Categories: Kit & Equipment

More Unusual Items for Survival

Continuing from our last article on the subject, here are some more unusual items for survival:

Fabric

Don’t throw away old fabric

Do you have old blankets, sheets, clothes, and curtains?

If so, don’t throw them away! You still need the fabric for one very simple reason: resourcefulness.

If you think about it, quilts are nothing more than new blankets that are made from old materials.

This means that even if you have a blanket or article of clothing with holes in it, you don’t want to throw it away. You can still recycle and reuse it.

People during the Great Depression used old fabrics for a wide variety of purposes, and in a survival situation, you may very well have to do the same.

Examples of what you can use old fabrics for include:

  • Making new clothes and bags
  • Turning an old pair of jeans into a skirt
  • Using as cleaning rags
  • Using as makeshift toilet paper by cutting up into squares (last resort use)
  • As a makeshift bandage/sling/tourniquet
  • Using as a cool compress for headaches

Sandbags

Sandbags are the best form of home defense protection that you can have

Without question, sandbags are the best form of home defense protection that you can have.

In fact, I would even go as far as to say that sandbags are one hundred percent necessary if you are truly serious about mounting a successful defense of your home against an organized attacking party.

Sandbags have been used for hundreds of years by military and law enforcement alike, and they continue to be used today.

The reason for this is simple: they absorb ammunition effortlessly.

When disaster strikes and the threat of raiding parties and looters becomes real, it’s important that you make your home as defensive as you can. This means making sure that you have plenty of areas of cover so you can avoid incoming fire from attackers.

Position sandbags strategically at your doors and windows. The more layers you have, the better.

The best way to store sandbags is to store the sand and the bags separately. Then, when disaster strikes, fill up the bags with the sand, tie them off, and you’re all set!

Plywood and Nails

Plywood boards can be effective for home defense

While we’re on the subject of home defense, a very easy way to deter intruders or to make an attack on your home more difficult is to use nails and plywood.

Simply take flat pieces of plywood and hammer nails through them. Turn them upside down and position them strategically in your front or back yard.

If you have barbed wire fences, you can create a layer of barbed wire fence, followed by a layer of plywood and nails, followed by another layer of barbed wire fence, and complete with sandbags in the doors and windows of your home.

If you can do that, you’ll have one of the best home defense fortifications that you could ask for.

Dental Floss

Dental floss

I love dental floss, and not just for its obvious oral hygiene use. In fact, dental floss might save your life!

Here is a list of uses for dental floss in a survival or disaster scenario:

  • Fishing line
  • Clothesline (wrap multiple strands together)
  • Wrap a perimeter around a camp, and attach cans filled with pebbles for an alert system
  • Tripwire
  • Emergency stitching
  • Repair clothes and tents
  • Lash a knife to a pole to make a knife spear
  • Restraints
  • Makeshift shoelaces
  • Wrap multiple strands together to make rope or cordage
  • Fashion snares
  • Kindling/tinder (as long as the dental floss is waxed)

Expired Bleach

You can still use expired bleach for one major survival use: flushing your toilet.

Wait, expired bleach?

Yes, you read that right.

Bleach is already highly recommended by survival experts as a survival item because it can help to make water safe to drink.

Nonetheless, bleach can expire. In fact, it usually expires after around six months.

This doesn’t, however, mean that you should just throw your bleach away. You can still use it for one major survival use: flushing your toilet.

In the event that you encounter issues with flushing your toilet properly, and you very well may in a long term disaster scenario, just pouring in some expired bleach could be the trick that gets it to flush – just something to keep in mind!

Cheesecloth

Cheesecloth

The neat thing about cheesecloth is that it will not disintegrate even when it’s wet.

If you’re a prepper who loves multi-purpose items, you will definitely not want to overlook cheesecloth, which can be used for the following purposes:

  • Keep fats, bones, and other solids out of broths/soups
  • Protect young trees from winged insects
  • Make a dust mask
  • First aid gauze pad alternative
  • Makeshift fishing net
  • Cheesemaking! (Obviously)

Steel Wool

Steel wool

While steel wool is excellent for scrubbing pots, it’s also great for starting a fire.

All that you need in addition to the steel wool itself is a nine-volt battery. Attaching the terminals of your battery with steel wool is all that you will need to get a fire going quickly.

Cat Litter

Cat litter

If you have cats, obviously you’ll want them to be happy and comfortable during the disaster, and that means having enough cat litter (and cat food) for them to use.

Even if you don’t have cats, stocking up on cat litter wouldn’t be a bad idea.

There are a few uses for cat litter:

  • Make ice less slippery (you can actually get your car out of the snow)
  • Keep plants in your garden moist
  • Rodent repellent (rodents HATE the smell of cat litter)

Duct Tape

Duct tape has many uses

Duct tape is truly awesome. There is just so much that you can fix or mend with it. I personally believe that you need to have an entire container filled with duct tape in your storage. Just one roll of duct tape is better than nothing.

Here is a list of survival uses for duct tape that you simply can’t ignore:

  • Cut into feathers for makeshift arrows
  • Bartering item
  • Makeshift bandage/sling/tourniquet
  • Seal a water bottle or container
  • Cut into cordage
  • Restrain a prisoner
  • Fasten a knife to a pole to make a knife spear
  • Repair glasses
  • Repair clothing, tents, and tarps
  • Use as trail marker
  • Use as boot insulation

Is there anything that you can’t fix with duct tape? I’m all ears.

Baking Soda

Baking soda toothpaste

If there is only one personal hygiene item that you should stockpile, it’s baking soda.

Baking soda is one of the most versatile products on the planet. As with duct tape, I’m a firm believer that you need to have an entire container simply filled with it.

By simply mixing baking soda and water into a paste, you will create a solution that will work for each of the following:

  • Toothpaste
  • Deodorant
  • Shampoo
  • Soap
  • Laundry detergent
  • Floor cleaner
  • Dishwashing soap

Hand Sanitizer

Another handy personal hygiene item to have is hand sanitizer.

Thanks to the alcohol content of hand sanitizer, it is highly flammable and will allow you to quickly get a fire going even in bad conditions.

A lesser-known use for hand sanitizer is to remove stains on clothing (including blood stains). More importantly, applying it directly to your skin over the site of a mosquito bite will reduce the pain from that mosquito bite almost immediately.

Besides those above uses, hand sanitizer can also be used for its intended purposes and can sanitize just about anything, including your hands, the floor, the table, and anything else needed.

Ian Kershaw

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