For water also always have a silcock key in your kit. That way in an urban or residential area you can also acquire water from buildings (commercial, schools, landscaping) that have water spigots without on/off knobs on them.
A rain jacket and or a poncho and some cash .One metall container/ cup for boiling. Spare glases and personal medication .Copys of important documents. Some duct tape in cordage and a little bit wire, a small sewing kit. A compass and a map of your area. I would like to have that to.
@@mitchschwartzburg3483 so this vid was in the context of the ca fires that just went down. It’s a bare minimum type vid that hopefully gets people inspired to think go bag and prepare. If we are talking full blown prep there’s a lot variants that would come into play depending on size, strength, age, number of family, their size, age, and strength. The location, what plan was created, you could drive, moto, bike ride, you could live by a marina and have a boat in the water that’s a destination, etc etc. That said, if I’m teaching prep or even really consulting prep type stuff I would generically say, there’s always a give and take, you have to make a plan that’s right for you and you family and then build from there. Anyone that says this is it. Everything you need for every situation is in this little bag is not being honest. To answer the question though 😁 that bag is very minimal weight that even a child, maybe 9 and up could carry pretty easily.
And a personal hygiene kit.
For water also always have a silcock key in your kit. That way in an urban or residential area you can also acquire water from buildings (commercial, schools, landscaping) that have water spigots without on/off knobs on them.
Solid kit. Makes me want to make a video on my kit.
@@ZekesView this one is your everyone should at least have these items go bag. Greta way for people to get started 👍
A rain jacket and or a poncho and some cash .One metall container/ cup for boiling.
Spare glases and personal medication .Copys of important documents.
Some duct tape in cordage and a little bit wire, a small sewing kit.
A compass and a map of your area.
I would like to have that to.
I'd add a microfibre cloth or a gaiter
What’s your all up weight of your go bag.. just in case you can’t use the car to get from point A to B and you have to walk that distance.
@@mitchschwartzburg3483 so this vid was in the context of the ca fires that just went down. It’s a bare minimum type vid that hopefully gets people inspired to think go bag and prepare. If we are talking full blown prep there’s a lot variants that would come into play depending on size, strength, age, number of family, their size, age, and strength. The location, what plan was created, you could drive, moto, bike ride, you could live by a marina and have a boat in the water that’s a destination, etc etc. That said, if I’m teaching prep or even really consulting prep type stuff I would generically say, there’s always a give and take, you have to make a plan that’s right for you and you family and then build from there. Anyone that says this is it. Everything you need for every situation is in this little bag is not being honest. To answer the question though 😁 that bag is very minimal weight that even a child, maybe 9 and up could carry pretty easily.
What about some sort of shelter?
@@chrismcdonald5015 shelter is good, but this one is a grab and go in lieu of the fires that were burning CA recently or something like that.
And at least a couple bic lighters..