am sort of an accidental prepper.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
I guess many of us sort of stumble into this lifestyle, right?
nanneryeeter@reddit
Possibly who knows. Maybe I'm schizophrenic.
JoyKil01@reddit
I’m a big fan of “you survive with community”, so for me, I pretty much know all my neighbors and their phone numbers in the first few weeks of moving into a new place.
It’s come in handy during “prep for Tuesday” scenarios and general community-building.
A good example is when my neighbor and I were stuck on our rural hill for 5 days in an April snowstorm with no power and no plowing (trees and power lines down across the town as well as on our small road).
We were starting to run out of generator fuel and I was able to text another neighbor (as the crow flies) who was able to drive into town, and they dropped us off a few cans of gas that we lugged up our hill.
I only knew that neighbor because I’m the kind of person who pulls over to say hi to folks walking down the street! Check in with each other now and then and offer a hand around their property—it pays in dividends.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Love this. Totally agree: community-based resilience is one of the most underappreciated preparedness approaches one can invest in.
Motorcyclegrrl@reddit
Best Comment. People skills are the most important skills. If you don't have what you need your network might. You might have something they need. Community.
Pleural_Effusion@reddit
Beekeeping. Knitting/weaving. Childcare/teaching skills to kids (and adults). But most of all? Sitting on my front steps (I live in Philly) and talking to my neighbors. It’s not perfect, but I now know soooo much more about who has what skills/knowledge, and my neighbors know what I can offer. Community is resilience.
natiusj@reddit
Guns
ChrisLS8@reddit
Hunting, shooting, map reading/land nav, comms, canning/food preservation (salted curing), canning etc.
NWYthesearelocalboys@reddit
Gardening, fush pond, aquaponics, camping and hunting.
DIY home repairs and projects, vehicle,/boat/atv repairs.
Remarkable-Ad5487@reddit
So many…. Gardening, pickling, canning, knitting, mending, collecting primitive weaponry (black powder guns, cannons) as well as making our own ammunition and dye casts for said weaponry.
PorcelainFD@reddit
Hiking, camping, gardening….
Direct_Word6407@reddit
Hiking. Helps keep in shape plus it is essentially free, minus gas.
CraftsyDad@reddit
Beekeeping!
Remarkable_Ad5011@reddit
Mechanic’n. Being able to fix stuff will be valuable.
bbaigs@reddit
Trades skill building. My husband and I do our own renovations specifically to learn how to do everything so we a) know how b) save money c) dont have to wait on/depend on anyone else.
deleted_by_reddit@reddit
[removed]
preppers-ModTeam@reddit
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Elandycamino@reddit
Hunting, fishing, repairing everything from appliances, small engines, electronics, cars, and antique restoration, and collecting. I buy or find the old stuff that has lasted over 100 years learn how it works and use it.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
That’s a super cool idea - collecting and learning about antiques that might be repurposed in an emergency situation. Love it!
Elandycamino@reddit
I'll watch videos of old survival equipment, or just every day objects and if I find it intriguing or unique and might be able to use it or find one cheap or broken one I will get one. There is tons of stuff I have acquired from Coleman GI or camp stoves, and lanterns to a butter churn, or CB radios, or 1930s shortwave radios. Old shaving kits, Crosley Icy Ball, etc learn the old ways of doing things and you will go far.
SnooPeppers2417@reddit
Almost all of my pass times are “prepped-adjacent”.
Hunting, fishing, foraging, fur trapping, gardening, bee keeping, ham radio, reading, puzzles…
I guess reading and doing puzzles don’t have a lot to do with “prepping”, but I know I’ll be doing a lot of both during SHTF situations, so I guess I am training.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Totally. Board games, puzzles, colouring books, novels… all of these would be invaluable in a prolonged disaster (when Netflix and Reddit goes down!).
schmeillionaire@reddit
Great post! After backpacking I realized that the saying ounces = pounds and pounds = pain is legit and made me reconfigure my get home bag as well. My answer to your post is not really my hobby but Im fortunate enough that my career has lead to me having a accumulated alot of tools and the knowledge to use them. My past two employers hired me as a welder but have provided me with alot of training as a mechanic. Im moving into a position where I'll be doing line boring and heavy equipment repair in the field. Ive been able to use these skills to do my own work on my vehicles and family members where as in the past I would've been strapped for cash when a repair came up. Also if you enjoyed Lucifers Hammer which made me want to buy an International Travel-all lol I suggest you read Alas Babylon.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Awesome reply! Your skill set is actually super impressive. And yes, I also did the same backpacking triage to my go bag. Pretty useful crossover skill! Great suggestion for Alas Babylon - I read that many years ago (loved it!), def due for a re-read!
67_fire_chicken@reddit
You mean like training in mortal combat? 🪓☠️🔪
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
lol… as a martial arts aficionado, I can’t disagree.
BasketBackground5569@reddit
I like yours!
curious_grizzly_@reddit
Bushcraft, and was the the Boy Scouts for 20+ years as a scout, then later as scoutmaster and merit badge counselor
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Ex boy-scout here also. Definitely one of the formative ingredients of my youth that got me into wilderness skills, and eventually preparedness.
cyanescens_burn@reddit
Also an Eagle Scout. This might be obvious to some, but sound way out there to others, but Burning Man can be good post-crumbling preparation.
We set up what is essentially a fancy refugee camp in a very inhospitable desert, and need to have everything we need to survive for close to two weeks, and extra in case it rains (the playa surface turns into wet clay which you can’t drive on, so you have to wait until it dries before you can leave). There’s no vendors there to buy food from.
We need to build shade structures and camps that can survive 70-90mph winds, dust storms, rain, etc. Back ten years ago there was little to no cell service there, so we needed to figure out alternatives for comms.
The super rich that go can bypass a lot of this by paying to have someone else deal with it, but the vast majority need to figure it out on their own. Many people organize into “camps” and work to solve these issues in teams, that can be from 2-400 people. Some camps organize into “villages” made of multiple camps. Many have been fine tuning this for 5-40 years.
Some even joke that the whole thing is a gov program to train people for a collapse, and to develop and test organizational systems, tech, emergency architecture (like portable and modular shade structure, showers, toilets, shelters), and so on.
There’s some groups I’m involved with that go to that same desert and set up smaller camps (100-200 people total made up by camps of 2-10 people each) when burning man is not happening. That’s even more survivalist practice, because everything is truly on us to work out (there’s no bathrooms there, and it’s illegal to dig pit latrines, no medical tent, etc).
One of the lead guys at the bureau of land management (US BLM) did an interview after his first year of supervising that land and seeing what we do out there, and he said that as an ex military guy he was blown away by our logistics, planning, organization, and how almost all labor is volunteers on top of it all. I’ve gotten to talk to some other BLM officers out there over the years, and they think it’s pretty damn impressive what we make happen.
Sure, there’s some unreliable folks that go just for drugs and sex; but they are easy to steer clear of (though you might be tempted by them to get laid now and then). It’s not too hard to find the doers and organizers, and lean into the prepper/survivalist, builder, maker, off-grid tech/comm/solar/welding/carpentry/electrical systems/etc people and ask them to be part of the team and learn some skills.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
That's super interesting! You've got me thinking now, one of my old roommates has been going to Burning Man for like 20 years. Maybe I should tag along to get a sense of it. I never considered it under the preparedness training optic, but this is such an astute way of looking at this. Exactly the type of response I was hoping for... thank you!
deathcabforkitty@reddit
Knitting
Achnback@reddit
Gardening and reloading
hobocat76@reddit
I do some small electronic repair with soldering and the like. Not a super useful thing, but can likely come in handy with the right circumstance.
charliedog1965@reddit
Foraging, hiking, camping, caving, rappelling
ecbrnc@reddit
Upcycling. I'm big on not letting textiles go to waste, so I at a minimum shred them up for stuffing, but I do lots of things. For example, if my daughter's leggings get a hole in them, the material isn't great for sewing, but I'll cut rings for hair ties out of the legs before scrapping the rest
11systems11@reddit
Solar. Electronics repair. Home repairs. Cooking. Small garden.
kellsdeep@reddit
Primitive camping. I have a buggout mini Van. I could survive indefinitely out of the thing. Hopefully the roads are still drivable when shtf.
roberttheiii@reddit
Doing stuff. Home plumbing and electrical repair. Build a shed. Race a sailboat. Go hunting. Go camping. Do your own car maintenance and repair.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Race a sailboat - now that’s super interesting. Exactly the kind of answer I was hoping for, as it’s not something you would think of for preparedness, but could actually be incredibly useful.
martin_xs6@reddit
In addition to racing, doing overnight trips on a sailboat is really good prep. There's the sailing part, but most bigger boats have a lot of systems that are good to know about for emergencies. Like generators, battery banks, water storage+filtration, solar (sometimes), etc. When you're sailing a long way you have to depend on them like you would if SHTF.
mofukkinbreadcrumbz@reddit
My wife and I have been offshore racing for a few years and run our own program now. The ability to plan and execute complex tasks with other people is also huge. Same with the ability to plan for disaster and take the necessary steps to protect yourself as best you can. Being able to read the weather just from looking around is also probably an underrated benefit.
Really, every 3+ day race sort of is a practice run for a SHTF moment. You have to trust others with watch, things break and you have to fix it, weather changes, you compete against others for resources, you don’t have something you need, contingencies fall through, accidents happen, medical needs arise, food and water are planned, but usually have to somewhat be rationed, interpersonal issues arise, sleep deprivation hits. The whole sport is full of masochists that seem to hate having money, but also want to do literally everything themselves.
Galaxaura@reddit
exactly. Years back my husband and I had a small Highlander we would race on a lake. For our honeymoon we went out to San Diego to get certified for Ocean sailing on a larger 36 foot boat.
We lived on it for a week and every day thw owner would come about aboard and show us the ropes. hah. get it.
ku8475@reddit
Another way to say this is being a hobbyist. There some of us that are compulsive learners/hobbyists. We see a skill or a task others are doing and we have to learn it to understand it. We get fixated on it to the point where it consumes our nights until we get to the point where we understand it well enough to accomplish the fundamentals.
While this is a financial nightmare, it's fantastic for being prepared. Also not great if you lack the skill to sell things used.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Wow, it’s like you read my mind in your response. My wife is always perplexed at my ever-evolving mini-obsessions, where I suddenly decide to plunge all the way into some new thing, hobby, learning, etc, and lose sleep over it for a few months until I pick up something new. Glad to know there’s a tribe for me of like minded souls out there!
jake_robins@reddit
Underrated response. Being able to fix your own house is clutch. Add to that basic materials storage. I try to keep a small Home Depot at my house so I always have nails and screws and variously plumbing and electrical supplies etc.
We get hurricanes here and the roads are bad so if we get hit I may not be able to get to the store quickly.
atx78701@reddit
I do Brazilian jiu jitsu and did krav maga in the past
dadbodfat@reddit
Hunting, fishing, fasting, endurance training, strength training, fighting, marksmanship, mechanic skills, electronics
BookLuvr7@reddit
Cooking from scratch and a little foraging. Making bread, pasta, wine, vanilla, extracts, and cheese from basic ingredients and sharing with my neighbors.
I've made my neighbors fruit rolls out of the ground up fruit must strained out after making wine. I add tasty but edible medicinal flowers like elderflower to my wines to make them more healthy. But when SHTF, having a way to make ethyl alcohol could be very valuable.
Knotty-Bob@reddit
Gardening
Animal Husbandry & Butchery
Hunting & Fishing
Food preservation (canning, dehydration, curing, smoking)
Backpacking & Camping
Carpentry
Knotwork
RedSquirrelFtw@reddit
I'm a lot into computers/servers and self hosting and also battery backup systems to keep my racks online. Makes me a bit more self sufficient as far as access to my own data/tools etc. With the price of computer components now I've been thinking about the future of this hobby though. As my systems die or become too obsolete it will be harder to replace stuff as most computer hardware is no longer obtainable by consumers unless you are very rich. At minimum I will need to look at the viability of just downsizing my setup greatly.
Also bought an off grid property that I plan to develop, as I really want to eventually live off grid. I guess that's more or less the ultimate prepper move. I honestly don't really consider myself a huge prepper, I'm more of the mindset that I just want to live a livestyle where I rely as little as possible on stuff I have no control of, so it's basically a form of prepping in a way.
2tekno@reddit
Expertise in building, operating, and repairing fpv drones.
ResolutionMaterial81@reddit
Advanced Electronics Mechanical Electro-mechanical Micro-pneumatics Micro-hydraulics Micro-soldering Techniques Electronic Communications Digital Logic PLCs VFDs SCADA DCS Rigging Instrumentation (including hazardous gas sensors) Medical 1st Responder (Offshore & Industrial 1st Responder) + recent "Stop the Bleed" course
All of the above were courses I was paid to take, many on a volunteer basis. Many, many others as well.
07/02 FFL/SOT (manufactured/repaired/demonstrated/sold NFA items including machine guns)
Casting, Coating & Reloading Center (nice to have hundreds of thousands of rounds of components to manufacture ammunition...including .50 BMG)
Tactical Carbine/PCC Competitions
RSO (Firing Range...including instruction of new shooters)
Hiking/Deep Woods Exploring
NBC....but main interest is Radiological.
Gardening...but on the back burner for now.
Canning (Dry Pack mostly)
Breadmaking (from wheat berries I grind myself)
Pizza making (same)
Cooking
Carpentry
Home renovation
Education (of the generations following)
throwawaybsme@reddit
I'm an engineer that works on small electronics. I am also an avid gardener.
slickwillymerf@reddit
I’ve been looking into Meshcore and Meshtastic for offgrid comms. They’re extremely small-footprint radio comms. Meshcore offers AES-128 encryption. Could be an interesting side hobby for you. 🙂
Reelmccoys@reddit
Are there any resources you recommend for someone who wants to learn how to repair small electronics?
Michaelalayla@reddit
If your local library has a library of things, sometimes they'll have kits that teach stuff like this.
martin_xs6@reddit
Also an engineer. Goodwill is also a good place to get random electronics to tinker with. Have hacked together some fun stuff from garbage I find there.
throwawaybsme@reddit
Buy stuff on eBay or Craigslist and fix it.
Reelmccoys@reddit
Oh don’t worry I have lots of kids toys to practice on.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Small electronics repair could definitely be useful in a variety of scenarios.
CompetitiveFact9822@reddit
Does being good with my depression count? Lol
I tell myself all my hobbies (running, shooting, reading) build my background for prepping.
cyanescens_burn@reddit
You might get a kick out of this episode. Highly recommend the whole first season, which breaks down all manner of aspects in a potential second American civil war, but this one might be of particular interest to you. They get into the effect of conflicts on mental health, and it might surprise you.
https://www.iheart.com/podcast/105-it-could-happen-here-30717896/episode/the-good-side-of-the-second-30911546/
CompetitiveFact9822@reddit
Oh big fan. Day 1,type!
Dufusbroth@reddit
Self managing or navigating mental health and depression is 100% a survival skill for any scenario but even more so in a survival one. Loads of studies and examples of more positive outcomes in those situations when you can handle that too.
All those hobbies would be helpful- good on ya.
CompetitiveFact9822@reddit
For sure. I was being half facetious. But for real. Including keeping extra meds.
Hilaryspimple@reddit
Not a hobby I do but want to do, but absolutely cordage, basket weaving or flint mapping would be excellent hobbies
Pretty-Ad5348@reddit
I can chew gum and pat my head at the same time. Bonus: I'm double jointed
Perioqueen@reddit
Chickens and gardening
Express_Dog_8173@reddit
I am not a prepper, or prepper adjacent. This just showed up on my feed, most likely because constantly engage with rope, knots, and sewing subreddits, as well as my other shit. I just want to say how pleasant it is that so many of y’all are gardening. Thank you for your time.
MegC18@reddit
I can spin, weave(vertical and horizontal looms) , crochet, knit and have flirted with many other textile crafts like making nets and felting. I have spun with nettle fibres, flax, raw silk, as well as wool from sheep, goats, llama, and camel.
I grow many of my own vegetables and have recently tried dry stone walling.
As a (long time ago) qualified geologist, I could find water sources and mineral deposits if I had to.
Ambitions: try flint knapping and willow weaving.
Extreme_Map9543@reddit
Sailing. As a matter of fact my entire prepping plan is to sail my boat to a safe tropical paradise. Outfitted properly I could out wait any issue the world could ever have.
cyanescens_burn@reddit
I’m jealous. When I hear friends dreaming of going vanlife, I think of going sailboatlife (is there an actual name for this?).
These student loans are like handcuffs though, even though I’m in a high demand, relatively ai-safe, and actually useful field (I’m not an anthropology or gender studies or modern arts PhD), so I don’t fit that stereotype of highly educated person with a useless degree whining about student loans, just from a working class family, couldn’t find work with decent pay without a masters degree, and felt I had to be the bullet.
Maybe one day, if this current recession that we as a society seem to be pretending isn’t a recession starts to turn around. But man, I got a bad feeling about this one. That straight closure in Iran has potentially to really fuck up the world.
Anyway, you’re living my dream buddy!
Storms would be my big concern though. Especially if NOAA and other atmospheric and meteorological data stops being transmitted. I guess pirates are also an issue (can you have guns onboard? How does that work if you are a legal gun owner in the US, but then use a Marina in a country that’s not allowed?). Then issues with people on the islands if they are in survival mode too, they might rob/kill you if they are really hard up.
Extreme_Map9543@reddit
You can do it too brother! You can bring guns on board, but it does cause some issues in certain countries. It’s a hot debated issue in the sailing world. I wouldn’t worry much about pirates. They are only in certain parts of the world, and you would go to those areas. You also don’t need to worry too much about storms either. Follow the proper seasons, and have a well founded and taken care of boat. People have sailed for a long time without good weather routing. And once you’re in the ocean it doesn’t matter anyway, whatever weather comes your way is what you’ve got.
Financially you can do it. Even with loans. You just gotta commit fully. Get a good old boat and learn to do 100% of work yourself. Buy a copy of “this old boat” from Don Casey. And “spurs boat guide to outing the cruising sailboat”. Just start reading and start dreaming dude. Then buy an old beater boat in the 30-36 foot range (which can be bought for almost nothing these days, the sailboat market is completely crashed)
Fit-Winter5363@reddit
Gardening as someone posted, is therapeutic and useful. I feel like I’m contributing to my health and wellbeing.
Salty-Gas-1172@reddit
Gardening, canning and preserving, shooting. I'm old enough I'll need to shelter in place in a disaster as much as possible. I won't be hiking through back country or anything like that. If I must evacuate we'd end up with some friends somewhere until we figure something else out.
Sullacuda@reddit
Fitness.
smc4414@reddit
Was a backpacker and off-road camper for decades before getting into prepping. Once I started to prep I was happy to discover the huge overlap in skills and gear….and the fitness
Soft_Ad_1095@reddit
Carpentry, Plumbing, welding, and a tiny bit of Electical knowledge. I also camp all the time in case i get stuck outside.
I wish i would of learned to hunt properly and unfortunately i have trouble stomcing butchering animals.
I might be fucked.
cyanescens_burn@reddit
Thoughts on welding off-grid? I’ve done some at burning man using a generator, so I’ve thought about this more than once, but I keep wondering what happens when fuel runs out.
I think we ran one off a trailer-sized solar rig last summer, so that really seems like the way to go for a prolonged crumbling of society situation. But I’d assume that solar set up was not cheap (it was the size of a pop up camper, maybe 15’ long).
Soft_Ad_1095@reddit
I think if you had the appropriate storage for solar power that could output the right voltage you would be able to weld. Otherwise you are pretty screwed without fuel given the powegrid goes down.
fascinatedinlife@reddit
Kickboxing for physical fitness and shooting as an additional skill. I also try to stay on top of garden work at home
Ryan_e3p@reddit
Aside from being an "influencer", I can't think of many things someone can do that wouldn't be useful or applicable.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Hmmm… how would an influencer work in a post apoc setting? Maybe you’d be the town cryer (is that what they were called?), or a nomadic messenger like in The Postman!
cyanescens_burn@reddit
I suppose it depends on your definition of influencer, but someone with working comms (meshtastic/meshcore, GMRS, HAM) could broadcast useful info to other settlements and encampments. But that’s more like journalist or reporter than the typical influencer.
Maybe they can be the town jester/fool if they are funny or like being humiliated for others enjoyment. Depending on the type of influencer they might have a skill, like if they are a home brewing influencer, they could brew and teach brewing. Or OF creators could be prostitutes or burlesque show ladies, maybe even honeypot-type intel assets.
But if they are just some idiot that seeks clout by causing drama, or streams video games but has no technical skills, yeah pretty useless.
Ryan_e3p@reddit
Trick question, they wouldn't.
Seppostralian@reddit
Backpacking, survival skills, also hoping to get some equipment and try getting into Ham Radio when I move this summer. Also very very into apocalyptic and/or dystopian fiction, especially that which includes focuses on the day-to-day survival challenges themselves.
JuniperJupiter4@reddit
I'm a forage and rockhound. I can identify most of both and their uses in my state.
Delgra@reddit
I’m in the PNW and have been wanting to get into both os these. Any book recommendations?
cyanescens_burn@reddit
I’ve been mushroom foraging for decades, and this is a good field guide for your region. I’ve spoken with Noah and been to some of his lectures and he knows his stuff:
Learn the deadly species inside and out first. Know them so well you can ID them in your dreams. Then decide on 2-3 edible species you want to learn, and learn their look-alike species, especially the toxic ones, and how to differentiate between them. That’ll set you on the right path.
Join your local mycological society and make friends.
https://namyco.org/reviews/mushrooms-of-cascadia-a-comprehensive-guide-to-fungi-of-the-pacific-northwest-by-noah-siegel-and-christian-schwarz/
Delgra@reddit
appreciate this breakdown. will order this title as well. 👍
fyrman8810@reddit
For the rockhounding, Nick Zentner on YouTube. He is a geology professor at Central Washington University in Ellensburg. He moved most of his lectures online in 2020.
Delgra@reddit
awesome! thanks for the recommendation!
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Very cool! I’d subscribe to your YouTube channel.
GridDown55@reddit
Winter tree identification.
alessaria@reddit
Leatherworking. In a sustained SHTF or TEOTWAWKI, things will need to be repaired/replaced with materials on hand. In my rural location, deer, elk, and moose are fairly easy to harvest, so that will be the material I am most likely to have access to. Also can be a good source of trade goods.
Independent-Food4084@reddit
Seems like lock picking could be a good skill to have. I've talked about it but not learned (yet).
KJHagen@reddit
Fishing, gardening, target shooting, and keeping up with current events. I enjoy processing firewood.
Routine_Awareness413@reddit
Boxing and shooting
french_toasty@reddit
I can run long distances
cyanescens_burn@reddit
I once heard a good argument for parkour being a great survival skill, especially in war or a really repressive gov.
Motorcyclegrrl@reddit
1 I am trying to build community. People skills.
2 My dad raised us to be independent. Gardening, fishing, hunting, repairs, diy, heating with wood, gathering firewood. I still do some of these things now and then.
3 iNaturalist . I take photos for scientists all over the world to use to study biodiversity. Great way to learn to recognize plants. My mom was a biology major also a librarian. So we got outside a lot. She would rattle off scientific names of plants and birds.
4 amateur/ham radio. I highly recommend it. In the US, you can started for $100. Study, license, test, hand held radio. Hams have an advanced communication network and technology that is way beyond what I can explain in this text. It's been developed for more than 100 years. They have emergency services groups and practice it too. I am very involved. I really been licensed for 3 years now and still learning. Electronic repair is next on my to do list. Also trans Continental communication. World wide contact.
5 needle crafts. Crochet. Sewing, leather sewing. Macrame'. Future goals Net making. Weaving. I want to learn to craft my own yarn and string. I never have been good at knitting. Shame, I love socks.
6 whittling. I am shocked how good to do with this hobby. I'm sure it can be practical and now I have knives that will last.
7 camping, dutch oven cooking.
8 I collect useful books. Better Homes and Gardens needle craft. Survival. How to guides. Firefox. Etc.
I want to learn to make my own alcohol but it's sadly illegal to have a still. Seems like it would be a huge help to have a steady supply of alcohol.
cyanescens_burn@reddit
If you live in the US, there was a recent challenge to the laws against home hobbyist stills so you should read up on those changes.
I’ve always wanted to tinker with small batches but like you don’t want to take that legal risk. I haven’t read up on the changes yet, but my algorithm picked up the headline very recently.
In the meantime, make a batch of kilju or really simple fruit wine (like apfelwein) or mead.
Fr33speechisdeAd@reddit
Like you said, hiking and camping are good. Coms is another. Maybe get your ham radio license? Also related to hiking is land navigation (orienteering) with a compass and map old school.
cyanescens_burn@reddit
If you are into comms, read up on meshtastic and GMRS radios too.
japhydean@reddit
Not sure if it qualifies as "prepper adjacent" but 3D printing.
StaticBrain-@reddit
Could be... Depends on what you make with it.
cyanescens_burn@reddit
They’ve made a big impact during the civil war in Myanmar. I personally am not willing to take the legal risks, but it’s a fascinating and surprising story.
https://www.iheart.com/podcast/1119-myanmar-printing-the-revo-289559181/
geekyreaderautie@reddit
Doing local C.E.R.T. trainings
cyanescens_burn@reddit
Some bigger cities call it NERT, just in case city dwellers are interested but can’t find CERT for their city.
CLPDX1@reddit
CERT training is fantastic.
Years before Covid, we had mock “mass casualty” prep training.
We had to learn how to do search and rescue, rate and treat trauma, set up a morgue, and get survivors to a waiting area.
When Covid hit. The design of the testing and vaccination areas were exactly the same as we had practiced.
fyrman8810@reddit
RV service has been my career for over 25 years. Acquiring and maintaining shelter with conditioned air (heat and AC) and a full kitchen with cooking and food storage is easy for me. That leads me to the next one, where to take that RV. (I’m in an apartment. Shelter in place may not be the best option in a given situation)
My tism is maps. I can sit and look at Google Maps for hours. I spend as much time on that app as I do social media.
I can get to almost any place you want to go in any manner you want to get there. Spokane to Seattle? You want freeway, two lane highway, gravel road, or hiking trail?
I find something that piques my curiosity on a map and I go there. Sometimes it’s in the most efficient way possible. Sometimes I take the least efficient route and take every backroad I can. I find all kinds of interesting places.
I know where the farms are. I know where to fish. I know where the animals are. I’ve found great areas to set up permanent residence in the middle of the forest that are defendable and sheltered from extreme weather. I know where to find the resources because I’ve already stumbled across them in my travels. I’ve even found old water driven electrical power plants in the middle of the forest, long abandoned but could be repaired and working again. Oh, clean water too.
Ninja_Wrangler@reddit
Sailing
BaldyCarrotTop@reddit
Camping. Most of my camping gear is also prepper gear.
Gardening. Besides traditional gardening I've experimented with vertical gardening, hydroponics, indoor and off season gardening. I also get experience with food preservation, and seed saving. I've been doing more research into perennial vegetables and genetically stable vegetables.
Technology. an odd one, but I have dabbled with offgrid data storage, communications, to name a few.
Forgiven4108@reddit
Hunting, fishing, foraging, gathering, fixing, first aid, animal husbandry, gardening…
I was about survival before it was cool.
beach_minion_78@reddit
Sewing (by hand), crochet. Seemes odd but when things are falling apart or need to create something wearable or useful by hand.
MAitkenhead@reddit
Actually put yourself in harm’s way to learn how you need to respond. Because the future will be a lot like that. The other skills for medium to long term survival are important, but if you fold the first time someone gets in your face and demands all your stuff, it won’t matter. TL:DR get into dangerous situations because that’s what the future looks like.
MrScowleyOwl@reddit
Permaculture and solar electric build skills. Oh, and carpentry, HVAC, pest control, etc.
Additional_Dish_694@reddit
I am obsessed with reloading ammunition. I like it more than shooting ammunition.
farmboy3000@reddit
Homebrewing, canning, food fermentation (kimchi, escabeche, giardiniera, miso,) etc...Also, I've repurposed my unused Corny kegs for fresh water storage.
spaisoflaif@reddit
running - being able to move myself 21 km in under two hours, but also it means i can metabolically support working with my body for long periods using my aerobic system, so I dont gas out snd and recover for the next day.
sprout92@reddit
Firearms, camping, and generally grew up outdoors so rafting, building fires, etc.
SunnySpot69@reddit
Gardening is my primary one.
Lesser ones in a way: canning. Cooking and baking.
dropkickoz@reddit
Amateur radio
Icelock@reddit
I farm Lion eggs.
hw999@reddit
3d printing, tool making, wood working, gardening, sewing, car repair, computer programming, self hosting, baking, flour making, canning.
Sh3rlock_Holmes@reddit
Exercise
nsmith043076@reddit
I garden from seeds. Just transplanted my tomato and pepper seedlings to bigger containers. We just made more space in the yard for 2 more berry bushes that will produce next yr.
Casiarius@reddit
A lot of people buy F1 hybrids from the big box store and consider themselves rugged homesteaders. I don't want to discourage them, but seed saving is likely to become a critical skill.
TheGanzor@reddit
Gardening. Welding. Electronics repair. Kiln work (pottery, annealing, charcoal). Forging. Raising crop animals. Fishing. Mushroom farming. Composting and vermiculture.
SelfSufficientHub@reddit
All my pursuits do I think.
I spend about 11 hours a week training Jiu Jitsu which covers fitness and self defence ✅
I garden and have spent time completely self sufficient building skills in animal husbandry, vegetable growing, preserving, butchering etc ✅
I have spent a lot of time recreationally fishing and own allot of gear ✅
I run foraging walks where I teach people to identify edible plants and fungi a few times a year ✅
I’m a general builder for a living. ✅
DogsAreOurFriends@reddit
Essentially, any trade or farm related activity would be helpful.
miss_osmose@reddit
An unexpected one has been Macramé. I feel like it has unlocked a new part of my brain. I have a completely new understanding of knots and could create a lot of useful things.
Motorcyclegrrl@reddit
Oooo, I got a kit to make Christmas ornaments. I love it. Macrame is definitely useful. All knot tying. So useful.
bananamancometh@reddit
Hmm I suppose trail running, hiking, backpacking, and camping are all adjacent.
Clay shooting and pistol competitions, also
Teckomando@reddit
I reload ammo. It's a form of meditation for me. Repetitive motions with a satisfying outcome. I shoot once a month with a group that just does defensive drills. I'm a crazy ham radio operator. I do SOTA (Summits on the Air) because my wife likes to hike and backpack. I started gardening. I love it. I train in Pekiti Tersia Kali and Martial Blades Concepts. I feel skills are slightly more important than supplies in prepping. Those are my hobbies. I consider them prepping adjacent.
chandleur_tribiani@reddit
Gardening and meshcore
llamadogmama@reddit
I live near several big lakes and have taken up bass fishing. Currently I throw them all back but if it became necessary for food I'd be set
NBKiller69@reddit
Depending on the nature of the disaster, electronics and mechanical repairs. In certain cases, those aren't particularly useful, but in others, being able to repair certain machines and electronics I feel might be very useful
enolaholmes23@reddit
I'm learning herbalism. I'm realizing if you do it right, herbs have the right compounds to strongly affect your body chemistry just like pharma meds do. Except you don't need a prescription, and you can grow a lot of them yourself.
leggomyeggle@reddit
I’m gonna start working out so I can carry my dog
V2BM@reddit
I adopted a dog last month and he’s just 25 pounds. I can pick him up easily - my previous dogs were 45 and 90 pounds and he’s so much easier. I love big dogs but feeding and bathing them is so different.
Delgra@reddit
https://fidoprotection.com/products/airlift-original-v2?country=US
on the spendy side for what it is but bomb proof. I carry one on longer hikes.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
How heavy is he? I actually bought a carry sling for my dog so I could carry him out in an emergency.
leggomyeggle@reddit
49lbs.
SoundOk4573@reddit
Look up large dog carry sling for sale. Think of a backpack, but it doesn't have a bag attached on the straps, it just has a harness for the dog.
leggomyeggle@reddit
lol. Her harness has saddle bags on the side, in hopes she can carry her weight. But she is, in fact, quite lazy and stubborn
Omniscient_1@reddit
Mine too lol
Mrz0mb1e@reddit
Data storage I currently have 2 and a half years worth of tv shows and movies waiting to be perused
Retro_Feniks@reddit
What's your set up like? I just have two hard drives full with folders, but I'm wondering what other people do for their post apocalyptic digital entertainment :)
Mrz0mb1e@reddit
I have 7x2tb 1x4tb and I just remember shows I liked or aka Claude what shows are good and download them then I use Jellyfin to stream them
only-uuuu@reddit
Fellow hoarder!!!
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
That’s actually brilliant.
Swimmer7777@reddit
Fishing. Hunting. But also knowing how to process the animals for eating or storing so to say.
grm3@reddit
I backpacked in college, and I think that it is probably the best hobby out there for those interested in wilderness survival and preps. And once you get the gear, backpacking trips are ready-made adventures. Just pay for gas and food. I was really into bushcraft stuff in high school, romanticized off-trail bushwhacking and thought on-trail stuff was easy without having done either. 5 days on trail changed my mind. ~15 miles a day, planning around water sources and camp sites, sleeping outside, etc.
I trout fish and bass fish. Mostly wading. Obviously ties into the wilderness survival thing, but you get comfortable navigating rivers, being wet, etc. I am skeptical of the little Altoid tin emergency fishing kits. If I think I might need a compact fishing kit for sustenance, I’m bringing a 4 piece spinning set-up or tenkara. And maybe a trot line.
I’m a brow belt in Brazilian jiu-jitsu. I’ve taken a few MMA, MT, and boxing classes. Being able to physically handle yourself is obviously useful.
SilverDarner@reddit
Acquiring and repairing books. I have a modest home library with all kinds of useful texts, plus a nice selection of classics, SF and fantasy.
stream_inspector@reddit
Camping
Playmakeup@reddit
I sew. Most of what I do is ballet costumes, but I’ve developed really strong design, construction and alteration skills.
Last time we had a freeze and couldn’t get faucet covers, I made one really quick from an old diaper pale liner and some padding from a meal delivery kit.
It’s the little skills that come in the most handy, though. Replacing a button, fixing a tear, darning a sock, etc are important to keep clothing functional.
Motor_Wasabi3127@reddit
Sewing
jacksraging_bileduct@reddit
I learned to pressure can food for long term shelf stable stuff, I can garden, fix a lot of stuff around the house, and really like shooting.
Many-Health-1673@reddit
Ranching/farming, hunting, long range shooting, working with my hands repairing tractors and vehicles, building sheds and barns, a lot of using chainsaws, etc.
I read a lot of fiction SHTF fiction novels. It does help make you think about possible scenarios.
slappy_mcslapenstein@reddit
I'm a nurse.
XRlagniappe@reddit
Ham radio
Powerful-Rip-3512@reddit
I´m pretty big into fishing.
Time_To_Rebuild@reddit
Gardening, Chickens, food preservation.
Potatoes and sunflowers, specifically.
But start planting perennials now. Berries, asparagus, fruit trees like pear and apple, and nut trees.
You technically could derive a nutritionally balanced diet from only potatoes, eggs, walnuts, kale and sunflower (plus iodized salt).
Fine-Mine-3281@reddit
I haven’t hunted or fished in 25+ years and now that I’m older & have more time I’ve taken up more outdoor pursuits like duck/goose hunting, trout & bass fishing, hiking, 4-wheeling & kayaking
I’d like to get into gardening & hobby farming but my wife isn’t the domestic type. She likes camping & the beach and such however.
Maybe when we’re about to retire I’ll get a garden and hobby farm 😉
fatcatleah@reddit
I used to make soap. With lye. I could easily do it again, since I still have all my supplies. But I'd need some oil, preferably olive oil, to start up.
yutsi_beans@reddit
I started training Muay Thai 2 months ago for self-defense.
Opportunity_Massive@reddit
I learned how to fish during Covid, and have kept it up as a main hobby. I think fishing is a good skill in a disaster situation. We live right by a river that goes to another river and some lakes, so it’s a useful skill where I live.
Counterboudd@reddit
Food preservation and gardening. We have a smallish garden and I make an effort every year to not let things go to waste so do a lot of canning and dehydrating and I think of it as practice for if things went really pear-shaped. Also foraging and herbal medicine. It’s nice to know I could find food sources in the wild and make some form of rudimentary medicine. I also do knitting and sewing, so having that level of construction skills could be useful one day. Also the stores of things I’ve accumulated from these hobbies has to be a start.
churchillguitar@reddit
Shooting & gardening. At least I’ll hopefully be able to scrounge up some food in the apocalypse. Woodworking, I’m pretty mechanically inclined and I feel like I could build and repair improvised fortifications.
Sadlemon9@reddit
I just like knowing how to preserve foods, knowing how to wax cheese or build a root cellar will always be handy when SHTF happens
funnysasquatch@reddit
Camping but only because it means I have plenty of lights on hand if we lose power & I have sleeping pads to throw on my car in case of hail.
Because the reality is if it’s more than a natural disaster like a tornado or earthquake where the government is still in tact - I doubt it’s a survivable event.
Pando5280@reddit
Almost all my hobbies have some practical application to healthy living and emergency preparedness. Some for physical health, some for food security, some for budget reduction and others for personal security. Its just a never-ending pursuit of creating a life that reduces the stress of navigating the world we live in.
sandinmybutttoo@reddit
Staying fit, learning different modes of transportation like sailing, participating in community emergency events where they teach you how to help others, making medicine from plants.
International_Ad2712@reddit
I just read the Parable of the Sower, and the most important thing to have in the book was water and a gun. So as a prepper in Southern California, water is one of my main concerns. We really need a decent well, but for now I’m using 275 gallon containers to create a water catchment system for garden/tree watering. Also planting nut trees this year. I’m working on long term sustainability and growing my own food
Skitzafranik@reddit
Basic first aid skills. Start by knowing and understanding how to ustilize everything in a basic kit, or improve said kit by adding personal essential first aid items which might fit your needs more .
Ok-Crazy30@reddit
The ability to shut off emotions and only use logic.
mro2352@reddit
Cooking from scratch, canning, reloading. That kinda thing
Skitzafranik@reddit
Hunting, weapons safety handling (if you’re a new novice) and target/ range shooting (ie. reading/understanding a scope)
It’s always good to be proficient now, than wait until post-SHTF and your playing ketchup
MobileAd8857@reddit
Gardening, canning, working on our house. I'm thinking about taking a small engine class.
canuckEnoch@reddit
Hunting, butchering, gardening, canning, cooking, baking, brewing, woodworking, metalworking, engine repair and maintenance, sewing…the list goes on. Not only useful if SHTF, but I enjoy doing stuff that yields a result. An added bonus is the time put in returns a better product at a cheaper price than store bought.
gottaeatnow@reddit
Running and lifting. I also enjoy backcountry camping and take a wilderness first aid class every two years. Will do wilderness first responder as soon as I have time.
Wise_Ad1751@reddit
Growing and storage of food . Shortwave radio may be only means of communication . Cheap and easy.
Bunnysniper44@reddit
Local volunteer groups: Medical Reserve Corp, Emergency Communications Team, Community Emergency Response Team, Search and Rescue.
Princessferfs@reddit
Lots and lots of gardening.
Electronic_Umpire445@reddit
Amateur Radio. Specifically know the emergency frequencies used by ARES/ RACES during emergencies and disasters in your area.
WiskeyUniformTango@reddit
Trailer camping.
WakingOwl1@reddit
I garden, I can spin, weave and sew, crochet and knit. I can butcher small animals and have some foraging skills.
BarryHalls@reddit
Gardening, hunting, fishing, shooting sports, gunsmithing, and most importantly READING.
I would like to do more automotive mechanical and home maintenance. I would like to do more of all of the above. Hours in the day, days in the workweek, so forth.
goldenshear@reddit
I sew, I’ve made all kinds of stuff over the last 20 years.
TurkDeerbit@reddit
Hunting, backpacking, gardening, raising chickens, and I’m a plumber
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Lots of skills there. And glad to meet a fellow backpacker in here!
TurkDeerbit@reddit
Backpacking teaches me a lot and keeps me in shape. Teaches me what I REALLY NEED, and what I don’t.
designsbyintegra@reddit
I play a lot of fallout.
In seriousness gardening, sewing, repairing things and various other odd things. Oh and I used to fish as well.
I was really lucky in that my dad was a low key prepper. We always had a large garden, he hunted, repaired everything, we always had spare water, flashlights, batteries.
Mom’s hobbies were gardening and textiles arts. Sewing, knitting, and weaving.
AcanthocephalaNo6236@reddit
Gardening, fishing, trapping, home repair, auto repair, exercising, ham radio, shooting. All things I enjoy doing and don’t do because it’s “prepping”.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Even better when you love doing these things, rather than just doing them out of obligation.
rubberghost333@reddit
LoRa - SDR. Comms with no wifi or cell towers.
andreisimo@reddit
Being social. Will be the most important skill when it matters.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
I think that’s probably very accurate.
ComfyMillionaire@reddit
I play Minecraft. I mean, I make stuff SAS style in the woods.
Cannonical718@reddit
Lock picking is one I picked up when (due to medical reasons) I was stuck at home for a good while. It's a fun but challenging hobby to pick up, and it could prove useful in emergencies.
Jolly-Start2542@reddit
Water purification. If you suddenly get worried about a serious breakdown in society. A hundred pounds barrel of shock chlorine can go along way for alot of things.
If there's panic at the grocery store go get some powdered chlorine.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Great tip! Also a good bartering supply to have on hand.
Xarro_Usros@reddit
Horse riding and archery -- although I suspect that, if the world gets that bad, I won't survive to that point!
More reasonably; walking and camping, I guess?
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
(Slaps himself in the face) - I actually forgot to mention these. Horseback riding and archery are two activities I also really enjoy!
insurgent29@reddit
Dirt biking
phishsamich@reddit
Cardio and weight lifting. Stuff matters little if you are not physically fit. Cool gear bro, can you hike miles while carrying it?
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Totally agree.
adhd_mechanic@reddit
A few years ago I got really into primitive camping, but specifically only camped at places that were only accessible by canoe (or something similar). I never particularly enjoyed hiking in and felt it was a little too limiting, so the canoe allowed me to haul in a few extra "creature comforts." I now live on a river that flows into a very large lake and am quite confident I could get my family and pets to safety with relative ease.
The other thing was just living smaller. Around that same time I started working on reducing consumption as well as waste. I had fruit trees and berries growing in my backyard and learned to can and make preserves simply because I didn't want to waste the food. I started making my own bread to reduce plastic waste, and was more mindful of packaging in general - to the point where I only set my trash out once a month at most.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Living by a river must be pretty sweet. I love canoe camping, but have never tried actual primitive camping.
brandoldme@reddit
Working out, hiking, backpacking, expanding first aid knowledge through classes. Although I'm an Eagle Scout, it's been a long time. So I'm planning on refreshing my skill base with some classes. American Heart Association basic life-saving, a stop the bleed class, and wilderness first responder. Maybe TECC. I live in an area where there's a bunch of former special forces soldiers offering classes. So I'm going to take a land nav class with one of them. And probably some shooting classes even though I've been shooting for about 43 years.
When I graduated high school I was confident I can walk out the door with only a knife and survive in the woods. For however long. At the beginning of this year and for the previous 30 I had not felt that way. I'm getting back on track.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Awesome. I’ve always wanted to take a wilderness first aid class.
2600sysop@reddit
Hunting.
GunnCelt@reddit
Outside of everything attached to our micro homestead is competition shooting and most things adjacent to it like reloading and a little gunsmithing. Archery, including building Flemish twist strings and arrows. I bow hunt, both bow and rifle. We dry camp and fish, if necessary. I’m one of those people that don’t enjoy it, it’s just necessary. Obviously, all maintenance on the homestead as well as metal and wood work. One of my hobbies is building furniture, mostly outdoor stuff.
Not hobbies, but I’m a volunteer firefighter and EMS in my rural town and the next town over. We’re getting ready to do a high rope rescue class, which fits in with my rappelling.
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
That’s a super well rounded set of skills. You’d be a very useful member of a resilience-based community.
GunnCelt@reddit
Our goal, for over a decade, was to get into this position. Now that we are here, we spend a lot of time trying to get our little slice of heaven in a place that we are happy with. It’s a lot of work and can get overwhelming. We went into it with the mindset of getting XYZ setup and realized that we needed to slow down. Our first year here was full of disappointment because of that
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
That’s something that people don’t often talk about here, and it’s good to bring it up - how actually hard it is to make this kind of lifestyle change, and the challenges that come with setting up a resilience based home.
GunnCelt@reddit
Very true.
No_Routine2905@reddit
Running a small farm. In my case, with cattle, but could be any kind of farm. Forces you to be resourceful, fix stuff, be a handyman, be observant of local trends, do basic animal care, etc. We also bale our own hay and knowing how to maintain equipment is a big part of it.
If you're out in the middle of the field on your own and shit breaks, you learn how to deal with it yourself because there is no one to call :)
Signal_Brain_933@reddit (OP)
Sounds like a pretty rewarding life.
Flat-Dark-Earth@reddit
Hunting.