You Need Water - What Will You Do?
Water Crisis
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The most important thing to store

Most people think more about storing food for a crisis, even though they know that water is the most important thing to have on hand. You can read more survival tips at http://expertsurvivaltips.com. This is likely due to the easy way we get water in our lives on a daily basis. We know we need to go to the grocery store for meat and vegetables (unless we are farmers) – but as far as water, we just turn on the tap and there it is.

This flowing water makes it easy for us to ignore the fact that we need to store water…we are lulled into a sense of complacency about the need for storing water. Even folks who prepare for an emergency can be caught forgetting to stock up clean water in levels that will be needed in an emergency.

Your body will begin to shut down after three days without water. But you can go a week without food. What should you be storing regularly? Water. Pick some up each chance you get and put it away in the case of a water crisis. The families dealing with natural disasters around the world find themselves standing in line waiting for a rescue organization to hand them gallons of water so that they can survive.

Think ahead

Store water.

Because it is an essential need, storing water and having a way to get more should be one of the goals of your survival preparedness. Do you have a way to purify water if you are in the woods?

Odds are, if you are in the woods, you will only have enough water for a day or two in your emergency bug-out bag. It’s too heavy to carry loads and loads of it. Prepare by re-using the water bottles you have to utilize sunlight purification or to pour your boiled water into them for the next day. There are options, you simply have to know what they are and how to put them into play.

Water pouches are available in-ounce size packs that are easy to carry in a survival backpack. These are purified and meant for long-term storage, so they can be kept in your backpack for an extended period of time, just in case of an emergency.  Choose containers that are easily manageable for your backpack, after all a one-gallon bottle of water is going to be hard on your back if you are in the woods, where several small pouches or water bottles will be easier to deal with.

It is all about planning and thinking ahead!

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