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Start Prepping – A Beginners Guide

If you are thinking about getting started with emergency preparedness it can be very overwhelming knowing where to start and what you actually should be doing. The key is to start small, focus on basics, and build over time. Here’s a simple beginner-friendly guide:

1. Know What You’re Preparing For

Think about the most likely risks where you live:

  • Power outages
  • Flooding or severe weather
  • Transport disruption
  • Short-term supply shortages

You don’t need to prepare for everything—just the most realistic scenarios first.

2. Build a Basic Emergency Kit

Start with essentials that can support you for at least 72 hours:

Must-haves:

  • Water (about 2–3 litres per person per day)
  • Non-perishable food (canned, energy bars, etc.)
  • Torch (flashlight) + spare batteries
  • Phone charger or power bank
  • First aid kit
  • Warm clothing or blanket

Nice to add later:

  • Portable radio
  • Multi-tool
  • Hygiene items (wipes, hand sanitizer)

Don’t try to buy everything at once—add a few items each week.

3. Organize Important Documents

Keep copies (physical or digital) of:

  • ID/passport
  • Insurance details
  • Emergency contacts

Store them somewhere easy to grab quickly.

4. Make a Simple Plan

Ask yourself:

  • How would I contact family if phones are down?
  • Where would we meet if we had to leave home?

Write it down—it doesn’t need to be complicated.

5. Prepare for Power Cuts

These are very common and easy to prepare for:

  • Keep devices charged
  • Have a backup light source
  • Know how to manually use essentials (e.g., doors, heating controls)

6. Learn a Few Basic Skills

Focus on practical, high-impact skills:

  • Basic first aid
  • How to turn off water/gas at home
  • Simple cooking without power

7. Review and Improve Gradually

Every couple of months:

  • Check food expiry dates
  • Replace used items
  • Add one new improvement (e.g., better kit, more supplies)

Mindset Tip

Preparedness isn’t about fear—it’s about reducing stress when something goes wrong. Even a small amount of preparation puts you ahead of most people.

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