Supply Checklist for Your Bugout Location

stocking your bugout location

Facebook survivalists recommend these supplies for your bugout location

A bugout location, or BOL, is where you plan to go in case of a mass evacuation or panic, such as what follows an earthquake or tsunami. If you live in a city devastated by a natural or manmade disaster, you might wish to leave the city and head for the h ills. Maybe you have a hunting shack on 40 acres a couple hours away — this would be your bugout location. If you live in the country, you might prefer to hunker down at your home, in which case you want to be sure you have reserves to sustain you for several days or weeks without the need to restock. Learn more about bugging out.

The Facebook Survivalist group bugout location checklist

The Survivalist group on Facebook has over 1000 members, many of whom are experienced hobbyists in the area of survival skills or emergency preparation. It’s very well run by the admins (at this writing, the acting admins are Dan Peters and Noel Napolitan), and you’ll find a great deal of useful information relating to survival skills and self-reliance.

I asked them to post three items they would want to have at their bugout location. Nearly 50 responses later, here’s a list compiled from their suggestions. Some members posted multiple responses, so their lists are longer. Several people duplicated responses by others — I’ve left them in so you can judge their importance by how frequently they come up.

Not all suggestions will apply in every situation, but go through them and pick out what will work for you:

  • spring water, rice and beans, firewood – SnoMan
  • med kit, shovel, entertainment (board game, cards) – Pete Prepper [Note from SnoMan: I recently discovered a great game called Voltage. As I write this, it’s on sale for only 2.99 and eligible for free shipping from Amazon. It’s a very clever, innovative card game, and my family loves it!]
  • firearms, cooking utensils, personal hygiene supplies – Arne O. Sanders
  • ammo, fuel (gas or diesel), wheat/grains – Ray Stalnaker
  • condoms, cooking gear, fishing gear – Nunofya Damnbiznus
  • antibiotics, informational books, hygiene products, mountain bike, binoculars, two-way radios, night vision binoculars, maps of city sewer lines, drag sled, snow shoes, range finders, field dressings, buck lure, cast iron dutch oven and pans, gold and silver, quick clot - Thomas Gray [Note from SnoMan: Early versions of quickclot could cause burns. Try this version contained in a dressing instead. It’s still very effective, but won’t burn].
  • bedding (cots, blankets, pillows), chairs, table, chemical toilet, all purpose toilet paper – Kenneth Bechtel
  • salt, garlic, honey, chili and cornbread supplies, wine, fire already prepared to light – Aleta Wallace
  • hunting rifle/ammo, fishing pole, BK2 Becker - Jack Brandt
  • playing cards, garden seeds, coffee, maps (road, USGS, forest service) for surrounding areas, canning jars and lids, pressure and regular canner, biometric documents (birth certificate, passports, shot records), blank notebooks, pens and pencils – Fiona Ellen Grayson
  • machete, axe, knife, and sharpening gear, food, cooking supplies, firestarting kit,compass, water, bandana, sleeping bag, tent, fleece wear, first aid, tools (knife, multitool, hatchet or machete, rope, twine, tarp, nails, zipties, personal toiletries (TP, biodegradable soap, wipes, nail file, nail clippers, baking soda, pak towels), slingshot, fishing gear, snares, 2×4 board, 1/2-inch washer, rubber hose – Dan Peters
  • colloidal silver, blankets, light source – Clara Holdorph Brown
  • gun/knife/tool cleaning supplies and maintenance items, including oil, sharpeners, rags – Mictch McKee
  • hand crank can opener, iron skillet, bacitracin zinc – Clinton Pfarr

Thanks to all the group members who participated!

~SnoMan

Facebook Comments

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11 Responses to Supply Checklist for Your Bugout Location

  1. Paul 21 February 2012 at 15:14 #

    Good suggestions! Water – nothing beats a good hand operated well pump. Food – lots of dried rice & beans, wheat – can't have too much. Good supply of heirloom seeds! Reliable source of heat – cast iron woodstove with cooktop and plenty of seasoned wood covers almost all your needs! Tools – guns for defense and hunting, knives, gardening tools, axe, maul, chainsaw, etc. A few chickens and goats are all you need for eggs, meat, and milk.

    Once you have these covered the rest is a bonus!!

    • sn0man 21 February 2012 at 16:06 #

      Those are really good additions to the list, Paul, thanks.

  2. andy 21 February 2012 at 17:16 #

    archery equipment is a must. silent and deadly in the right hands. also wont atract any unwanted attention, from the unprepaired or law enforcement should marshall law be declared.

  3. Cecelia 12 October 2012 at 19:11 #

    Thanks so much for your work in emergency preparedness.

    I've been researching this issue for several months now, and have come to believe that my interest is divinely inspired. It's been truly astonishing to me to find that so many of my friends and family have felt this same 'leading' of late.

    For an endeavor that is often baffling and overwhelming, the clarity of your information is so unusual and so welcomed!

    Thanks, again for your invaluable help!

  4. Grizzly Fire 15 November 2012 at 19:33 #

    Great information! Checkout Grizzly Survival Fire: http://www.grizzlyfire.com

  5. Don Williams 11 February 2013 at 23:37 #

    500-1000 gallon propane tank. You can buy a propane 11 feet size freezer and/or propane 11 feet refrigerater freezer combo. Each is about $1200.00. It is good to have. 20 pounds pounds should run a refrigerator one week. One thousand gallon tank will provide fuel for one year. You call propane company and rent the tank on a permanent basis. You order $500-1000 gallon (pound) of propane for less then $3.00 a pound. A propane bottle on most RV s is 20 pounds. You can locate propane bottle refuel adapter $20.00, to transfer propane fron tank to propane bottle.

  6. Don Williams 12 February 2013 at 00:15 #

    Adapt the propane to a 11,000 gas generator then connect to your 700 feet deep well pump motor. This can be used to refill your 3000 gallon water reserve tank. Near by build a 1/3 rd acre garden, veggies, fruit, berry grapes. Eight feet deer fence. Have remote operated gate opener powered by solar. Water garden with drip system. When u run out of deer meat just leave gate open, when the deer, hog, rabbit, of choice enters garden, remotely close the gate. Your fresh meat can be kept in fridge. I enjoy reading your ideas and thought would share what I did.

  7. Icona Pop Lyrics 14 April 2013 at 22:01 #

    This is my idea of a perfect vacation. Something that would take away the stress and enjoy the perfect moment with nature.

  8. Dave 30 April 2013 at 16:04 #

    Excellent info in case I need to test my survival skills.

  9. theh2osupremacy 6 May 2013 at 04:48 #

    ''spring water, rice and beans, firewood '' spot on mate!
    H2o Supremacy – Stephan K

Trackbacks/Pingbacks

  1. 7 Must-Have Items in Your Bugout Bag | Survival News Online - 6 December 2012

    [...] Keep in mind the primary purpose of a bugout bag — it is not to sustain you indefinitely, but to provide your needs temporarily in case you need to evacuate quickly if a disaster should strike. Your needs will vary depending on where you live, your physical condition, and the kind of disaster you’re preparing for, so it’s important to understand principles of survival, and apply them to your specific circumstances. For example, some people will plan to hunker down at their home in the event of an emergency, so their bugout bag will be designed primarily to get them home. Others will need to evacuate their home, and their bugout bag will be designed to get them safely to a bugout location, like a shack in the woods or the grandparent’s homestead in the country. See our checklist for stocking the bugout location. [...]

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