So the earth quits shaking, the waters recede or the tornado passes. You’ve prepared well for the next 72 hours – you hope – but what happens if the aftermath lasts longer?

by Leon Pantenburg

A tornado could destroy roads and bridges and strand people on the disaster scene.

A tornado could destroy roads and bridges and strand people on the disaster scene.

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What will you do if thing don’t return to normal for quite a while? As in weeks or months? Or what if there is a “new normal”?

That is the premise of the Prepper’s Long Term Survival Guide by Jim Cobb.

Extended term survival guides have, quite frankly,  become pretty passe’. It seems like everyone with a claim to some sort of expertise writes one. Many times, these publications are nothing more than a compilation of writings from internet sources. (My favorite, so far, is the urban survival guide that shows an often-seen diagram and instructions of how to build a solar still.)

But Cobb is the owner of Disaster Prep Consultants and the author of Prepper’s Home Defense and The Prepper’s Complete Bo0k of Disaster Readiness. He has been involved in disaster preparedness  for about 30 years. He has the creds, and from what I’ve read from his other publications, the expertise to give some useful advice. But still, these long term guides, at some point, devolve into lists of survival tools and techniques easily accessed from any Red Cross site.

Cob divides his book into sections that deal with the standard food, shelter, off-grid power and other self-sufficient strategies. Most of these sections have equipment lists.

Here is where Cobb’s book differs from most long-term guides. Frequently, people can’t appreciate the need for a particular aspect of preparedness. If, for example, you don’t garden, you might not see the need for stockpiling heirloom seeds. But read Cobb’s entry about food shortages, and you might change your mind.

Each chapter of Cobb’s book is written as if it were a diary after a disaster occurred. The sections are highly entertaining and interesting, and may pull you into a chapter or section that previously didn’t arouse much interest. Because the scenarios are plausible the reader finds him/herself introduced to the potential disasters or situations in their areas.

A turn-off for me, and probably many other readers, are the stock photos on the front cover. Prominently displayed on the front are unrelated items that apparently combine to create a group of balanced survival items. The survival knife shown has a poor design, IMO, and the matches and shotgun shells photos seem like a cliche’ and kinda cheezy. I know Cobb’s publisher can do better than that.

I also get turned off about elaborate home defense plans and scenarios, simply because people tend to fixate on a particular part of preparedness to the near exclusion of others. I have met many preppers who emphasize firearms and ammo and virtually ignore some of the less fun items that might be needed, like water storage and interior lighting. Cobb dedicates enough space on every area to interest the reader, and also gives a balanced over-all view.

Cobb writes well, and the book is an easy read. It is not a complete long term survival guide, and it isn’t the one book every prepper needs. I don’t think such a publication exists.

But the Prepper’s Long-Term Survival Guide is a good book to introduce non-prepper types into the idea of getting started. as such, it could be a valuable addition to your library.

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