If you have a year of food stored, I don't think it would be as bleak as that. I suspect that milpa system the Mayans use would do the trick pretty well. It needs only a small area to grow a high yield of food. Most of those lawns in the suburbs have been fertilized for years and years. As soon as everything shuts down, I am assuming the sewage system would eventually halt along with the power since the facilities that process waste would eventually back up. So people have to start composting pretty early. That adds into the soil pretty fast.C-Mag wrote:You guys make good points.Speaker to Animals wrote:Martin Hash wrote:The Walking Dead scenario: all weaklings & old people gone.
Since accomplishment means nothing to most people here, and money will collapse, the fantasy is that because I’m old, some young buck could take me on. The delusion being everything I got was due to White Male Priviledge. Well, let me assure any 30-something who thinks the lack of grey hair gives you the advantage when the police are gone, I will fucking own you.
Survival, in my opinion, comes down to community and luck. I'd imagine your neighborhood has quite a lot of landscaping that can be converted to gardens. Not really a huge amount of people. The men could form up into a local militia for all intents and purposes to defend the area.
A man can be Mr. Spec Ops Operator and still perish if he is alone and surrounded by dindus and rabid progressives. There's a balance to be had.
Yes, land can be converted to gardening, but dealing with soils and having the seeds, watering and protecting your crops are all problems. Problems in a survival situation that require time and calories. Starting from scratch it would be very difficult to convert much of the land to gardens and expect much of a return.
Also, I suspect quite a lot of people will be fighting over what they can loot from department stores and supermarkets. Most people will be fighting. Just hunker down with your food storage. Focus on keeping a low profile, getting your water collection up, and ramping up some kind of farming system for the following year.