Speaking from experience, it might be good to invest in a tea kettle that plugs into your car. We got stuck on a mountain from a rock slide that took part of the road with it. Ended up having to stay inside the car because it was freezing outside, so we didn't have access to electric outlets or space to set up camp. We ate peanut butter and jelly sandwiches and made hot tea. You could probably use it to heat up soups too.
You know, some or all of these, and your suitcase kitchen, would be handy for more than travel. Imagining all the folks who have sheltered in place during ice storms. Also the horror of living without power or gas ( when utilities are shut off). Preparedness might start with what I want on the road and be right with me during other hardships.
You may consider putting a few matches into small sealable bags along with a striker strip. Also, if you know someone who uses the Freestyle glucose test strips, the smaller wooden matches fit nicely in the used plastic bottle the test strips come in, and the little bottles keep the matches dry. I have used both repurposed, or scrap seal bags to store matches in. For this use it would not matter what the bags had in them if they are used. The bags and the plastic bottles keep air and water out of the matches.
One idea that I learned many years ago was to dip wooden matches in nail polish to waterproof them. Striking them scrapes off the polish in one spot, and the polish in the surrounding area burns really well.
Keeping some food that doesnt require heat might be good too. Sandwich stuff, cereals, cottage cheese, lunch meats, etc. We always take pre cooked chicken strips because cold chick tastes good too. You could also bring boiled eggs, pasta salad, potato salad, etc. My dad's go to is cheese and crackers with salami. Mom and I prefer to premake sandwiches and keep them in the cooler.
Excellent! That tall water heater thing is cool. Excellent go bag. Have you ever been evacuated for a wildfire? Theres a lot going on at the same time, and being able to grab 3 days of food & a kitchen on the way out would be very handy & comforting.
I love your ideas! A person could put in last minute things that are more perishable at the last minute and than have more days worth just in case. I have a back pack in my car for just in case but it is more for a get home bag than camping with the car. I like your ideas.
Please, can you do a one-hour class on planting your Vego gardens? I purchased one, put it together and now I don't know how to plant it efficiently. Thank you for all you teach us!!!
Great video! My daily driver is my camper van so I’m always prepared but this was a great reminder to reset for spring/summer. It’s currently set for winter in case the weather got so bad I had to spend the night in the parking lot at work. 😉. I work at a hospital and not going in is not an option. I love being self sufficient, even security knows what I drive and if the van stays overnight, they leave me alone. Thank you so much for letting us know about the baby blue sale, I got one! It’s my third portable power station and I’m thrilled with all of them but Bluetti is amazing.
This is a great video! Thanks to you & Jim for helping us be more prepared. We don't travel much but this has made me realize we need to be better prepared when we do. Your channels are the best😊
The butane stove will not work well on cold campouts with temps in the teens and below. I often have to put the canister inside my coat to warm it up. I have made hundreds of cups of coffee on one just like yours however a small white gas stove like a Coleman works better in the cold. The Kelly Kettle is an amazing tool. I don't use mine as much as I thought I would, but it still goes on every trip we take. One thing I will caution you about. If you break out the food box on the side of the road in a miles long traffic stop, be ready for the neighbors to stop by.
Budget Preppers had a great tip for water for FD meals. She used a large bag and put the food in the bottom, sealed it and then put the required water in the top and sealed it so you had water and food in one packet!
Such a helpful video. Thank you! Would you please consider doing some videos on canning without sugar - especially jams and canned fruit? It would be so helpful to all of us who cannot handle even small amounts of white sugar.
Another great video! Many good ideas. Especially for emergencies the precooked freeze dried foods seem especially suited. Already cooked,so no extended cooking time needed. Quick rehydration. If rehydrating with hot water would probably only need a little more heating to have a hot dish of food. Hope to be able to get a freeze dryer. It makes for so many more possibilities. Your first test trip turned out to be quite the test!
I have a Kelly Kettle. I first heard about it in an Apocalypse book I was reading. One of the characters used one. I looked it up on line to see if it was real. I bought one, haven't used it yet but like you I like that it heats water and doesn't require special fuel.
Hi Pam and Jim, love the video! If it were dooms day, and it was my last meal, I definitely would figure out how to make a 17 course dinner out of that emergency food box!🤣❤
Do you also keep heavy duty heatproof/fireproof gloves or firewood tongs in your vehicle? 15:32 seems like this device would need some type of protective gear to pick up and pour water out?
Nifty gadgets! Thanks for sharing them. Oh, I sobwant3d to visit pink.coal sand dunes on our October trip, but we ran out of time. We spent too much time at the dam museum site. I hope you share that with us so I can see them vicariously.
Speaking from experience, it might be good to invest in a tea kettle that plugs into your car. We got stuck on a mountain from a rock slide that took part of the road with it. Ended up having to stay inside the car because it was freezing outside, so we didn't have access to electric outlets or space to set up camp. We ate peanut butter and jelly sandwiches and made hot tea. You could probably use it to heat up soups too.
Yes, great idea. Thanks.
You know, some or all of these, and your suitcase kitchen, would be handy for more than travel. Imagining all the folks who have sheltered in place during ice storms. Also the horror of living without power or gas ( when utilities are shut off). Preparedness might start with what I want on the road and be right with me during other hardships.
Exactly. My camping hiking backpacking roadtrip stuff gets used at home, actually. It all lives in the spare bedroom.
Agree! Thanks.
You may consider putting a few matches into small sealable bags along with a striker strip. Also, if you know someone who uses the Freestyle glucose test strips, the smaller wooden matches fit nicely in the used plastic bottle the test strips come in, and the little bottles keep the matches dry. I have used both repurposed, or scrap seal bags to store matches in. For this use it would not matter what the bags had in them if they are used. The bags and the plastic bottles keep air and water out of the matches.
Empty prescription medicine bottles would also work.
Great idea. Thanks.
One idea that I learned many years ago was to dip wooden matches in nail polish to waterproof them. Striking them scrapes off the polish in one spot, and the polish in the surrounding area burns really well.
Keeping some food that doesnt require heat might be good too. Sandwich stuff, cereals, cottage cheese, lunch meats, etc. We always take pre cooked chicken strips because cold chick tastes good too. You could also bring boiled eggs, pasta salad, potato salad, etc. My dad's go to is cheese and crackers with salami. Mom and I prefer to premake sandwiches and keep them in the cooler.
Traveling on memory lane-growing up we spent many a car trip eating cheese, crackers, and salami on the side of the road. Good times.
Excellent! That tall water heater thing is cool.
Excellent go bag. Have you ever been evacuated for a wildfire? Theres a lot going on at the same time, and being able to grab 3 days of food & a kitchen on the way out would be very handy & comforting.
We often have wildfires in our region but so far have not had to be evacuated. But, being prepared for that possibility is important for us as well.
I love your ideas! A person could put in last minute things that are more perishable at the last minute and than have more days worth just in case. I have a back pack in my car for just in case but it is more for a get home bag than camping with the car. I like your ideas.
Please, can you do a one-hour class on planting your Vego gardens? I purchased one, put it together and now I don't know how to plant it efficiently. Thank you for all you teach us!!!
You are really organized. This was wonderful
So glad you liked it.
Great video! My daily driver is my camper van so I’m always prepared but this was a great reminder to reset for spring/summer. It’s currently set for winter in case the weather got so bad I had to spend the night in the parking lot at work. 😉. I work at a hospital and not going in is not an option. I love being self sufficient, even security knows what I drive and if the van stays overnight, they leave me alone. Thank you so much for letting us know about the baby blue sale, I got one! It’s my third portable power station and I’m thrilled with all of them but Bluetti is amazing.
You are so welcome! So glad you love the Bluetti! We do too. And I love how you are always prepared with your van setup!
This is fantastic Pam and Jim!! Thank you!
You are so welcome!
I put my glass jars for travel in old, clean socks. works like a charm.
Great tip! Thank you.
We carry a 5 to 6 gallon fresh water blue jug, aka Walmart to carry along with drink mixes to make meals and drink in the truck.
Mary, I think it was your suggestion about the way you carry water that motivated us to get a 5 gallon container to carry with us as well! Thanks.
Wow. We keep a day pack for road trips .. this is a better idea. Thanks.
Thanks.
thanks these are great ideas you never know when you are traveling even when you think it's a short trip 🙂🌻
Exactly! Thank you.
This is a great video! Thanks to you & Jim for helping us be more prepared. We don't travel much but this has made me realize we need to be better prepared when we do. Your channels are the best😊
The butane stove will not work well on cold campouts with temps in the teens and below. I often have to put the canister inside my coat to warm it up. I have made hundreds of cups of coffee on one just like yours however a small white gas stove like a Coleman works better in the cold. The Kelly Kettle is an amazing tool. I don't use mine as much as I thought I would, but it still goes on every trip we take. One thing I will caution you about. If you break out the food box on the side of the road in a miles long traffic stop, be ready for the neighbors to stop by.
At our age we tend to be fair weather campers! But thanks for the info--good to know.
Budget Preppers had a great tip for water for FD meals. She used a large bag and put the food in the bottom, sealed it and then put the required water in the top and sealed it so you had water and food in one packet!
Great tip!
Such a helpful video. Thank you! Would you please consider doing some videos on canning without sugar - especially jams and canned fruit? It would be so helpful to all of us who cannot handle even small amounts of white sugar.
We have done one video on that over on RoseRed but will consider doing more.
@@trailgrazers3690 Thank you.
What about your road oven? I love my little electric lunch box. It reheats food great and while I haven't used it for cooking it supposedly can.
Another great video! Many good ideas. Especially for emergencies the precooked freeze dried foods seem especially suited. Already cooked,so no extended cooking time needed. Quick rehydration. If rehydrating with hot water would probably only need a little more heating to have a hot dish of food.
Hope to be able to get a freeze dryer.
It makes for so many more possibilities.
Your first test trip turned out to be quite the test!
Yes, it was! Thanks so much for your comment.
I have a Kelly Kettle. I first heard about it in an Apocalypse book I was reading. One of the characters used one. I looked it up on line to see if it was real. I bought one, haven't used it yet but like you I like that it heats water and doesn't require special fuel.
We love ours and have used it a lot.
Great information, I have been wanting to do this for the car. Thanks so much -- love both your channels!!
Wow, what great information and preparedness!
So glad you liked it.
Hi Pam and Jim, love the video! If it were dooms day, and it was my last meal, I definitely would figure out how to make a 17 course dinner out of that emergency food box!🤣❤
LOL! Love that kind of thinking!!!
Your Kelly Kettle makes me think of a samovar
Now I have to go look that up! LOL!
Wow! Great video and ideas! I definitely need to work on this.
Thank you both!
So glad it was useful for you.
Do you also keep heavy duty heatproof/fireproof gloves or firewood tongs in your vehicle? 15:32 seems like this device would need some type of protective gear to pick up and pour water out?
We have hot pads, but I use heat gloves all the time at home. That is a great idea to also have them for our preparedness boxes! Thank you.
I know you have done some of this on the channel. Would you be willing to do more videos with some of the recipes and dehydrating and freeze drying?
You bet! More coming up!
Hi, would you need refrigeration to rehydrate the sausage ? ? 💞🌻🦋
If it is taking many hours to rehydrate, then yes.
Hello Maam
How about teaching a class on fermenting.
I probably should do that but I will have to practice a lot first. I don't do a lot of it. Thanks for the idea.
Nifty gadgets! Thanks for sharing them.
Oh, I sobwant3d to visit pink.coal sand dunes on our October trip, but we ran out of time. We spent too much time at the dam museum site. I hope you share that with us so I can see them vicariously.
We plan a trip there very soon.