- Thread Starter
- #81
I do not plan to buy an AR platform, just not my thing, I know how that can limit bug out options but its something I'm preparing to deal with.
Well pending washington state laws changed that. Bought an AR10 yesterday.
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I do not plan to buy an AR platform, just not my thing, I know how that can limit bug out options but its something I'm preparing to deal with.
Pending oregon legislation might change that for me.Well pending washington state laws changed that. Bought an AR10 yesterday.
Can't go wrong with a .45, pleasant to shoot all day and it will put down some serious hurt downrange, even if all you have left is fmj.Start out with a couple of 45's, an AK and 45-70 lever action. Since this is hypothetical, I fear no squirrel.
Situation:
-You have enough time to grab 2 of the following long arms on your way to bug out.
-You have sufficient ammo ready to go for whatever you pick.
-You have a p229 in 9mm on your person
-You have an sp101 in .357 on you.
-Bug out location is the Olympic Peninsula
Long arm options
-Ruger American Predator .308
-Rossi lever 16" in .357
-Remington 870 Express with 18.5" barrel
-Ruger 10/22
-Keltec sub2000 p226 mag version (9mm)
A sandwhichIMHO, y'all are approaching this backwards.
Your firearms are for self defense, not hunting. Imagine yourself on a paintball field. You just shot a squirrel with a pellet gun. What are your chances of dressing your game and making stew without getting found?
In an E&E game, eating VEGAN is the way to go. Can anyone name a non vegan meal that you can prepare in camp, carry in a pack and eat 6 hours later without 'side effects'?
(I'm not vegan, but my lady is. She has taught me a couple things.)
Can anyone name a non vegan meal that you can prepare in camp, carry in a pack and eat 6 hours later without 'side effects'?
Salted meats, which will actually outlive your vegan foods by months.IMHO, y'all are approaching this backwards.
Your firearms are for self defense, not hunting. Imagine yourself on a paintball field. You just shot a squirrel with a pellet gun. What are your chances of dressing your game and making stew without getting found?
In an E&E game, eating VEGAN is the way to go. Can anyone name a non vegan meal that you can prepare in camp, carry in a pack and eat 6 hours later without 'side effects'?
(I'm not vegan, but my lady is. She has taught me a couple things.)
IMHO, y'all are approaching this backwards.
Your firearms are for self defense, not hunting. Imagine yourself on a paintball field. You just shot a squirrel with a pellet gun. What are your chances of dressing your game and making stew without getting found?
In an E&E game, eating VEGAN is the way to go. Can anyone name a non vegan meal that you can prepare in camp, carry in a pack and eat 6 hours later without 'side effects'?
(I'm not vegan, but my lady is. She has taught me a couple things.)
@CountryGent I just looked up that pemmican is a sort of salted meat, which I didn't know!
Much appreciated!Here is a how to on making it here: How To Make Pemmican: A Survival Superfood That Can Last 50 Years.
Bon appétit.
Our ancestors were not vegans... I'm guessing they had a few tricks to save food for longer then 6 hours
As a new study in Nature makes clear, not only did processing and eating meat come naturally to humans, it's entirely possible that without an early diet that included generous amounts of animal protein, we wouldn't even have become human—at least not the modern, verbal, intelligent humans we are.